Same-sex adoption Same-sex couples have been able to adopt children in South Australia since February 2017. Originally, the
Adoption Act 1988 allowed only heterosexual couples (both married and de facto) to adopt children. Single individuals were also banned from adoption in South Australia, making it the only place in Australia to have such a restriction. The difficulties of British same-sex adoptive parents Shaun and Blue Douglas-Galley in bringing their adopted children to South Australia led them to lobby for legal reform, including a letter writing campaign to 70 politicians and an online petition that gathered 27,000 signatures. In response, in July 2014, the
Government of South Australia announced the formation of a committee to review its adoption laws, including whether same-sex couples and singles should be able to adopt. Submissions to the inquiry closed on 30 May 2015, though the formal recommendations of the review were not released at any stage that year. Eventually, in mid-2016, the review and its recommendations were publicly released. Chief among the report's recommendations were the legalisation of adoption of children by same-sex couples and a move to allow for the amending of birth certificates to include information about the biological and adoptive parents of a child. Around the same time, a report issued by the South Australian Law Reform Institute recommended amendments to adoption law allowing for same-sex adoption and equal access to assisted reproductive treatment for same-sex couples. In August 2016, the Minister for Education and Child Development, Susan Close, said in a statement she would "soon" present a bill to Parliament amending the
Adoption Act 1988, which would include a clause removing the ban on same-sex adoption. The clause would be a
conscience vote matter for government members. On 21 September 2016, the
Adoption (Review) Amendment Bill 2016 was introduced to the
House of Assembly. The bill would amend the
Adoption Act to allow for, among other reforms, same-sex adoption and adoption of children by single persons in South Australia. Debate on the bill in the lower house occurred between 2–15 November, until a
conscience vote was held on the legislation. The bill passed the lower house, with the clauses of the bill allowing same-sex adoption being supported by 27 votes to 16. An amendment to the bill tightening the eligibility of single people to adopt was passed by 22 votes to 21; the amendment stating single people could have adoption orders granted where "the Court is satisfied that there are special circumstances justifying the making of the order". The bill proceeded to the
Legislative Council. On 7 December, the Council passed the bill at the third reading stage by 13 votes to 4 without amendment. The bill received
royal assent on 15 December 2016, becoming the
Adoption (Review) Amendment Act 2016. Following a
proclamation by the
governor of South Australia on 16 February, the majority of the Act (including the parts allowing same-sex adoption) went into effect on 17 February 2017.
Assisted reproductive technology and surrogacy South Australian law allows same-sex couples to have equal access to
assisted reproductive treatments (ART) and
altruistic surrogacy (commercial surrogacy is illegal nationwide). A law to that effect passed the
Parliament in February 2017 and came into effect on 21 March 2017. Prior to 2017, South Australia was the only jurisdiction in Australia to ban fertile single women and lesbians from accessing
assisted reproductive treatments (ART). A ruling by the
Supreme Court of South Australia in 1993 established that a single woman must be "medically infertile" in order to receive
IVF treatment. The court found that the restriction of access to treatment on the basis of marital status (in the
Assisted Reproductive Treatment Act 1988) contravened the federal
Sex Discrimination Act 1984, thereby allowing infertile women of any sexual orientation access to ART. The
Assisted Reproductive Treatment Act 1988 was subsequently amended to include these provisions regarding infertility. An attempt in May 2012 to amend the act and allow fertile women access to ART passed the upper house by 12 votes to 9, though failed in the lower house. South Australia was also one of only two jurisdictions in Australia (the other being
Western Australia) to ban
altruistic surrogacy for singles and same-sex couples under the
Statutes Amendment (Surrogacy) Act 2009. The act presumed that the woman who gives birth to a child is the legal mother of the child, regardless of genetics. It was passed by the
Parliament of South Australia on 17 November 2009. An amendment introduced by Labor MP
Ian Hunter which would have allowed anyone in a same-sex relationship access to surrogacy was rejected when the law was drafted in 2008. Previously, the
Family Relationships Act 1975 made all surrogacy arrangements in the state illegal. The
Statutes Amendment (Surrogacy) Act 2009 revised the
Family Relationships Act 1975 by legalising altruistic surrogacy for married and de facto opposite-sex couples. The ban on commercial surrogacy remained. At the request of the state government, in May 2016 the South Australian Law Reform Institute issued a sweeping report recommending wholesale changes to assisted reproductive technology (ART) and surrogacy laws in South Australia, recommending equal access to ART services and
altruistic surrogacy for same-sex couples and single women. On 15 November 2016, the
House of Assembly split the aforementioned bill and introduced the
Statutes Amendment (Surrogacy Eligibility) Bill 2016, a bill which dealt exclusively with surrogacy and assisted reproductive treatments. The bill would amend several other acts so as to allow same-sex couples access to altruistic surrogacy arrangements and ensure fertile women and same-sex couples have access to assisted reproductive technology. Debate on the bill continued on 16 November, at which point the lower house removed provisions in the bill allowing single people access to altruistic surrogacy arrangements. The following day, the bill passed the lower house by 25 votes to 16. The bill proceeded to the
Legislative Council. The bill passed the council by 14 votes to 3, though two important amendments were made to the bill at the clauses stage.
Family First members introduced an amendment to allow assisted reproductive treatment providers the right to conscientiously object to providing services based on the patient's sexual orientation.
Greens member
Tammy Franks responded by introducing an amendment that would require any services that refused treatment to be placed on a publicly available list. The bill returned to the House of Assembly (which by that stage had risen for the
summer break) for consideration of the council's amendments. In January 2017, the report of the Allan review of the
Assisted Reproductive Treatment Act 1988 (SA) concurred with the South Australian Law Reform Institute's recommendations, having conducted extensive review and consultation with community on these matters. On 15 February 2017, the House agreed to an amendment moved by the
socially conservative Labor member
Tom Kenyon which removed the proposed requirement for those who object to providing treatment on religions or conscience grounds to be placed on a list. The remainder of the bill was accepted by the House. The bill returned to the council for consideration of Kenyon's amendment, which provided its approval on 28 February. The bill received
royal assent on 15 March, becoming the
Statutes Amendment (Surrogacy Eligibility) Act 2017. Following a
proclamation issued by
Governor Hieu Van Le, the law came into effect on 21 March 2017. The state's surrogacy laws were consolidated into the
Surrogacy Act 2019 in 2019, a law which came into effect on 1 September 2020. The new law included a provision allowing "single intended parents" to pursue surrogacy in South Australia, ending the previous legislation which required the intended parents to be a two-person couple.
Recognition of lesbian parents In 2010, a bill was proposed providing partial recognition of lesbian co-mothers in same-sex relationships and their children. It was introduced by Greens member
Tammy Jennings following the
2010 state election in the
Legislative Council and passed via a conscience vote of 14–5 on 14 November 2010. It subsequently passed in the
Legislative Assembly, also via a conscience vote, by 24–15 on 10 June 2011. The bill was subsequently given
royal assent and became law on 23 June 2011 becoming the
Family Relationships (Parentage) Amendment Act 2010, commencing on 15 December 2011. In June 2015, the
Family Relationships (Parentage Presumptions) Amendment Bill 2015 passed the upper house. The bill abolished the 3-year relationship requirement for parentage recognition. The bill passed the lower house in February 2016 by a margin of 29–12, with both the Government and Opposition having a
conscience vote. Minor amendments to the bill in the lower house meant it had to return to the upper house for final approval, which occurred later that year. The bill received
royal assent on 23 June 2016 becomng the
Family Relationships (Parentage Presumptions) Amendment Act 2016 and went into effect 3 months after being signed into law (i.e. from 23 September 2016). ==Discrimination protections==