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Joshua Rowe, NSW/ACT Director of the Australian Christian Lobby, said the result was deeply disappointing (Parliament of NSW)

The NSW Legislative Council has voted 23–16 against a bill that would have allowed faith-based aged care facilities to decline offering voluntary assisted dying on site. Source: The Weekly Source.

The upper house voted on the legislation on Wednesday, with members allowed a conscience vote.

Sydney MP Alex Greenwich, who introduced the original VAD legislation in 2021, said the bill “would have cruelly limited access to voluntary assisted dying in aged care homes”.

The bill was introduced on October 15 by Liberal MLC Susan Carter. It proposed amendments to the Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2022 that would allow religious aged care facilities to refuse access to doctors attending residents for matters related to VAD.

However, they would still be required to facilitate a resident’s travel to another location where VAD-related care could occur.

Joshua Rowe, NSW/ACT Director of the Australian Christian Lobby, said the result was deeply disappointing. “Respect for our diversity, especially among faith communities, doesn’t finish with mere conversation. Legislators must take action to protect religious freedom.”

Also this week, in Victoria Parliament passed reforms allowing doctors to initiate conversations about VAD and extending eligibility to those with 12 months to live. The reforms brought Victoria, the first state to legalise VAD, into line with other states.

FULL STORY

Controversial changes to NSW VAD laws rejected (By Caroline Egan, The Weekly Source)