Preliminary Pages
Foreword
All that pollution up at Molledal – all that reeking waste
from the mill – it’s seeped into the pipes feeding from the pump-room; and all
the same damn poisonous slop‘s been draining out on the beach as well … I’ve
investigated the facts as scrupulously as possible … There’s irrefutable proof
of the presence of decayed organic matter in the water – millions of bacteria.
It’s positively injurious to health, for either internal or external use. Ah,
what a blessing it is to feel that you have done some service to your home town
and your fellow citizens.[1]
Blowing the whistle, or speaking out against suspected
wrongdoing in the workplace can be a very risky course of action. Outcomes can
fall far short of expectations. In Ibsen’s play, Dr Stockmann assumed that his
assessment of the town spa would be welcomed and that work would soon commence
to address the contamination. Authorities took a different view and considered
Stockmann a threat to the prosperity promised by the new town spa. Locals also
turned against Stockmann and branded him an ‘enemy of the people’.
Even when aware of the risks, whistleblowers may be
confronted with a number of strong ethical tensions. They have a professional
sense of loyalty to their employer, colleagues and clients. They have their
personal interests to consider concerning their career progression and the
welfare of their family. These may be set against higher principles of
morality, conscience and truth. Yet all too often whistleblowers are left frustrated,
humiliated or ostracised at great personal cost.
In principle, speaking the truth about what one considers
illegal, immoral or improper practices should be supported and recognised as a
positive contribution to the integrity of an organisation, even if further
information reveals that the substance of the allegation was unfounded.
Whistleblowing on matters of public interest is particularly serious because
broader issues of concern to the community may be involved which could include
public safety, the misappropriation of funds, or the misuse of authority.
Australia is blessed with a very high standard of public
administration and professional conduct within the public sector.[2]
However, wrongdoing within the sector does occur from time to time and legislation
on whistleblower protection is piecemeal at best. Commonwealth provisions,
primarily s. 16 of the Public Service Act 1999, stand out as
particularly thin and limited in terms of the range of matters covered, the
public servants included and the scope of protection available. That is why the
Attorney-General asked the Committee to consider and report on a preferred
model for legislation to protect public interest disclosures (whistleblowing)
within the Australian Government public sector. Whistleblowing is a complex
area of law that desperately needs clarity.
This inquiry follows a long series of reviews and proposals
for whistleblower or public interest disclosure legislation at the Commonwealth
level. One of the more significant reviews in this area was the 1994 report of
the Senate Select Committee into Public Interest Whistleblowing, In the
Public Interest.[3] That comprehensive report
made ambitious recommendations for model whistleblower provisions including a
two-stage process for internal and external disclosure, the creation of an
independent Public Interest Disclosures Agency and Board, provisions covering
employees and contractors in the Australian Government public sector and the
academic, health care and banking sectors, and protecting disclosures to the
media in certain circumstances.
In its response to the report, the Government rejected the
Senate Committee’s recommendations for a Disclosures Board, protecting
disclosures concerning the private sector and disclosures to the media. The
Government nonetheless agreed with the need to improve the system and signalled
its intention to introduce legislation into Parliament. However, following the
election of March 1996, the new Coalition government abandoned the preparation
of specific legislation on whistleblowing.
On the introduction of the Public Service Bill in 1997,
whistleblowing in the Australian public service received further consideration.
Two Parliamentary Committees reviewed that Bill and expressed dissatisfaction
with its limited whistleblowing provisions.[4] However, those provisions
came into force in 1999 following the passage of the Public Service Act.
Three versions of a private member’s Bill were introduced into Parliament by Senator Andrew Murray (2001, 2002 and 2007), but without government support, those Bills lapsed.
In the context of the unfulfilled expectations from the
landmark Senate Committee report, this inquiry also found that the current
Commonwealth public sector whistleblower protection system is inadequate and
new separate legislation in this area is needed. The Committee has before it an
important opportunity to put forward a comprehensive public interest disclosure
framework that improves the current system and leads the development of similar
second generation legislation in other jurisdictions.
The recommendations in this report reflect what the
Committee considers to be primary legislative priorities. They promote
integrity in public administration and support open and accountable government.
They are informed by the view that legislation should be based on clear
commonsense principles to provide reasonable certainty to any person reading
it. Yet legislation alone is not sufficient. A shift in culture needs to take
place to foster a more open public sector that is receptive to those who
question the way things are done.
The main recommendations in the report are that:
n new legislation be
introduced titled the Public Interest Disclosure Bill;
n the primary objective
of the legislation is to promote accountability in public administration;
n the legislation cover
a broad range of employees in the Australian Government public sector including
APS and non-APS agencies, contractors, consultants and their employees and
parliamentary staff;
n disclosures to be
protected include serious matters relating to illegal activity, corruption,
maladministration, breach of public trust, scientific misconduct, wastage of
public funds, dangers to public health and safety, and dangers to the
environment;
n decision makers have
discretion to include other types of allegations even if they are not initially
made through prescribed channels, as long as the whistleblower shows good faith
in the spirit of the Act;
n the scope of
statutory protection includes protection against detrimental action in the workplace
and immunity from criminal and civil liability and other actions such as
defamation and breach of confidence;
n the system comprise a
two stage process of internal and external reporting with the Commonwealth
Ombudsman to oversee the administration of the Act;
n agencies and the
Ombudsman have a number of obligations and responsibilities including the
provision of procedural fairness and reporting on the operation of the system;
and
n the legislation be
supported by an awareness campaign to promote a culture that supports
disclosure within the public sector, where people feel confident to speak out
when they are in doubt.
I would like to acknowledge the contribution of all those
who shared their time, expertise and experience with the Committee during this
inquiry. In particular, I would like to thank Dr AJ Brown and the Whistle While
They Work project team, members of Whistleblowers Australia who
enthusiastically contributed to the inquiry, key public sector leaders, the Australian Public Service Commissioner Ms Lynelle Briggs and the Commonwealth Ombudsman
Professor John McMillian. Finally, I would like to thank the other Members of
the Committee and the secretariat who worked on this important inquiry.
Mark Dreyfus
QC MP
Chair
Membership
of the Committee
Chair |
Mr Mark Dreyfus QC MP |
|
Deputy
Chairman |
The Hon. Peter Slipper MP |
|
Members |
The Hon. Kevin Andrews MP
Mr Mark Butler MP
Mr Petro Georgiou MP
Mr Daryl Melham MP
Mrs Sophie Mirabella MP
Ms Belinda Neal MP
Mr Shayne Neumann MP
Mr Graham Perrett MP
|
|
|
|
|
Committee Secretariat
Secretary |
Dr Anna Dacre |
Inquiry
Secretary |
Dr Mark Rodrigues (from 08.09.2008) |
Research
Officer |
Mr Michael Buss (from 08.09.2008) |
Administrative
Officers |
Ms Melita Caulfield
Ms Claire Young |
|
|
Terms of reference
The Committee is to consider and report on a preferred model
for legislation to protect public interest disclosures (whistleblowing) within
the Australian Government public sector. The Committee's report should address
aspects of its preferred model, covering:
1. the categories of people who could make protected
disclosures:
a. these could include:
i. persons
who are currently or were formerly employees in the Australian Government
general government sector*, whether or not employed under the Public Service Act
1999,
ii. contractors
and consultants who are currently or were formerly engaged by the Australian
Government;
iii. persons
who are currently or were formerly engaged under the Members of Parliament
(Staff) Act 1984, whether as employees or consultants; and
b. the
Committee may wish to address additional issues in relation to protection of
disclosures by persons located outside Australia, whether in the course of
their duties in the general government sector or otherwise;
2. the types of disclosures that should be
protected:
a. these
could include allegations of the following activities in the public sector:
illegal activity, corruption, official misconduct involving a significant
public interest matter, maladministration, breach of public trust, scientific
misconduct, wastage of public funds, dangers to public health and safety, and
dangers to the environment; and
b. the Committee should
consider:
i. whether
protection should be afforded to persons who disclose confidential information
for the dominant purpose of airing disagreements about particular government
policies, causing embarrassment to the Government, or personal benefit; and
ii. whether
grievances over internal staffing matters should generally be addressed through
separate mechanisms;
3. the
conditions that should apply to a person making a disclosure, including:
a. whether
a threshold of seriousness should be required for allegations to be protected,
and/or other qualifications (for example, an honest and reasonable belief that
the allegation is of a kind referred to in paragraph 2(a)); and
b. whether
penalties and sanctions should apply to whistleblowers who:
i. in
the course of making a public interest disclosure, materially fail to comply
with the procedures under which disclosures are to be made; or
ii. knowingly
or recklessly make false allegations;
4. the
scope of statutory protection that should be available, which could include:
a. protection
against victimisation, discrimination, discipline or an employment sanction,
with civil or equitable remedies including compensation for any breaches of
this protection;
b. immunity
from criminal liability and from liability for civil penalties; and
c. immunity
from civil law suits such as defamation and breach of confidence;
5. procedures in relation to protected disclosures,
which could include:
a. how
information should be disclosed for disclosure to be protected: options would
include disclosure through avenues within a whistleblower's agency, disclosure
to existing or new integrity agencies, or a mix of the two;
b. the obligations of
public sector agencies in handling disclosures;
c. the
responsibilities of integrity agencies (for example, in monitoring the system
and providing training and education); and
d. whether
disclosure to a third party could be appropriate in circumstances where all
available mechanisms for raising a matter within Government have been
exhausted;
6. the
relationship between the Committee's preferred model and existing Commonwealth
laws; and
7. such other matters as the Committee considers
appropriate.
*As defined in the Australian Bureau of Statistics
publication Australian System of Government Finance Statistics: Concepts,
Sources, Methods, 2003 p.256.
List of abbreviations
ABC |
Australian Broadcasting Corporation |
ACLEI |
Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity |
ACTU |
Australian Council of Trade Unions |
AFP |
Australian Federal Police |
AGD |
Attorney-General’s Department |
AIC |
Australian Intelligence Community |
ALRC |
Australian Law Reform Commission |
AM |
Member of the Order of Australia |
AO |
Officer of the Order of Australia |
APS |
Australian Public Service |
APSC |
Australian Public Service Commissioner |
AQIS |
Australian Quarantine Inspection Service |
ARB |
Australian Racing Board |
AS |
Australian Standard |
ASIO |
Australian Security Intelligence Organisation |
ASIS |
Australian Secret Intelligence Service |
ATO |
Australian Tax Office |
CPSU |
Community and Public Sector Union |
CSIRO |
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organisation |
DEEWR |
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations |
DIGO |
Defence Imagery and Geospatial Organisation |
DIO |
Defence Intelligence Organisation |
DSD |
Defence Signals Directorate |
ICAC |
Independent Commission Against Corruption |
IGIS |
Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security |
LIV |
Law Institute of Victoria |
MP |
Member of Parliament |
NTEU |
National Tertiary Education Union |
OECD |
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development |
ONA |
Office of National Assessments |
OPSSC |
Office of the Public Sector Standards Commissioner |
OSC |
Office of Special Counsel |
POAA |
Post Office Agents Association |
QC |
Queen’s Counsel |
QCU |
Queensland Council of Unions |
QNF |
Queensland Nurses Federation |
UNCAC |
United Nations Convention Against Corruption |
WBA |
Whistleblowers Australia |
WWTW |
Whistle While They Work |
List of recommendations
2 Principles and
definitions
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
introduces legislation to provide whistleblower protections in the Australian
Government public sector. The legislation should be introduced to Parliament as
a matter of priority and should be titled the Public Interest Disclosure Bill.
Recommendation 2
The Committee recommends that the purpose and principles of
the Public Interest Disclosure Bill should reflect the following:
- the purpose of the Bill is to promote accountability and integrity in public administration; and
- the provisions of the Bill are guided by the following principles:
- it is in the public interest that accountability and integrity in
public administration are promoted by identifying and addressing wrongdoing in
the public sector;
- people within the public sector have a right to raise their
concerns about wrongdoing within the sector without fear of reprisal;
- people have a responsibility to raise those concerns in good
faith;
- governments have a right to consider policy and administration in
private; and
- government and the public sector have a responsibility to be
receptive to concerns which are raised.
3 Categories of people who
could make protected disclosures
Recommendation 3
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill define people who are entitled to make a protected disclosure as a ‘public
official’ and include in the definition of public official the following
categories:
- Australian Government and
general government sector employees, including Australian Public Service
employees and employees of agencies under the Commonwealth Authorities and
Companies Act 1997;
- contractors and consultants
engaged by the public sector;
- employees of contractors and
consultants engaged by the public sector;
- Australian and locally engaged
staff working overseas;
- members of the Australian
Defence Force and Australian Federal Police;
- parliamentary staff;
- former employees in one of the
above categories; and
- anonymous persons likely to be
in one of the above categories.
Recommendation 4
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide that the Commonwealth Ombudsman is the authorised authority for
receiving and investigating public interest disclosures made by employees under
the Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984.
Recommendation 5
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill include a provision to enable a decision maker within the scheme to deem
other persons to be a ‘public official’ for the purposes of the Act. Those who
may be deemed a public official would have an ‘insider’s knowledge’ of
disclosable conduct under the legislation and could include current and former
volunteers to an Australian Government public sector agency or others in
receipt of official information or funding from the Australian Government.
Recommendation 6
The Committee recommends that, after a period of operation of
the proposed legislation, the Australian Government consider introducing
protection for members of the public to make public interest disclosures about
the Australian Government public sector.
4 The types of disclosures
that should be protected
Recommendation 7
The Committee recommends that the types of disclosures to be
protected by the Public Interest Disclosure Bill include, but not be limited to
serious matters related to:
- illegal activity;
- corruption;
- maladministration;
- breach of public trust;
- scientific misconduct;
- wastage of public funds;
- dangers to public health
- dangers to public safety;
- dangers to the environment;
- official misconduct (including
breaches of applicable codes of conduct); and
- adverse action against a person
who makes a public interest disclosure under the legislation.
Recommendation 8
The Committee recommends that, on the enactment of a Public
Interest Disclosure Bill, the Australian Government repeal current
whistleblower provisions in s. 16 of the Public Service Act 1999 and s.
16 of the Parliamentary Service Act 1999.
Recommendation 9
The Committee recommends that Public Interest Disclosure Bill
provide that the motive of a person making a disclosure should not prevent the
disclosure from being protected.
5 Conditions that should
apply to a person making a disclosure
Recommendation 10
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide, as the primary requirement for protection, that a person making a
disclosure has an honest and reasonable belief on the basis of the information
available to them that the matter concerns disclosable conduct under the
legislation.
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide authorised decision makers with the discretion, in consideration
of the circumstances, to determine to discontinue the investigation of a
disclosure.
Recommendation 12
The Committee recommends that protection under the Public
Interest Disclosure Bill not apply, or be removed, where a disclosure is found
to be knowingly false. However, an authorised decision maker may consider granting
protection in circumstances where an investigation nonetheless reveals other
disclosable conduct and the person who made the initial disclosure is at risk
of detrimental action as a result of the disclosure.
6 Scope of statutory
protection
Recommendation 13
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill define the right to make a disclosure as a workplace right and enable any
matter of adverse treatment in the workplace to be referred to the Commonwealth
Workplace Ombudsman for resolution as a workplace relations issue.
Recommendation 14
The Committee recommends that the protections provided under
the Public Interest Disclosure Bill include immunity from criminal liability,
from liability for civil penalties, from civil actions such as defamation and
breach of confidence, and from administrative sanction.
7 Procedures in relation to
protected disclosures
Recommendation 15
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide an obligation for agency heads to:
- establish public interest
disclosure procedures appropriate to their agencies;
- report on the use of those
procedures to the Commonwealth Ombudsman; and
- where appropriate, delegate
staff within the agency to receive and act on disclosures.
Recommendation 16
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide that agencies are obliged to:
- undertake investigations into
disclosures that are made from within the organisation or referred to it by an
another agency;
- undertake an assessment of the
risks that detrimental action may be taken against the person who made the
disclosure;
- within a reasonable time period
or periodically, notify the person who made the disclosure of the outcome or
progress of an investigation, including the reasons for any decisions taken;
- provide for confidentiality;
- protect those who have made a
disclosure from detrimental action; and
- separate the substance of a
disclosure from any personal grievance a person having made a disclosure may
have in a matter.
Recommendation 17
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide that the following authorities, external to an agency, may
receive, investigate and refer public interest disclosures:
- the Commonwealth Ombudsman,
including in his capacity as Defence Force Ombudsman, Immigration Ombudsman,
Law Enforcement Ombudsman and Postal Industry Ombudsman;
- the Australian Public Service
Commissioner; and
- the Merit Protection
Commissioner.
Recommendation 18
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide that the following authorities, external to an agency, may
receive, investigate and refer public interest disclosures relevant to their
area of responsibility:
- Aged Care Commissioner;
- Commissioner for Law
Enforcement Integrity;
- Commissioner of Complaints,
National Health and Medical Research Council;
- Inspector-General, Department
of Defence; and
- Privacy Commissioner
Recommendation 19
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide that where disclosable conduct concerns a Commonwealth security or
intelligence service, the authorised authorities to receive disclosures are the
Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security and the Commonwealth Ombudsman.
Recommendation 20
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill establish the Commonwealth Ombudsman as the oversight and integrity agency
with the following responsibilities:
- general administration of the
Act under the Minister;
- set standards for the
investigation, reconsideration, review and reporting of public interest
disclosures;
- approve public interest
disclosure procedures proposed by agencies;
- refer public interest
disclosures to other appropriate agencies;
- receive referrals of public
interest disclosures and conduct investigations or reviews where appropriate;
- provide assistance to agencies
in implementing the public interest disclosure system including;
- provide assistance to employees within the public sector in
promoting awareness of the system through educational activities; and
- providing an anonymous and confidential advice line; and
- receive data on the use and
performance of the public interest disclosure system and report to Parliament
on the operation of the system.
8 Disclosures to third
parties
Recommendation 21
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill protect disclosures made to the media where the matter has been disclosed
internally and externally, and has not been acted on in a reasonable time
having regard to the nature of the matter, and the matter threatens immediate
serious harm to public health and safety.
Recommendation 22
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill include Commonwealth Members of Parliament as a category of alternative
authorised recipients of public interest disclosures.
Recommendation 23
The Committee recommends that, if Commonwealth Members of
Parliament become authorised recipients of public interest disclosures, the
Australian Government propose amendments to the Standing Orders of the House of
Representatives and the Senate, advising Members and Senators to exercise care
to avoid saying anything in Parliament about a public interest disclosure which
would lead to the identification of persons who have made public interest
disclosures, which may interfere in an investigation of a public interest
disclosure, or cause unnecessary damage to the reputation of persons before the
investigation of the allegations has been completed.
Recommendation 24
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure Bill
provide that nothing in the Act affects the immunity of proceedings in
Parliament under section 49 of the Constitution and the Parliamentary
Privileges Act 1987.
Recommendation 25
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill protect disclosures made to third parties such as legal advisors,
professional associations and unions where the disclosure is made for the
purpose of seeking advice or assistance.
Recommendation 26
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide authority for the Commonwealth Ombudsman to publish reports of
investigations or other information relating to disclosures (including the
identity of persons against whom allegations are made) where the Ombudsman
considers it is in the public interest to do so.