It should be remembered that these regulations were introduced on the basis of there being some undefined problem with the way keepers were managing their animals. Despite numerous requests for an indication of where there is a problem, In the vast majority of cases, there is no problem at all - most keepers have up to a few animals and if anything, go overboard in terms of the space required. Those with large collections confine their animals for a number of very good reasons - space requirements, ease of heating and management, ease of cleaning to name a few (all of these add up to good husbandry, especially for animals that spend large parts of their lives in very confined spaces under rocks and logs...).
Before some of you get all starry eyed about how much more wonderful it will be for the reptiles of NSW, take a moment to think about who produces a large number of these animals for the pet trade, and those who must of necessity manage large collections, such as Taronga and the Reptile Park - can the ARP afford to build new facilities for the large number of vens it has to maintain for venom production? Will trying to wrestle a 2 or 3 metre King Brown or Taipan out of a large, spacious enclosure increase the risks to the employees of that establishment. As soon as you take control of these fundamental matters out of the hands of the people who actually work with these dangerous animals, and place it into the hands of idealogically-driven bureaucrats, problems will arise.
As far as solving the problem of illegal collecting, it will be about as effective as the GST was at stamping out the "black economy," and we all know what a game-changer that was
!
Jamie