Report
Terms of Reference
1.1
On 26 June 2014, the Senate referred the following matters to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee (committee) for inquiry
and report by the 7th sitting day in March 2015:
-
progress in implementing the recommendations of the committee's 2012
reports into the performance of the Department of Parliamentary Services (DPS),
with particular reference to:
- workplace culture and employment issues,
- heritage management, building maintenance and asset management issues,
and
- contract management;
- the senior management structure of DPS and arrangements to maintain the
independence of the Parliamentary Librarian;
- oversight arrangements for security in the parliamentary precincts and
security policies;
- progress in consolidating Information and Communication Technology
services and future directions;
- the future of Hansard within DPS;
- the use of Parliament House as a commercial venue;
- further consideration of budget-setting processes for the Parliament and
the merits of distinguishing the operating costs of the parliamentary
institution and such direct support services such as Hansard, Broadcasting and
the Parliamentary Library, from the operations and maintenance of the
parliamentary estate;
- consideration of whether the distinction between the operations of the
parliamentary institution and its direct support services, and the operations
and maintenance of the parliamentary estate, is a more effective and useful
foundation for future administrative support arrangements, taking into account
the need for the Houses to be independent of one another and of the executive
government; and
- any related matters.[1]
Introduction and background
1.2
This is the second interim report of the committee for this inquiry. This
report discusses only one issue, whether the committee was misled at its
estimates hearing on 26 May 2014 by the evidence given by Ms Carol
Mills, former Secretary of the Department of Parliamentary Services (DPS).
1.3
In its first interim report the committee discussed the Senate Committee
of Privileges' (Privileges Committee) 160th report on 'The use of CCTV material
in Parliament House'.
1.4
The Privileges Committee inquired into a code of conduct investigation
commenced by DPS in February 2014. In the course of that investigation, DPS had
accessed CCTV images of a DPS employee placing an envelope under the door of
Senator Faulkner's office at Parliament House. The Privileges Committee sought
to determine, in relation to the use of the CCTV footage by officers of DPS for
internal investigations involving DPS staff:
- whether there was any improper interference, or attempted improper
interference, with the free performance by Senator Faulkner or any other
senator of their duties as a senator;
- whether disciplinary action was taken against any person in connection
with the provision of information to Senator Faulkner or any other senator; and
- if so, whether any contempts were committed in respect of those matters.[2]
1.5
In its report the Privileges Committee recommended that the committee's
attention be drawn to contradictions between:
-
evidence provided to the committee during the course of estimates
hearings for DPS on 26 May 2014; and
-
a submission and additional documents provided by DPS to the Privileges
Committee during the course of its inquiry into the use of CCTV material in
Parliament House.[3]
1.6
The committee decided to consider the matter of the contradictory
evidence identified by the Privileges Committee as part of its broader inquiry
into DPS. The committee's first interim report set out:
-
the material provided to the Privileges Committee by DPS in its
submission and additional documents;
-
correspondence from Ms Mills received 20 February 2015,
seeking to explain the contradictory evidence; and
-
correspondence from the Clerk of the Senate,
Dr Rosemary Laing, received 17 March 2015, outlining her
recollection of a meeting with Ms Mills on the morning of 26 May 2014,
prior to Ms Mills' appearance before the committee that morning.
1.7
The committee initially planned to discuss the issue of the
contradictory evidence with Ms Mills at the hearing on
16 March 2015 but was advised she was on leave. The committee proceeded
with the hearing on 16 March 2015 but covered other matters in the DPS inquiry
with the intention of having Ms Mills appear before the committee once she had
returned from leave. In its first interim report, which was tabled following
the termination of Ms Mills' employment with DPS on 21 April 2015, the
committee indicated that it still had a number of questions for Ms Mills
regarding the contradictory evidence. The committee resolved to invite Ms Mills
to attend a hearing on 13 May 2015 in a private capacity and she accepted this
invitation.
1.8
The committee has spent considerable time examining this issue and does
not intend to make further inquiries in relation to this matter. The committee
has therefore decided to table a second interim report dealing only with this
issue. As the committee noted in its first interim report, the focus in the
remainder of this inquiry into the performance of DPS is to look more broadly
at the role, functions and structure of DPS within the current framework.
Investigation into the code of conduct matter
1.9
On 25 February 2014, the Secretary of DPS approved a preliminary
investigation into whether a DPS employee (Employee X) had breached the
Parliamentary Services Code.[4]
The brief requesting the Secretary's approval for the preliminary investigation
outlined the background to the matter, namely that a second DPS employee
(Employee A) had received a typed anonymous note in her in-tray on the morning
of 19 February 2014:
The note was clearly designed to cause [Employee A] distress.
...
On 20 February it was established that [Employee X] had been
absent from the workplace on 19 February but had entered Parliament House at
9.31 PM on the evening of 18 February and exited at 9.40 PM. Security camera
footage shows [Employee X] entering through the Senate security area with
several pieces of paper in her hand. There are a number of camera views that
show her proceedings to the area outside the entrance to Hansard [where
Employee A works] and then leaving the vicinity of Hansard via the lift and
then the first floor...
[Employee X's] only movements within Parliament House were to
proceed from the Senate security entrance to the vicinity of Hansard
(immediately outside the entrance door) and then exit the building.[5]
1.10
In addition to asking the Secretary for approval of the preliminary code
of conduct investigation the brief sought approval for:
[T]he release of information from Security Support such as
entry and exit times for [Employee X] and also the release of still photographs
from security cameras that depict [Employee X's] movements within Parliament
House between 9.31 PM and 9.40 PM on 18 February 2014.[6]
1.11
On 27 February 2014, Ms Mills was sent an email by the officer conducting
the preliminary investigation:
Through investigating additional footage of [Employee X's]
movements, DPS footage has also shown that [Employee X] deposited a brown
envelope under the door of Senator Faulkner's office before [DPS'] Senate
Estimates Hearing...
Noting that we have previously discussed the issue of DPS
employees being in a privileged position by working in Parliament House and
having 'direct' contact with Parliamentarians, as well as noting that some
Hansard editors this week may also have been distributing material...I wanted to
draw this substantial evidence to your attention.
Your direction in how you wished us to manage this matter would
be appreciated – noting its broader context in how DPS employees interact with
Members of Parliament.[7]
1.12
Ms Mills responded to this email on the same day stating:
You may be aware that contact by individuals with
parliamentarians is not something that we monitor in order to provide privacy
to them in the conduct of their business.[8]
1.13
This response from Ms Mills prompted the following email from the
officer:
Please be assured that we were not monitoring DPS employees
visiting any particular parliamentarian.
As part of our preliminary investigation into another matter
regarding the anonymous letter provided to [Employee A], [Employee X's]
movements in and out of the building were examined and this other bit of
footage came to light.[9]
1.14
Ms Mills then responds:
[Y]es I well understand how it occurred.[10]
1.15
On 12 March 2014, Ms Mills signed a second brief
approving a formal investigation into whether 'on the balance of probabilities'
Employee X has breached the Parliamentary Service Code of Conduct by
leaving the note addressed to Employee A.[11]
The 12 March 2014 brief reiterates the background to the matter and notes
that Employee X had been asked to provided information regarding her reasons
for being in Parliament House on the evening of 18 February 2014. The
brief states that while Employee X has provided some information about why
she was in Parliament House that night:
There are [a] number of remaining issues that require
clarification and the questions that need to be put to [Employee X] are more
appropriate for a formal investigative process rather than a preliminary [one].
In addition to the questions originally put to [Employee X]
it is now apparent that at some stage between her entry to the building and her
walking along the first floor Senate wing corridor (heading south) that she
acquired a brown envelope. Given that [Employee X] did not enter the building
with the envelope nor obtain the envelope from [her work area] as she did not
enter her work area, one of the possibilities is that it was obtained from Hansard.
From mapping out the route taken by [Employee X] on the evening of 18
February, Hansard would appear to have been the only unlocked work area to
which she could have gained entry.
A selection of still photographs from the security camera
footage are attached for your information.[12]
1.16
On 19 March 2014, Ms Mills also signed a letter appointing an
investigating officer to determine whether Employee X had breached the
Parliamentary Service Code of Conduct.[13]
Evidence provided at the Estimates hearing on 26 May 2014
Department of the Senate
1.17
On the morning of 26 May 2014, Senator Faulkner questioned officers of
the Department of the Senate on the CCTV code of practice for Parliament House.
For the most part, these were questions of a general nature about the operation
of the CCTV code of practice.[14]
1.18
However, towards the end of his questions, Senator Faulkner referred to
a line of questioning that he and Senator Ronaldson had previously pursued with
the Department of the Senate and DPS in February 2012. That questioning related
to a newspaper report that security cameras in Parliament House were being used
to identify whistle-blowers leaking information to Senator Faulkner.[15]
Senator Faulkner asked the Clerk of the Senate specific questions about advice
she may have provided regarding the parliamentary privilege implications of the
use of CCTV footage in Parliament House.[16]
The Clerk stated:
[T]here are, in relation to CCTV footage, obviously very
serious privacy concerns. But there is also the question in Parliament House of
the freedom of senators and members to go about their business without improper
interference. Any act or conduct, be it actions, words or what have you, is
capable of being dealt with as a contempt if it constitutes an improper
interference with the free performance of a member or senator's duties. That is
the threshold test for contempt in the Parliamentary Privileges Act, in section
4. So it really depends on the circumstances of the case—what kinds of conduct
may well be seen as possibly interfering with that freedom of senators and
members to go about their functions.[17]
1.19
At the end of his questioning, Senator Faulkner indicated to the
President of the Senate 'I might follow some of these matters up when we deal
with the Department of Parliamentary Services'.[18]
Department of Parliamentary
Services
1.20
Shortly after DPS commenced its appearance at 11.17am on
26 May 2014, Senator Faulkner, as he had foreshadowed, began with
questions about the CCTV code of practice.[19]
In particular, Senator Faulkner sought information on who, within DPS, could
access CCTV footage:
Senator FAULKNER: So access to the CCTV footage, in
terms of DPS staff, is very limited, isn't it?
Ms Mills: Yes, it is.
Senator FAULKNER: Can you say who it is limited to,
please?
Ms Mills: Depending on the circumstances, it is
limited to a very small number of people from the security branch, who will do
the original accessing of the information, then, depending on the nature and
the purpose for it, it will be restricted only to officers who have an
essential need to view that footage, and that will vary according to the
situation.
Senator FAULKNER: But they also have to have a
security clearance, don't they?
Ms Mills: Under normal circumstances, yes. I am
unaware if there are any exceptions to that.[20]
1.21
In the course of this particular line of questioning, Ms Mills
indicated that DPS may have breached the CCTV code of practice:
Senator FAULKNER: What level of security clearance do
they have to have?
Ms Mills: They would have to have at least a Neg Vet 1
or 2.
Senator FAULKNER: So—
Ms Mills: Senator, I might assist this, because I did
see you this morning and I have looked into the matter. It would appear to me
from investigations this morning that it is possible DPS has breached the code
in investigating a case to do with a staff member. It may not be that issue. I
was unaware of the circumstances, but I did view your questions this morning.
What I can say is that—in looking very rapidly at that situation—it would
appear that in dealing appropriately with what were the guidelines for criteria
for viewing footage, that I believe that was done in good faith. I believe that
some additional information came forward in the course of the review that led
to what appears to be a breach of the principles, which I will look into this
afternoon.[21]
1.22
It is clear to the committee from this exchange that it is Ms Mills who
has raised the prospect that DPS may have breached the CCTV code of practice in
the course of investigating a matter to do with a staff member. In fact, Senator
Faulkner responds to Ms Mills' revelation stating 'That is not a question I
have asked yet...'.[22]
1.23
Senator Faulkner goes on to express concern about the information that
had just been disclosed and seeks further information on the matter from Ms Mills about DPS' use of CCTV footage:
Senator FAULKNER:...I want to know whether CCTV footage
in this building has been used to monitor DPS staff?
Ms Mills: Not to monitor DPS staff, no. To gather
evidence in a potential code of conduct case around an individual, yes. The
notion of monitoring staff would infer a broad-brushed approach to following
our staff. That is certainly not the case. An incident occurred some months ago
where a potential code of conduct breach had occurred, and, reading [the guidelines],
it was the view of the department's senior legal and security area that a
potential access to CCTV to assist in understanding that code of conduct issue
was not in conflict and was in fact supported by the policy.[23]
1.24 In this exchange Ms Mills puts a specific timeframe on the
particular investigation which she has raised stating '[an] incident occurred
some months ago'. Further, Ms Mills also notes that the case arose 'where a
potential code of conduct breach occurred'.
1.25
It is at this point in her evidence that Ms Mills claims that she
had only just found out about the matter that morning having watched the
questioning of the Department of the Senate:
Senator FAULKNER: You have only just found that out
this morning?
Ms Mills: Yes.
Senator FAULKNER: Because I asked questions of the
Department of the Senate?
Ms Mills: Yes.[24]
1.26
Senator Faulkner indicated that he had not asked the Department of the
Senate about the particular matter, to which Ms Mills responded:
Ms Mills: You asked a number of questions. I always
prepare when I watch you—as there may be issues where we might have that follow
on. You did make reference on a couple of occasions that you would ask similar
questions of the Department of Parliamentary Services.
Senator FAULKNER: Yes, but I was talking about the use
of CCTV footage. You are now saying that CCTV footage has been inappropriately
used by the Department of Parliamentary Services in some form—I do not know and
I do not intend to ask, because I do not intend to breach the privacy of an
individual or individuals, who are either employees or former employees—I do
not know their status—of DPS. But this is a very serious problem. We now hear
that DPS has not acted in accordance with its own code of practice.
Ms Mills: Having seen your questions this morning, I
asked to be reassured that all members were acting in accordance with the
current policy, and that there had been no changes to the policy. These are
questions you asked this morning—
Senator FAULKNER: Yes.
Ms Mills: And I wished to have that verified. I also
asked if there had been any situations where we had used CCTV that might be
relevant to my investigation, and I found in that preliminary advice that we
have used it once recently and, in that activity, may have inadvertently
breached that. I am being up-front with the committee that we may have made an
error, and I am being up-front with the committee that I am confident it was an
isolated issue, and I am being up-front with the committee that no-one would
have willingly, or deliberately, breached any of these things, but it appears
it may have happened, and I will look into it later today.[25]
1.27 Ms Mills then advised the committee that, to her knowledge, CCTV had
only been used once in relation to staff matters:
Senator FAULKNER: Well, I will look into it now. How
often has CCTV footage been used in relation to staff matters, disciplinary or
otherwise?
Ms Mills: I cannot answer. I would have to take that
on notice. I am aware myself of one instance, the one I have just spoken of.
Senator FAULKNER: You have spoken about one. I want to
know if there are other instances. This is very serious.
Ms Mills: There are none to my knowledge.
Senator FAULKNER: So you can assure me there are no
other instances?
Ms Mills: I can assure you that there are none to my
knowledge, but I would have to look back over the records to see if there had
been other instances.[26]
1.28 Mr Neil Skill, the First Assistant Secretary of the Building and Asset
Division, DPS, also advised he was only aware of one case:
To my knowledge, there is only the one case, although it
would have been approved at the branch-head level and not necessarily the
division-head level, which is the level I am at. We will be watching this now
and I am sure we will have some information for you shortly, if there were any
other cases. But it is a very rare occurrence. As Ms Mills said there is only
one that we are aware of.[27]
1.29 When Senator Faulkner sought to establish whether there could be more
than one incident, Ms Mills stated that DPS
were looking into the matter further.[28] Subsequently, it was confirmed that CCTV footage had been
accessed on two other occasions for non-code of conduct matters, specifically,
allegedly inappropriate conduct by a guard and a fraud incident.[29]
1.30
Senator Faulkner also asked whether a senator was involved:
Senator FAULKNER: But I am asking whether a senator is
involved—whether a senator has been spied on.
Ms Mills: No-one is being spied on.
Senator FAULKNER: Is a senator or a senator's office
involved in this surveillance?
Ms Mills: An individual staff member of the Department
of Parliamentary Services was involved in the surveillance. The only reason that
permission was given was because of a potential code of conduct breach by a
staff member of the department. We are within our rights to do that.
Senator FAULKNER: No, you are not within your rights
to do that at all. It is not allowed for under the code of practice.
...
Ms Mills:...I am confident in saying that at no point in
the approval given by the former assistant secretary to release this footage
was there any belief that it would have anything to do with either a senator or
a member. It was made in good faith that it was about the behaviour of an
individual within DPS's own office space.[30]
1.31
The committee notes again, that in the course of this exchange,
Ms Mills refers to 'a potential code of conduct breach by a staff member
of the department'.
1.32
Senator Faulkner subsequently returned to questioning about the
involvement with senators or their offices:
Senator FAULKNER: I come back to the question I asked
before about the functions and performance of parliamentarians in the course of
their duties and responsibilities. I want to now ask why you made the comment
you did before about the possibility that at least one parliamentarian—is it
one parliamentarian or more than one?—may have been affected in the performance
of their duties, and that this has just come to your attention.
Ms Mills: What came to my attention this morning was
that, as I saw you ask a number of questions about the policy, you asked a
number of questions of the Department of the Senate and intimated that you
would also ask similar questions of the Department of Parliamentary Services.
I, therefore, in preparation, went to reassure myself that the answers that had
been given to you by the Usher of the Black Rod were correct—that, in fact, we
had not varied at all from the policy and we had not yet scheduled a change. I
also asked if there had been any use of the policy in recent times around any
decision and I was at that time advised that it had been used on this occasion
for this one incident to do with the code of conduct for a staff member. I then
asked for further information about that, which led me to come forward and say
to you that, in making those inquiries, I feel there may have been an
inadvertent and ancillary breach of the statement of purpose in undertaking
what was an appropriately constituted approval to look at a code of conduct
issue under category (e) of the policy.
Senator FAULKNER: Why do you say there may have been?
Ms Mills: Because the information that was provided to
me suggested that some of the CCTV footage may have captured that person doing
other activities in the building besides the one for which the CCTV footage was
released.
Senator FAULKNER: What does that mean?
Ms Mills: Because the matter is still under
investigation, I would prefer not to provide details at this time. However, I
am happy to provide you details in private discussion.
Senator FAULKNER: All right. Does it involve me? Does
it involve people providing information to me?
Ms Mills: It may do.
Senator FAULKNER: It may do? Does it involve a person
or people—an individual or individuals—providing information to me as I go
about my work as a senator in this parliament?
Ms Mills: That is what I am looking into. That is the
issue that was brought to my attention today, and I am looking into it.[31]
1.33
Once again, in this exchange, the committee notes that Ms Mills refers
to 'this one incident to do with the code of conduct for a staff member'.
1.34
Later in the hearing, following the lunch break, the committee returned
to this topic and specifically to the draft investigation report. Prior to that
report being read out, Ms Mills provided the following explanation of the
context of the report:
There was an allegation about the behaviour of a staff
member. A staff member was identified through security records as having
attended the building in unusual hours. They were asked for their reason for
being in the building. They gave a particular rationale. That was looked at on
CCTV. It did not accord with the advice that person gave. A second interview
was conducted. They gave new advice, and that is the basis, really, of [the
draft investigation report].[32]
1.35
Senator Faulkner asked for any paragraphs of that draft report which
related to a senator's office or a senator – namely, himself – to be quoted:
Ms Teece: In response to the allegation, the person
that is subject to the code [Employee X] said:
I also had some personal business with the senator and
left documents at the senator's office. Should you wish to confirm this by
contacting the senator, please advise and I will seek approval from the senator
to provide their name.
In relation to the section under consideration of the
available evidence: 'She contends that the reasons for her attendance at
this time were to both drop off work related papers to her normal work location
and to conduct some personal business with the senator.
Senator FAULKNER: What I have been trying to do here
is clearly—I mean, I may as well be speaking Swahili. I am interested only in
the elements that I have outlined.
Ms Teece: Yes.
Senator FAULKNER: In other words, that relate to the
parliamentarian. In this case it appears to be me.
Ms Teece: It just says to conduct some personal
business with the senator.
Senator FAULKNER: Okay. I think you just used the term
'collection of evidence'—that is what I am interested in, the use of CCTV
footage. I must have said this six times.
CHAIR: You have been very clear, Senator Faulkner.
Ms Teece: Consideration of available evidence:
The photos and security camera footage reveal that—
[Employee X]—
did not attempt to enter her normal work location, which
was the other stated intention of her attendance. The relevance of the photos
is that they demonstrate there was no need for access to the areas of
Parliament House that she did if the sole purpose of her trip was ultimately to
deposit material which could only relate to personal business under the door of
suite 42 on the outer corridor.[33]
1.36
Senator Faulkner indicated that suite 42 of the outer corridor was his
office. Senator Faulkner then asked that any further paragraphs in relation to
suite 42 be read out:
Senator FAULKNER: ...Is suite 42 mentioned in evidence?
Ms Teece: Yes, Senator.
Senator FAULKNER: How many times, please?
Ms Teece: Once. It says: 'The route taken after
entering through Senate security checkpoint was determined as being on the
Senate side of the parliament as follows.' Then it goes through a number of
dot points and then: 'place an envelope under the door of suite 42 on the
Senate side of Parliament House'.
...
Senator FAULKNER: Before we go to that—you can confirm
that is the only place that is mentioned in evidence collected? You just told
us that.
Ms Teece: Yes, that is correct.
Senator FAULKNER: Just that occasion.
Ms Teece: That is correct.
Senator FAULKNER: Just repeat those words, please:
place an envelope—
Ms Teece: 'Place an envelope under the door of
suite 42 on the Senate side of Parliament House.'[34]
1.37
During that afternoon session on 26 May 2014, Ms Mills reiterated that
she was not aware of the draft code of conduct report and that she had not read
that report.[35]
Evidence provided on 13 May 2015
1.38
At the hearing on 13 May 2015, Ms Mills repeated the
claims that she made in her letter of 20 February 2015. Ms Mills stated:
At the time I gave the evidence [on 26 May 2014], there was
no reason for me to connect Senator Faulkner's line of questioning with the
disciplinary inquiry set in train in DPS in [February] 2014. It was a code of
conduct investigation into harassment by a department staff member of a
colleague. It was unrelated to the line of questioning that I believed was
being followed at the time.[36]
1.39
Ms Mills set out the context of her appearance before the committee for
the estimates hearing on 26 May 2014:
On the morning of 26 May 2014 during the estimates hearing,
Senator Faulkner asked the Department of the Senate a series of broad questions
relating to CCTV operating policy. He indicated he would take up the same issue
with DPS later in the day. At that point, the senator's questions did not touch
on any particular matter but related to the CCTV code of conduct in general
terms. In order to be prepared for my own appearance before the estimates
hearing, I sought to establish what the senator's line of questioning might
relate to. But in the brief time I had available before my initial appearance,
I was unable to ascertain this. There was nothing in his line of questioning in
the morning that could reasonably suggest I should have been able to make a
link between that and the internal disciplinary matter that I had knowledge of
from the department earlier in the year.[37]
1.40
Ms Mills further explained:
I was aware that in the course of that disciplinary
investigation into harassment CCTV footage had been inspected by authorised
officers. They had done this only for the purpose of confirming the employee's
entry into, exit from and movement within Parliament House on the evening in
question. When the officers unexpectedly observed the staff member making
contact with a senator's office, they drew this to my attention. As the
department's evidence to Privileges showed, I instructed those officers
specifically that this was to be excluded from any element of the
investigation, stating 'contact with the parliamentarians is not something we
monitor'.[38]
1.41
Ms Mills stated that to her knowledge, at the time of her appearance
before the committee on 26 May 2014, her instruction that 'contact
with parliamentarians is not something we monitor' had been followed and there
was no reason for her to link the investigation of the harassment to anything
to do with Senator Faulkner's questioning to the Department of the Senate at
the estimates hearing.[39]
1.42
Ms Mills also referred to the meeting she had with the Clerk of the
Senate on the morning of 26 May 2014:
The Clerk advised me that Senator Faulkner was in possession
of a report relating to the disciplining of an officer for having contact with
a senator's office. The Clerk advised me she had seen the report. It was a
misuse of CCTV and, in her view, a breach of privilege. The Clerk did not
inform me when the report had been produced, who authored it, how old the
matter was or to whom it related. Therefore, nothing she told me caused me to
connect it to the harassment investigation underway in the department. Frankly,
had I connected it, there was no reason for me to then not have made reference
to it that morning. There was no motive for me whatsoever not to have directly
referenced it if I had been aware of it.[40]
1.43
Ms Mills explained why she did not make further inquiries into the
matter prior to appearing at the estimates hearing:
While it would have been my normal practice to fully
investigate details of such claims on the day, all I had time to do before my
own appearance [at the estimates hearing] was to go back to my office very
briefly, instruct staff to thoroughly search DPS records for any case or report
as described by the Clerk or otherwise involving CCTV. Again, I did this
because I was unaware of the report specifically and wanted to gather as much
information as I could on the day.[41]
1.44
Ms Mills noted that the Clerk had advised that 'as soon as the senator
began to ask questions about CCTV policy, I should inform him that I had just
been made aware of the report in his possession, inform him that the department
had breached privilege and apologise'.[42]
Ms Mills stated that she had been reluctant to take such advice:
Having not seen the report or been aware of any such report
or of any employee being disciplined for contact with a senator's office, I was
uncomfortable about acknowledging a breach without being fully aware of the
circumstances and being able to verify myself if a breach had occurred. The
Hansard record shows that, to some extent, I did follow the Clerk's advice: I
did not admit a breach.[43]
1.45
Ms Mills stated that, on the morning of 26 May 2014, she had not been
able to make the connection between the code of conduct investigation she
authorised in February 2014 and the matter which subsequently was referred to
the Privileges Committee:
There remained no reason why I would connect Senator
Faulkner's line of questioning in May [2014] with a disciplinary inquiry set in
train in DPS in [February] 2014, because that had no relation to the officer's
contact with a senator. It was a code of conduct investigation into alleged
harassment. Equally, there was no reason for me to identify this unfinished
code of conduct investigation when I spoke with the Clerk, from what she
described to me. I did not and could not have known that the CCTV footage
referred to in my email of 27 February was the same footage referred to by
Senator Faulkner in his questions.
As a decision maker in the code of conduct process, I was
properly kept removed from that investigation. So between 27 February and
26 May 2014 I was not advised of its progress. I was therefore
unaware that a draft report had been written or provided for comment to the
staff member under investigation as part of the standard code of conduct
process. Given that I had specifically instructed officers that footage showing
contact with a senator's office was to be excluded from the investigation and
had understood that that instruction had been followed, once again there was no
reason for me to link this harassment investigation to Senator Faulkner's
questioning at the time.[44]
1.46
Ms Mills was emphatic that she had not misled the committee:
My answers to the committee last May were given in good
faith. To reiterate: I did not know at the time I gave the evidence that has
been challenged by the Privileges Committee what investigation was being
referred to or what CCTV footage was at issue. So when Senator Faulkner asked,
'Does it involve me?' I answered in good faith: 'It may do ... That is what I am
looking into.' This was true. [These are] the instructions I had given my
staff. I simply did not know when I gave that answer what footage or issue was
being spoken of. It was not until the lunch adjournment on 26 May [2014]
that, following my staff's search, I was provided with a copy of and briefly
reviewed the investigator's draft code of conduct report into the harassment
matter. That was the first time I had seen what was actually a draft—not a
finalised report—into the internal matter, and it turned out to be the report
in the possession of Senator Faulkner.
My evidence to the committee was given in good faith and it
was entirely accurate from the information available to me at the time. I had
not previously seen the report, nor was I aware of its existence. Having
received the information, however, as the Hansard record makes clear,
after the luncheon break [of the estimates hearing] I spoke openly about the
report with the assistance of the Acting Chief Operating Officer of the
department and continued to answer Senator Faulkner's questions in good faith.
To reiterate: Senator Faulkner's questions about CCTV usage [for] monitoring
staff and contact with officers of the department was inconsistent with my
understanding of the harassment investigation underway and I had no reason to
draw a link and, therefore, the [information] that I provided to committee was,
to the best of my knowledge, neither misleading nor contradictory.[45]
Committee view
1.47
The committee wishes to emphasise that Ms Mills accepted the committee's
invitation to appear on 13 May 2015 in a private capacity to discuss
the contradictory evidence and acknowledges Ms Mills' willingness to assist the
committee in relation to this matter.
1.48
Ms Mills continues to stridently deny that she has misled the
committee. Ms Mills maintains there is no reason she should have been able
to connect the questioning by Senator Faulkner of the Department of the Senate
regarding the use of CCTV in Parliament House, with a specific code of conduct
investigation where CCTV footage was accessed and which became the subject of
the Privileges Committee inquiry.
1.49
The committee notes that Ms Mills' evidence on 13 May 2015 was that
between 27 February and 26 May 2014 she was not advised of the progress of the
code of conduct investigation. This is clearly not true. On 12 March 2014
Ms Mills received a brief seeking approval for a formal code of conduct
investigation. That brief set out the background to the matter and referred to
footage which had been used to track the employee's path through Parliament
House on the evening of 18 February 2014. Ms Mills also signed a
letter on 19 March 2014 appointing an investigating officer to the
code of conduct investigation and that letter also contained background details
on the events which were the subject of the investigation.
1.50
This material was in addition to the 25 February 2014 brief
which not only set out the background to the matter, but also sought approval
for the release of additional still photographs depicting the employee's
movements in Parliament House on 18 February 2014. Further, Ms Mills
received an email on 27 February 2014 advising her that further
footage of the employee's visit to Parliament House on 18 February had been
located. Not only did that email refer to the footage of the employee placing a
brown envelope under Senator Faulkner's door, it raised broader concerns about
the interaction of DPS staff with parliamentarians.
1.51
Given the details of the investigation which were provided to
Ms Mills in the two briefs, the email of 27 February 2014, and
the letter which Ms Mills signed on 19 March 2014, the committee finds it
difficult to believe that Ms Mills could have entirely forgotten about this
matter when she heard Senator Faulkner's questions to the Department of the
Senate on 26 May 2014.
1.52
Ms Mills also claims that she was not able to connect Senator Faulkner's
questioning with the code of conduct investigation because the investigation
was into a matter of harassment of one DPS employee by another, and not an
investigation into interference with a senator or member. Further, Ms Mills
claims that the meeting she had with Clerk of the Senate on 26 May 2014
did not assist her to make the connection because the Clerk had spoken of a report
about disciplining a DPS staff member for contact with a senator's office.[46]
1.53
The committee does not accept Ms Mills' assertion that because of the
nature of Senator Faulkner's questions and the Clerk's characterisation of the
matter, being about investigations into contact between DPS staff and
parliamentarians, she was unable to make the connection with the code of
conduct investigation into a possible case of harassment by one DPS staff
member of another staff member.
1.54
In the committee's view, the evidence that Ms Mills gave on the
morning of 26 May 2014, regardless of Senator Faulkner's previous
questions or the exchange which Ms Mills had with the Clerk, suggests that
she was, in fact, discussing a code of conduct investigation of a DPS staff
member which had occurred some months ago. On a number of occasions on the
morning of 26 May 2014, as the committee has noted, Ms Mills referred to the
matter as a code of conduct investigation.
1.55
Even if Ms Mills was not able to recall the specific details of the
investigation, according to the evidence of Ms Mills and Mr Skill on
26 May 2014, this was the only code of conduct investigation involving that use
of CCTV footage and one of a total of only three staff related matters where
CCTV footage had been accessed by DPS. Given the limited number of such
investigations the committee simply cannot believe that Ms Mills did not make
the connection.
1.56
The committee accepts Ms Mills' statements that, prior to giving
evidence on the 26 May 2014, she was unaware of the existence of the
draft report which resulted from the code of conduct investigation. Further, the
committee notes that Ms Mills had explicitly instructed staff on
27 February 2014 that 'contact by individuals with parliamentarians
is not something we monitor...'.[47]
1.57
However, despite this instruction, the brief of 12 March 2014
seeking approval for a formal code of conduct investigation still makes
reference to the employee carrying a brown envelope and walking along the outer
corridor of the first floor of the Senate wing. While the brief does not make
any mention of the envelope being placed under Senator Faulkner's door, it
would appear that the code of conduct investigation was still making some
reference to the additional CCTV footage which was drawn to Ms Mills' attention
on 27 February 2014.
1.58
While the committee accepts that Ms Mills may not have been aware of the
existence of the draft code of conduct report, having heard Ms Teece read from
the draft report on the afternoon of 26 May 2014, the committee finds it
implausible that Ms Mills would not have made the connection between the
matter being discussed with the committee that day and the preliminary and
formal code of conduct investigations which she authorised over the period
February-March 2014.
1.59
Having considered Ms Mills' correspondence of 20 February 2015 and evidence
of 13 May 2015, the committee still cannot reconcile those explanations with
the evidence Ms Mills provided to the committee on the 26 May 2014.
1.60
Specifically, Ms Mills has omitted to clarify to the committee, either
on 26 May 2014 or at any subsequent point, that she in fact authorised the
preliminary and formal code of conduct investigations on 25 February 2014 and
12 March 2014 respectively. In omitting to tell the committee of this
information, the overall impression of the evidence that Ms Mills provided in
relation to the code of conduct investigation is that she only became aware of
it on the morning of 26 May 2014. Clearly this is not the case. The committee
therefore cannot come to any other conclusion than it was misled by Ms Mills at
the estimates hearing on 26 May 2014.
1.61
The committee believes that Ms Mills' misleading evidence has had a
substantive impact on the committee's work. As the committee noted in its first
interim report Ms Mills' failure, to that point, to explain the contradictory
evidence identified by the Privileges Committee was one factor in Ms Mills'
standing as a witness being seriously eroded. For nearly a year, the committee
has been engaged in its inquiry into DPS. For a significant period of that time
the committee has had concerns over the veracity of evidence provided by Ms
Mills, not only in relation to the CCTV matter, but also other matters. There
can be no doubt that the committee's concerns as to Ms Mills' credibility
as a witness has, to some degree, hampered the committee in its work.
1.62
However, while the committee is of the view it has been misled and that
the committee's work has been affected, the committee also acknowledges that Ms
Mills' employment with DPS has now been terminated. As indicated in the
committee's interim report, the committee's focus will now be looking more
broadly at the role, functions and structure of DPS.
1.63
The committee believes it has now pursued this matter as far as
practicable and reports accordingly to the Senate.
Senator Cory Bernardi
Chair
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