SAFEGUARDING AGAINST ‘SHADOW GOVERNMENT’ APPOINTMENTS AND STRENGTHENING AUSTRALIA’S DEMOCRACY

Yesterday, I received the Solicitor-General’s opinion in the matter of the validity of the appointment of Mr Morrison to administer the Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources (SG No.12 of 2022).

Given the highly extraordinary circumstances, I have today decided to release that Opinion, and I have instructed the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet to publicly release it on the department’s website at https://www.pmc.gov.au/news-centre/government/solicitor-general-opinion-validity-appointment-mr-morrison.

In summary, the Solicitor-General has concluded that Mr Morrison was validly appointed to administer that department under the Constitution.

However, the Solicitor-General has also said that the fact that the Parliament, the public and other ministers were not informed about this appointment, was inconsistent with the conventions and practices of responsible government which are critical to our constitutional democracy.

The Solicitor-General’s conclusions are relevant to the circumstances of Mr Morrison’s appointments to administer four other portfolios during 2020 and 2021, which followed the same process.

Importantly, the Solicitor-General considers that the existing practices by which appointments such as this are notified to the Parliament and the public are deficient.

I agree.

He has proposed various mechanisms by which those practices could be improved.

I have directed the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet to work with the Office of the Official Secretary to the Governor-General to adopt a practice of publishing in the Commonwealth Gazette future appointments of ministers to administer departments.

I will also give consideration to whether any further immediate changes are required.

Cabinet has agreed there will be an inquiry into these events and will now consider what form that inquiry will take.

My government is seeking to restore the Australian public’s faith in our institutions and put an end to the culture of secrecy.

Our democracy is precious and we are committed to strengthening it.

Greens join fight for sea country on Tiwi Islands, in legal first

Today, hearings begin as Munupi Senior Lawman Dennis Tipakalippa sues Santos and the Federal Government over their approvals of the Barossa gas project, despite Santos’ failure to consult Traditional Owners. 

“This case could establish what adequate consultation looks like, when it comes to offshore gas projects. Native Title does not protect sea country,” said Greens Mining and Resources spokesperson, Yamatji Noongar Senator Dorinda Cox.

Senator Cox joins Traditional Owners on Country to hear their evidence, and consider if industry regulators are abiding by international human rights standards.

Senator Dorinda Cox said:

“The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP) clearly states that free, prior and informed consent is a human right.”

“Free, means without coercion. Prior, means giving communities enough time to consider their options. Informed, means having access to all of the relevant information before making a decision. Here, Traditional Owners were not even told about the Barossa gas project!”

“We’re talking about the The Munupi communities’ access to food, their ability to perform ceremonies and cultural practices. They have no protection from environmental disaster, the regulator needs to do their job.”

“Right now, our legislation is too weak to force mining companies to seek free, prior and informed consent from Traditional Owners. The onus is on First Nations people to figure out what the sector is doing, and that needs to change.”

“Traditional Owners will present evidence, on country, through ceremony, song and dance. I’m here to hear their evidence, this will inform what legal protections around free, prior and informed consent could look like as the Greens continue to fight for the UNDRIP to be implemented in our laws, politics and practice.”

“This would be the dirtiest gas in the country, with at least double the carbon dioxide of any other offshore Australian gas field. If Labor wants to meet their own emissions target, we cannot keep opening up new coal and gas.”

BACKGROUND

In 2007, 144 countries voted in favor of the UNDRIP and Australia was one of four nations who voted against it. After endorsing the UNDRIP in 2009, successive Governments failed to implement it. In March 2022, Senator Lidia Thorpe successfully introduced a Private Senators Bill that will ensure this Country complies with the UNDRIP. Senator’s Thorpe and Cox successfully established a Senate inquiry into the application of the UNDRIP. 

Call for Senate Committee to reconvene questioning on Holgate sacking with revelations Morrison was secret shareholder minister

The Greens will ask the Senate Environment and Communications Committee which held an inquiry into the sacking of Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate to reconvene questioning of the departments and ministers involved, after revelations former PM Scott Morrison was a shareholder minister at the time. 

In 2020, Scott Morrison called on Ms Holgate to resign after it was revealed she gave Cartier watches to Australia Post executives, saying she should stand aside “or she can go”, raising questions of political interference by the former PM. 

Following the Finance Department’s review in the matter, a Senate Inquiry was held which heard evidence from the Finance Department. At no point was the Committee informed that when Scott Morrison attacked Ms Holgate in the parliament, that he was also the responsible minister. 

Chair of the Committee, Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young said:

“There are serious questions about whether the former PM Scott Morrison and the Finance Minister at the time, misled the parliament. 

“There are serious questions about whether the Department of Finance misled the Senate. 

“Scott Morrison’s treatment of Ms Holgate was appalling, and the Committee found he had showed a lack of respect for due process and procedural fairness. Now we find out he was the secret minister all along.

“I will be asking the Committee to reconvene questioning the Department and former Ministers involved – including the ‘minister in secret’ Scott Morrison. I will also be asking whether there is a case here for referring the Privileges Committee to examine whether the senate was misled. 

“The Department either lied, withheld information, or didn’t know. This is a despicable state of affairs whichever way you look at it.”

NATIONAL SKILLS WEEK KICKS OFF

National Skills Week is an opportunity to celebrate Australia’s diverse skills set, but comes at a time when our nation is in the grip of a skills crisis.

A robust skills and training sector is critical to driving a productive workforce – this will deliver a stronger economy and more affordable goods and services.

Owing to a decade of inaction, Australia is experiencing a serious labour supply shortage and some of the most acute skills shortages of any country in the OECD.

The Albanese Government is taking immediate action to address this crisis.

Next week we are hosting our Jobs and Skills Summit, bringing together unions, businesses, government and industry to address our economic challenges.

We’re keen to see what proposals will be brought to the table to kick start the economy and get wages moving.

The Albanese Government is also delivering $850 million for 465,000 fee-free TAFE places and for TAFE infrastructure.

This will provide opportunities for school leavers, workers wanting to retrain or upskill and unpaid carers — who are predominantly women — to get into the workforce.

On top of this, we are creating an extra 45,000 TAFE places for industries suffering acute shortages, and a $50 million TAFE Technology Fund.

There is also a strong focus on providing more opportunities for apprentices and trainees – this includes 10,000 apprentice places in the new energy sector and ensuring one in 10 workers engaged on federally funded government projects is an apprentice or trainee.

Our $1.2 billion Future Made in Australia Skills Plan will focus on key areas of skills shortages, with new places at university and TAFE.

It is projected that over the next 5 years, 9 out of 10 jobs will require a post-secondary qualification and the Albanese Government is committed to ensuring people have these skills.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said:

“Better skills and better training means better jobs and a better future for more Australians in more parts of the country.

“My Government is focused on growing our vocational and training sector, delivering 465,000 fee-free TAFE places to help address skills shortages, and upgrading key TAFE infrastructure.

“We also have a strong focus on opening up more opportunities for apprentices and traineeships, giving people on the job work experience.

“Our goal is to build a strong VET sector to help more Australians get secure, well-paying jobs, while providing the skilled workers that business needs to grow our economy.

“Next week we are hosting our Jobs and Skills Summit that will brings together unions, business groups and the people who help run our world-class VET sector, to look at how we deliver immediate action on the skills shortages Australia is facing.” 

Minister for Skills and Training, Brendan O’Connor said:

“One of the biggest challenges facing businesses is they are struggling to find workers with the skills for the jobs available.

“Owing to a decade of inaction, the challenges have grown but they are not insurmountable.

“The first bill introduced to this parliament was to establish a new independent body Jobs and Skills Australia, to provide independent advice to government so we can better respond to future skills demand and better match taxpayers investment in areas of need.

“National Skills Week is a chance to recognise the value of our VET sector and promote it as an important stepping stone on the path to a good career.”

For more information about National Skills Week activities and virtual events across Australia visit: www.nationalskillsweek.com.au

Cairns medical receptionist sentenced to jail for $178k Medicare fraud

A Cairns woman has been convicted and sentenced to two years and nine months imprisonment by the Cairns District Court on Wednesday, 17 August 2022, after pleading guilty to fraudulently claiming more than $178,000 in Medicare payments under the Medicare Benefits Scheme (MBS).

Working as a medical receptionist, the woman was charged with one count of obtaining a financial advantage by deception for electronically submitting 355 false Medicare claims using the details of five medical practitioners.

The woman entered a guilty plea and was sentenced to two years and nine months imprisonment. 

However, the prison sentence was suspended, and she was placed on a good behaviour bond of two years. The woman is also subjected to two years’ probation and ordered to repay the full amount of $178,548.70.

The Department of Health and Aged Care takes allegations of fraud against Medicare very seriously.

The department has a strong health provider compliance program that protects Australia’s health payments system through the prevention, identification and treatment of incorrect claiming and fraud by health providers.

Anyone with information about suspected non-compliance or fraud of Government health payments by health providers can make a report via the “Reporting Fraud” page on the Department of Health and Aged Care’s website at www.health.gov.au/fraud-tip-offs  or by calling the Provider Benefits Integrity Hotline on 1800 314 808.

Additional Humanitarian Assistance for Sri Lanka

Australia will provide an additional $25 million to help Sri Lanka meet urgent food and healthcare needs, as it confronts its worst economic crisis in 70 years.

During this challenging period, Australia stands with the people of Sri Lanka, especially those experiencing severe hardship.

This additional support brings Australia’s Official Development Assistance response to $75 million.

Our support will be delivered through UN agencies to provide food, health and nutrition services, access to safe water and essential support for those at risk, including women and children.

Australia’s continued assistance to Sri Lanka supports our mutual interest in a secure and resilient Indian Ocean and reinforces our 75 year-strong relationship built on cooperation and community connection.

The extra humanitarian assistance is in addition to the $23 million in ongoing development assistance to Sri Lanka in 2022-23.

Battery cage phase-out long overdue and far too slow

Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Animal Welfare spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has said that today’s announced Australian poultry standards, which will phase-out battery cages, are long overdue but provide a far too lengthy transition period out to 2036.

Senator Faruqi said:

“The industry has had more than enough time to move away from battery cages. We now need some real action.

“After years of dragging their feet, the industry does not need up to 14 years to transition away from battery cages.

“People absolutely do not want hens being kept in battery cages under such cruel and inhumane conditions for another decade or more.

“The use of battery cages is terrible animal cruelty — there’s really no other way to put it.

“Thousands of people made submissions to the poultry standards review and almost all of them supported a phase-out of battery cages.

“Australia is well behind other countries on the international stage and frankly it’s a travesty.”

Addressing the teacher shortage long-term requires current focus 

It’s not enough to simply reduce poor working conditions. We must create supportive working environments where teachers can thrive.

The teacher shortage in Australia is at a crisis point. More teachers are leaving or considering leaving the profession than ever before as burnout hits an all-time high. On the other end of the spectrum, enrolments in teaching degrees are declining as more become wary of the pressures of the career path.

Scientia Associate Professor Rebecca CollieSchool of EducationUNSW Arts, Design & Architecture, is an educational psychology researcher investigating teacher motivation and wellbeing. She says teaching has become more complex in the past decade. Teachers now face greater demands, but this has not been accompanied by the provision of more time and support to manage those demands.

“Teaching has intensified greatly as teachers are asked to take on more and more,” A/Prof. Collie says. “There’s just not enough time in the day for teachers to do everything they need to, and this means that many feel overworked and underappreciated.”

National Teacher Workforce Action Plan has been proposed by education ministers to address the teacher shortage with a big focus on recruiting new teachers. Performance-pay incentives and making teaching degrees cheaper are among some strategies that have been floated. However, A/Prof. Collie says for a plan to be effective, it must first address the working conditions for current teachers.

“This is important for retaining teachers, but also because any attempts to attract new teachers to the profession will be stymied by a ‘revolving door’ of teacher turnover if current conditions aren’t improved,” A/Prof. Collie says.

Addressing poor teaching conditions

Many teachers in Australia report experiencing poor working conditions, including high workloads. It’s not uncommon for teachers to work late into the night and on weekends, causing significant stress and leading to attrition.

“What teachers are being asked to do is a lot different now than it was a decade ago. It includes a lot more administrative and compliance work,” A/Prof. Collie says. “What hasn’t kept pace is the time teachers are afforded. It just adds other tasks to everything they’re already doing and takes away from the time to effectively prepare, plan and collaborate in relation to the core business of teaching.”

A/Prof. Collie says teachers can also struggle to deal with disruptive student behaviour and regularly changing or unrealistic expectations from government and professional bodies, parents and school leadership.

“Disruptive students can be very stressful for teachers, particularly early career teachers who may be still developing the skillsets to deal with different student needs,” A/Prof. Collie says. “When you factor in the changing demands placed on them from the top down and the bottom up, it is understandable that many teachers feel stuck between a rock and a hard place.”

The result is a poorer learning experience for students and growing dissatisfaction for teachers, A/Prof. Collie says.

“Our research shows it’s central that teachers have the time to build quality interpersonal relationships with students to engage them in their learning. These relationships are a big reason why teachers enter the profession and why they stay, but teachers just don’t have as much time to develop them as they had in the past,” A/Prof. Collie says.

Fostering a supportive teaching environment

A/Prof. Collie says that while reducing these poor working conditions is vital to solving the teacher shortage, efforts must also be made to foster a healthy and supportive environment for teachers to thrive.

“Reducing poor working conditions simply creates a neutral environment. So, at the same time, we must improve the things that make teaching a great profession to begin with,” A/Prof. Collie says.

Research indicates the opportunity to have input in decision-making within schools and positive interpersonal relationships with both students and colleagues are factors that play a crucial role in ensuring teachers remain engaged in the profession.

“Those things play an essential role in teacher happiness and wellbeing. If teachers are happy at work, they’re more effective at work and want to stay at work,” A/Prof. Collie says.

It’s also essential for teachers to have access to professional learning and mentoring opportunities relevant to the different demands they face across regions and schools, A/Prof. Collie says.

“Giving teachers professional learning opportunities, effective feedback and mentoring so they can continue to build their skills is essential and this is something we need to make sure is accessible to teachers in all schools,” A/Prof. Collie says.

If we hope to address the teacher shortage long-term, we must ultimately listen to what teachers say, A/Prof. Collie says.

“There’s an excellent cohort of skilled teachers telling us this is why we want to leave or have already left,” A/Prof. Collie says. “If we don’t deal with the root causes, if we don’t improve working conditions, then teachers – current or new – just aren’t going to stick around.”

Jobs summit must tackle higher education crisis

Ahead of joining the NTEU picket line at the University of Sydney staff strike this morning, Deputy Greens leader and Education spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has said that the upcoming Jobs and Skills Summit must address the job insecurity crisis in higher education.

Senator Faruqi said:

“There is a scourge of insecure, casualised work in higher education. University workers deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.

“If we want our universities to deliver the highest quality teaching, learning and research, we have to invest in staff, treat them fairly and stop their exploitation.

“The upcoming Jobs and Skills Summit is an opportunity for the government to hammer out its response to this crisis – and not a moment too soon. We need action on casual conversion, secure jobs, fair pay, wage theft and increased public funding for our universities.

“As a proud NTEU member and former university lecturer, I know first hand how working conditions on our campuses have deteriorated rapidly over the last few decades. This is shameful and unacceptable.

“Industrial action at Sydney has been ongoing for months. It’s utterly cooked that university workers have to sacrifice their time and wages to stand up for their basic rights at work — fair pay, decent conditions and a secure job. Solidarity!”

We need a Mining Super Profits Tax, not record dividends

Greens Treasury spokesperson, Senator Nick McKim, has responded to the announcement by BHP that it will pay a record dividend by calling for a Mining Super Profits Tax (MSPT).

“Australia needs a Mining Super Profits Tax.”

“BHP shareholders are rolling in cash but the Australian public who own the resources are being shortchanged.”

“Mining giants are posting obscene profits on the back of commodity booms, but the benefits are going to corporate executives and shareholders rather than to Australians who are struggling with the spiralling cost of living.”

“This is depriving the government of revenue and helping fuel inequality.”

“PBO analysis for the Greens shows that if the Rudd Government’s original Resource Super Profits Tax had been in place over the last decade, the Federal Budget would have been better off to the tune of $50 billion.”

“PBO analysis also shows that a new Mining Super Profits Tax (MSPT) would bring in $108 billion over the next decade.”

“The new government should announce a MSPT alongside reform of the PRRT and a market-wide super profits tax on big companies in the October Budget.”

“But this is unlikely to happen because mining corporations have used political donations to buy outcomes from both major parties.

“Taxes on the excessive profits of big corporations would fund genuine cost-of-living relief such as dental into Medicare, full mental health care, and free childcare.”