South Australian shadow Attorney-General calls for commercial surrogacy
		Thursday, February 09, 2017 
		The South Australian Deputy Opposition Leader, and shadow  Attorney-General, Vickie Chapman, has called for commercial surrogacy to  be legalised, to minimise the number of intended parents going to  develpoing countries for surrogacy. She did this in a debate about  reform of that State’s IVF and surrogacy laws so that they are  non-discriminatory.
Ms Chapman said:
“We  are not dealing with all the issues that go to surrogacy in this bill,  and I think that is a shame. I think we need to, and the sooner we do  the better. My personal view is that to do it we are going to have to  actually except the fact that if we are going to ask a female person to  undertake this role and responsibility—which is a major sacrifice—then a  fee ought to be able to be paid for that purpose. Otherwise, couples in  Australia will continue to go to other countries, exploit other people,  pay the fee and not be required to sign up to levels of responsibility  that I think we should insist on here.
     
              
Let us make that an area of reform that we do address,  and that we do try to make sure we protect women in exploitable  circumstances in other countries, that we do not allow a situation to  prevail in Australia where it is prohibitive for many to undertake this  role, just to be repaid their expenses.
I remember that when I was in early adulthood sometimes  my sisters—and I have plenty of them—would say to me, ‘What would you  do in this situation? If one of us couldn’t have children would you have  a baby for us?’ As a sister I said I would, I would do that; if I were  fertile (which I happened to be) then that would be something I would  do. It was a personal commitment, but not everyone has an available  sibling or friend who is prepared to do that.
     
              I think it is important that we have a chance to have  control over the terms and conditions the women are in so that they are  not exploited, so that the children who are born are protected against  circumstances of either abandonment or exploitation. It is time we  addressed that. I know it is very hard to get things through without  government approval supporting things in this parliament, because it has  to go through two houses of parliament, but we do try—and I have a list  of bills tomorrow for private member’s bills. Every now and again we  get one up, but the point is that we do need the government’s blessing.
     
              In an area of comprehensive reform such as this, I  think it is a missed opportunity for the government to fix it. It is  well known. It is an issue that other jurisdictions are starting to deal  with, but it seems that the government has had a bit of a hands-off  approach to this, other than dealing with a certain group in the  community who are seeking status and recognition, which of course is our  LGBTIQ community—not unimportant, but it is not the only thing that  needs to be fixed. We do need to address this matter.”