The excavation of the Broadbeach Aboriginal burial ground in 1965, and the repatriation and reburial of the remains in 1988 played a significant role in the development of this Act, which was the state's first cultural heritage legislation, which culminated in this piece of legislation. The Aboriginal Relics Preservation Act 1967 was the first piece of legislation to protect Aboriginal archaeological sites. This was replaced by the Cultural Record Act 1987, which was in turn replaced by the 2003 Act.
Overview
In proclaiming this statute, Queensland Parliament:
created a statutory duty of care applying to all land users in Queensland, regardless of tenure;
recognized any pre-existing agreements landholders may have entered into with Aboriginal owners;
established a register of Aboriginal cultural heritage to be protected, plus database holding information and details of known Aboriginal cultural heritage places
proscribed fundamental principles requiring areas and objects of significance to Aboriginal people to be protected and managed in accordance with relevant Aboriginal laws, customs or history
provided for Aboriginal peoples to play an active role protecting Aboriginal cultural heritage by enabling particularly interested groups to form State approved Aboriginal cultural heritage bodies to whom cultural heritage inquires are referred
provided for land users and Aboriginal peoples to be able to negotiate, agree, enter into, and, if desired, register with the State, cultural heritage management plans proscribing how Aboriginal cultural heritage is to be managed in particular places
The Act defines Aboriginal cultural heritage as being:
any significant Aboriginal area within Queensland;
any significant Aboriginal object from Queensland; or
any place within Queensland containing in situ evidence of archaeological or historic significance to Aboriginal peoples prior occupation of the State
A Minister who was responsible for implementing the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2003 gave example of the kinds of things he believes to be Aboriginal cultural heritage as follows:
In proclaiming the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2003, Queensland Parliament intended to provide "blanket" statutory protection to ALL of Queensland's Aboriginal cultural heritage, irrespective of whether or not that heritage is known toland users. To achieve this end, Parliament created a formal, statutory "duty of care", by which anyone carrying out any activity on any land anywhere in Queensland is required by law to take:
"..all reasonable and practicable measures to ensure their activity does not harm Aboriginal cultural heritage".
The risk both individuals and corporations take should they fail to take care, and so damage Aboriginal cultural heritage, is legal prosecution, and possible fines of up to for individuals, or for corporations.
Coverage
After 4½ years of heritage protection under the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 2003, the Minister responsible for the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act 1993 announced:
the cultural heritage databases holds approximately 23 000 records of known indigenous cultural heritage places
the State had approved 22 indigenous cultural heritage bodies to assist protect cultural heritage
for each of 2007–2008 & 2008–2009 the State has made a total of $100 000 per annum in grants available to assist pay some of the costs of studies updating the cultural heritage database, plus some of the operating costs of the approved Aboriginal cultural heritage bodies.