State Minister definition

State Minister means the New South Wales Minister or the Victorian Minister who is a member of the Ministerial Council;
State Minister means the Minister of State of a State for the time being responsible for the administration of this Agreement for the relevant State.
State Minister means the Minister of State of a State for the time being responsible for the administration of this agreement for the relevant State.

Examples of State Minister in a sentence

  • In accordance with the arrangements to be agreed upon between the Minister and the State Minister the operation of the agreement is to be evaluated triennially.

  • Any other purposes agreed upon between the Minister and the State Minister.

  • After consultation with the State Minister, any person included in a class of persons which is declared by the Minister in writing under his hand, to be persons in need of assistance to which this Part relates.

  • The State Minister will determine in accordance with Recital (D) in each year the allocation between home purchase assistance and rental housing assistance of the total amount of loan assistance and of grants of united assistance to be provided by the Commonwealth to a State in that year and may at any time during a year vary the determination in respect of that year.

  • The State shall be represented for the purposes of this agreement by the Department administered by the State Minister or such other agency of the State as the State Minister shall nominate ('Agency') and the State Minister shall notify the Minister of the address of that Department or Agency and of any change at any time of the Department or Agency or of the address.


More Definitions of State Minister

State Minister means the State Minister administering this Act.
State Minister means the Minister designated by regulation as the State Minister for the purposes of this Act. (4) An explanatory note to a provision of this Act forms part of the provision to which it relates.
State Minister means the Minister of the State for the time being having responsibility for administration of the Rail Safety Act 1996;
State Minister means a member of the Forum who represents a State, and includes a Minister who is acting as a member of the Forum in place of that member;
State Minister means the Minister of State of the State for the time being responsible for the administration of this agreement for the State, or when there is more than one such Minister, means the Minister having for the time being responsibility for the matter or class of matters in respect of which the relevant provision or provisions of this agreement is or are being applied.
State Minister means a State Minister appointed to represent that State at the Forum from time to time; ‘State or Territory statutory right’ means a right, entitlement or authority that is granted by or under a law of a State or Territory; ‘Territory’ means the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory; ‘Territory Minister’ means a Territory Minister appointed to represent that territory at the Forum from time to time; ‘transferable’, in relation to a right, entitlement or authority, means transferable under the general law or a law of the State by the holder of the right, entitlement or authority (whether or not the right, entitlement or authority is exclusive, and whether or not a transfer is restricted or requires consent); ‘water right’ means a right, entitlement or authority, whether or not exclusive, that is granted by or under the general law or a law of the State in relation to the control, use or flow of water.
State Minister means the State Minister administering this Act. (2) If this Act uses a term that is used in the ACC Act, the term has the same meaning in this Act as it has in the ACC Act unless the contrary intention appears in this Act. (3) If the head of an ACC operation/investigation suspects that an offence (the "incidental offence") that is not a serious and organised crime may be directly or indirectly connected with, or may be a part of, a course of activity involving the commission of a serious and organised crime (whether or not the head has identified the nature of that serious and organised crime), then the incidental offence is, for so long only as the head so suspects, taken, for the purposes of this Act, to be a serious and organised crime. (4) A reference in this Act, other than Part 2, to a function includes a reference to a power or duty. 4. Act to bind the Crowns. 4This Act binds the Crown in right of the State and, so far as the legislative power of the State permits, the Crown in its other capacities.__________________Part 2—The Australian Crime Commission, the Board and the Inter-Governmental CommitteeDivision 1—The Australian Crime Commission 5. Functions of ACCs. 5The ACC has the following functions—