Issues raised with the committee in Rockhampton
2.1
This chapter summarises the main issues raised during the committee's
hearing in Rockhampton. It considers the current level of local business
engagement with Defence and future opportunities; the challenges facing local
business, including Indigenous organisations; mechanisms to enhance engagement;
communication by Defence about exercises and the proposed expansion of training
areas and land acquisition; and the environmental impacts of Defence activities.
Facilitating opportunities for regional and local business
Utilising the skills in the region
2.2
The committee heard from a range of Rockhampton businesses on their
engagement with Defence. Mr Zane Keleher, an Engineering Specialist at Penti-M
Engineering in Rockhampton, advised the committee that while the company had
been in business for 28 years and is close to the army barracks and Shoalwater
Bay Training Area (SBTA), it has had very minimal engagement with Defence.
Mr Keleher explained that the company was interested in taking advantage
of any regional opportunities for engagement with Defence but noted that it has
been challenging to understand the processes and find appropriate contacts.[1]
2.3
Similarly, Mr Christopher Goodwin, General Manager of SMW Group, which
provides a variety of engineering services, advised the committee that they
have not had a lot of exposure to Defence but are interested in getting
involved in supply.[2]
2.4
Mr Andrew Godwyn, Senior Logistics Manager, Primary Industries QLD Pty Ltd,
advised the committee of the company's long-standing association with the
Singapore Army over the last 16 years for the supply of logistical support
while based in Rockhampton. This support includes maintenance and repairs to
vehicles, equipment supply, food supply, transport, electrical supply and
shipping. The committee heard that Primary Industries QLD Pty Ltd is a local
company which currently employs 24 people and expands to 70 staff during the
operational periods, particularly Exercise Wallaby.[3]
However, this company has only engaged in what it described as a 'very, very
small amount' of work with the Australian Army.[4]
2.5
The committee was interested to obtain more detail on why Primary
Industries QLD Pty Ltd has been able to engage and foster a long standing
contractual arrangement with the Singapore Army but has not been as successful
in developing similar opportunities with the Australian Defence Force (ADF).
However, as the initial contract was let in 1999 the detail was not available,
but it was noted that when Primary Industries QLD Pty Ltd took over the
contract the Singapore base was already established in Rockhampton and it was
suggested that there would have been some personal interaction at that stage.
It was also noted that the Singapore army has permanent staff based in
Rockhampton and that 'they get to know most of the council people, the airport
people and everybody else that they deal with.'[5]
2.6
Councillor Margaret Strelow, Mayor, Rockhampton Regional Council,
advised that she felt there needed to be more up to date information available
on the social and economic benefits of the Defence presence in the Rockhampton
region; however, she suggested some examples of successful engagement. Her view
is that local businesses were engaging more successfully with Singapore Defence
than with the Australian Defence Force:
Obviously there are a couple of companies here who do continue
to provide. There is Rocky's Own, who are a local transport company, and they
have been very effective. Once again, they are probably more visible with
Singapore than they are with Australian Defence. And Flexihire do provide
facilities.[6]
2.7
Mr Michael Colen, Manager Executive Services, Gladstone Regional
Council, was unable to point to any successful examples of local suppliers
building relationships with Defence and securing opportunities.[7]
Challenges for local business
2.8
The three companies the committee heard from all reported challenges in
engaging with, and attaining information from, Defence on procurement
opportunities. None of the companies were aware of any processes where Defence
had engaged with the local small business community to provide awareness of the
capacity they required and related opportunities.[8]
2.9
Mr [Goodwin] advised that he has sought to engage with Defence to seek
out opportunities in the region and explained his frustration in obtaining
information:
We are registered with AusTender, QTenders et cetera and we
participate with the ICN Gateway. As an example of where we found it extremely
difficult to try and understand what the Defence requirement is, we've recently
taken on a dealership for a brand of equipment which we know Defence has. We've
tried to contact Defence in several ways to see what their requirements are,
how we can assess what we can offer so whenever Defence equipment comes through
this area, we can actually support it.
I was referred to the Joint Logistics Unit up in
Townsville—Ross Island—who I was told control all of the spending in this area.
I tried about five or six different phone calls, but I could never get the same
person or find anyone who I could talk to about what would happen here in the
Shoalwater Bay region. I even reverted to Facebook: they had a Facebook page,
and I left a Facebook message. Unfortunately, I haven't had any response at
all—not that I expected a response from Facebook, but that is what we had to
revert to.[9]
2.10
Mr Ben Hughes of Hughes et al, a business providing tailored local
content advice, services and products to all tiers of business, advised the
committee that from his experience the biggest challenge for local engagement
is the lack of coherent information and an understanding of the status of the
project cycle:
That is a responsibility of the project itself to ensure that
communication is clear and transparent, and that often presents the largest
barrier to locals participating.[10]
2.11
Mr Hughes also talked about the importance of the procurement cycle
aligning with the market requirements to enable local providers to be ready to
and have appropriate pre-qualifications in place to participate and be 'tender
ready' and provide relevant information within the required timeframe.[11]
Mr Hughes emphasised the importance that Defence:
... get out into the marketplace with clear communication
around standards, expectations and timings of procurement packages and when
they would be coming available is the first major point I would make. The
second one is to ensure that their policies and their processes cascade down
through their supply chain. And what I mean by that is that it is all well and
good for the proponent—being Defence, or their main contractors—to go to
market, but they have to ensure that their second-, third- and fourth-tier contractors
have the ability to go to market as well.[12]
2.12
Mr Hughes emphasised the importance of Defence's role in developing
supplier capability in regional areas by providing feedback to businesses:
...it is incumbent on a major project to go shopping in the
local region but they do not necessarily have to buy in the local region if
that local region does not have the capability, capacity and attractiveness to
meet the commercial requirements, but they should go shopping. That shopping
exercise should result in feedback from the major project to those small
businesses that is not just a 'congratulations, you are successful and we are
going to put you through to a tender process' but more important for the vast
majority is giving the feedback to the organisations on why they did not meet
that standard and then use that information in partnership, for example, with
State Development, which is something we are doing with one of my clients at
the present moment, to seed intelligence into that supplier development
profile. The supplier may not be capable enough to deliver on Defence, but that
does not mean that they should not be educated as to why, given supplier
development and then be able to meet the requirements in a year or two for
another project.[13]
2.13
Mr Hughes also raised the issue of the perceived insurance and risk
associated with smaller consortia in regional areas compared to tier 1
contractors which may not favour their selection:
Often it comes back to insurance and risk. The small
companies may not be able to offer the level of bank guarantee for a particular
piece of work, or they may not be able to carry the capital costs in the first
instance, which would preclude them from being able to be considered for that
work.[14]
2.14
Ms Mary Carroll, Chief Executive Officer of Capricorn Enterprise,
responded to the proposal of a procurement model that required a tier 1
contractor to have a percentage of local engagement. She was positive, but
noted that a contractor could cover off that requirement but engage the local
contractors at a reduced rate and load the balance for their own company.[15]
2.15
Ms Debra Howe, Director, Strategic Growth, Livingstone Shire Council, discussed
the difficulties that local businesses encounter in engaging as a
sub-contractor to a tier 1 or 2 contractor as well as the definition of local:
We understand that there may not be businesses here that are
the size of tier 1 and tier 2 that are required to potentially deliver some of
the work, but how are the contracts actually put into place that mandate the
definition of local in terms of tier 1s and tier 2s procuring in our economy
and actually realising the quite magnificent stats that are now represented in
this KPMG report about the billions of dollars and the millions of dollars and
the hundreds and hundreds of jobs that will be played out here?
My challenge is that this be audited in a couple of years
from now to show us the capacity that was built and delivered as a result of
that spend. We need the local market to not be adversely affected by the size
of their operation or by the accreditations and things that they must have in
order to do business to deliver a federal government-funded something. Just the
very nature of those businesses needing to go through that process, get those
accreditations and then maintain those costly accreditations annually in the
hope that they might pick up some crumbs that drop from tier 1 or tier 2 is
actually not helping this economy in any way. So the definition of 'local'
needs to be looked at, and it needs to be delivered in real time in this
economy.
I have one anecdote. I'm not prepared to name the business,
but I have an example I would like to share anecdotally of a company that's in
fact based in Rockhampton, that is doing some civil engineering for Defence via
a tier 2 contractor. They are receiving $100 an hour for their work and the
Gold Coast based company that has the contract charges Defence $250 an hour for
that work—a direct bill for the work happening here. I suggest that not only
would you achieve the jobs that are aspired to in this document, you would
achieve it 10 times over should you spend your dollar once and wisely in our
local economy.[16]
2.16
Brigadier Beutel responded to the above evidence by stating that the
systems in place would enable Defence to have visibility of such an occurrence
and he had not seen this happening:
...I do not see how that could actually happen. Under a
managing contract form of contract, for the head or the prime contractor, the
tier 1 contractor, their contract value is for a management fee and what we
refer to as a contractor-work-fee delivery, which is basically their overheads
to manage the construction project for it. That is fixed going forward.
As to the actual contracts that are let as part of the trade
packages to undertake the works, we have visibility of all the contracts that
go out and then the preferred tenderer. That comes back in through the managing
contract, so we actually get to see that. Whatever the subcontractor to the
managing contractor has in their contract, that is what the contract is, for
the value of it, and that is paid again through the trust account, so we have
that visibility. Under a head contract, again I do not see how that could work
without even having a trust account there because of the stat dec requirement
for a head contractor to provide to us to state that a subcontractor has
undertaken this work for this amount. So I do not see how something like that
could actually occur, unless a contractor is running two sets of books. Again,
that is just my assumption. In the seven years that I have been intimately
involved in this part of the business, both as a colonel and as the brigadier
responsible for it, I have never seen any evidence of that at all.[17]
2.17
Mr Neil Lethlean, of Capricorn Enterprise, provided evidence on the
importance of structuring the procurement process so that the work going out to
tender is not necessarily under one large package, but broken down to enable
local competition:
If you put all the major components of the spend under one
package, you're going to attract a prime. If you break the packages down to
where it can be competitively tendered by local capability then you're going to
succeed locally, because the locals have the benefit. They have the benefit of
being local and the use of the terrain. They have experienced staff. So I think
that more and more the work projects and work programs can be broken down. We
understand that it's quite extensive. Defence are proposing to spend up to $140
million, commencing next year. They are in the process of engaging a contractor
to manage the whole project. But, when you look at the scant detail that's gone
out about the work programs, the bulk of those can be dealt with by local
business.[18]
2.18
Ms Mary Carroll of Capricorn Enterprise, noted that this approach has
been adopted by local government authorities on major projects, where they have
broken down to smaller packages to enable local businesses to be more
competitive.[19]
2.19
Councillor Bill Ludwig, Mayor, Livingstone Shire Council, explained his
concerns about the need to ensure that procurement policies provide opportunity
for engagement of local businesses:
We need to get the federal government to look at their
procurement policies. A lot of the time you cut out the local people because it
can only go to tier 1s. We've now proven Livingstone with a $30 million project
in partnership with the state government: Panorama Drive. If we break some of
those things down into components, we can build the local capacity. We ended up
with just about 100 per cent local jobs when we were able to work with Main
Roads. State and local government sat down and made sure we got best value for
money, and that's what the federal government wants to do. There is risk
management, and we're delivering a project on budget and on time and we're also
building capacity in this region for our people to do those major projects.[20]
2.20
The committee sought Defence's view on the viability of the proposal of
making contracts smaller and whether there has been an evaluation of deviating
from the prime contractor procurement practice:
The first point I make is that we do not have a
one-size-fits-all approach, and it is based on the risk of the project and how
we can best mitigate that risk going forward.
As to the value for money aspect of it, or how we can get
more competition in the market, under a managing contract form of contract, No.
1, we get competitive tension in that project, first off, by the engagement of
the managing contract, because that will be competed for—not necessarily by all
the tier 1s; it could be tier 1s, tier 2s and tier 3s. We do not have a tier 1
rule. That is another misconception that I have heard—that we have this tier 1
rule. That is not the case. For a managing contract, it goes predominantly out
to an open tender for an ITR process short-listing. So we get competitive
tendering, because, again, the managing contractor's submission to us, for the
planning phase and then the delivery phase, is based on technical merit and a
value-for-money assessment. Under a managing contractor, where we get the
competition is again through the trade packages. I can give an example. One
project for $100 million may actually have 10 or 12 or 13 various trade packages
which will then all be competed for on the open market.
As to the head contractor model, just quickly: they can
self-perform the works, but a majority of the head contractors like to look to
use local subcontractors, in relation to how they perform, and they declare
that to us as part of the contract. But again, the head contractor provides us
with a fixed lump sum head contract, and we hold them to that and they have to
achieve that competitive edge in the market to make sure that they achieve that
lump sum figure that they have tendered for, and that's what we are paying them
to do.[21]
2.21
Mr Steven Grzeskowiak, Deputy Secretary, Estate and Infrastructure
Group, Department of Defence, welcomed the opportunity to participate in the
hearing in Rockhampton to hear from the local community about issues relating
to procurement opportunities for locals and how their processes may be
impacting this. However, he emphasised Defence's obligation to operate within
the Commonwealth Procurement Rules:
The way we will look at this will be about trying to let
local businesses know as much about what is going on and to help them engage
rather than some other processes we have heard about in some of the places
where weighting factors can advantage a local, which we don't think is
something we are able to do under the Commonwealth procurement rules as
currently written. If they were to change, that is a different issue, but that
is not within our gift. It is a broader government issue through the Department
of Finance.[22]
Mechanisms to enhance engagement
Improving communication and
coordination
2.22
The committee heard about the initiatives of the Capricorn Enterprise, a
not-for-profit, apolitical membership based organisation which provides
economic development support to regional industry in Rockhampton and the
Capricorn Coast. The Chief Executive Officer of Capricorn Enterprise, Ms Mary
Carroll, advised that the organisation acts as an independent voice for the
business community and provides economic development services to Livingstone
Shire Council.[23]
2.23
Ms Carroll also advised that Capricorn Enterprise has positive working
relationships with a range of government and industry groups, including Defence
representatives. She set out some recent and (then) forthcoming events:
-
2 February 2017 – in partnership with Austrade, an industry forum
for SMEs in regard to procurement requirements to engage with Defence
-
31 July 2017 – hosting key briefings with Mr Sean Hawkins,
Director of the Singapore Joint Development Implementation Team and Mr Mick
Reilly, Business Community Liaison Officer for Defence
-
30 August 2017 – in partnership with AusIndustry and Centre for
Defence Capabilities and personnel from the Singapore-Australia initiative – a
forum with three existing primary (or tier 1) contractors to discuss with local
industry the procedure to engage with primes as contractors and subcontractors.[24]
2.24
Mr Neil Lethlean, Economic Development Manager at Capricorn Enterprise
advised the committee of his role in running business development programs to
look for new opportunities for local businesses:
It has got to be understood that Defence in this region does
not have a large permanent presence. Western Street houses permanent personnel.
But Shoalwater Bay, from a regional perspective, is the most important asset.
Understanding the work programs that are programmed there over the next decade
or more, it is our responsibility as that independent voice, as that
independent networking facilitator to engage with local industry that wants to
be engaged with defence.[25]
2.25
Mr Lethlean summarised Enterprise Capricorn's key role:
...we are looking to engage with industry to make it aware of
Defence requirements. We understand that Defence is not there to take risk. It
has a well entrenched system for procurement and engagement through its primes
and qualified contractors. But my ambition, working with the Centre for Defence
Industry Capability and AusIndustry representatives, is to ensure that local
industry that wants to engage in the Defence industry programs is totally aware
of what those requirements are and can prequalify to become engaged in that
network. That is my primary responsibility.[26]
2.26
Mr Grant Cassidy, a board member of Regional Development Australia
Fitzroy and Central West, and also Chair of the Capricornia Business Advisory
Alliance, explained that the Alliance was established by the Federal Member for
Capricornia, Ms Michelle Landry MP, as an advisory committee to look at
local opportunities in relation to the Singapore project:
...to take the lead to steer the region in the lead up to the
upcoming billion-dollar-plus investment and to make the most of business
opportunities to drive our regional economy, assist with SME business growth
and, importantly, jobs creation. Far too often, we have seen in regions like
ours that it is very fragmented and makes it near impossible for government
departments such as Defence or even prime or tier-1 contractors to easily work
with local businesses.[27]
2.27
The committee heard evidence from Mr Cassidy that the information sessions
which Defence has held were only advertised in the state newspaper and there
was no local information:
...when this was raised through the local federal member to the
department, the reference was that there was no consideration that there would
be any businesses in this region that would be capable of winning that work.[28]
2.28
Ms Carroll was supportive of the proposal for a group of local
governments with similar issues in dealing with Defence. However her preference
would be for a broader grouping encompassing other sectors:
...I think that it needs to be local government, business and
industry working together, hearing the same things and not having duplication
of committees. You, like I, probably do not like going to meetings for the sake
of a meeting, and you want to be clear and concise. Collaboration and
partnership has to occur, and, if the majority are willing, the minority need
to be brought into the fold. I think that your idea is a very good one, but I
think it needs to expand to business and industry and not just to local
government. CQ, as I said, is the six local government authority areas.
Obviously, you can't have a committee of 50, but it absolutely needs to involve
a more-broad remit than just the specific interests of one local government
versus another.[29]
2.29
In response to the suggestion that there be some form of standing forum
between Defence and local governments to deal with issues in relation to the
SBTA, Mr Grzeskowiak noted that ongoing arrangements are in place for state and
territory governments, but Defence would not have any issues about being
involved in more localised processes.[30]
Developing local capability
2.30
Mr Craig Wilson, Project Engineering Specialist with QMI Solutions and
member of the Queensland Division of the Industry Capability Network, noted
some of the initiatives they undertake to assist in developing capability and
align it with the requirements of major Defence projects. These include
programs and workshops which are run for Defence Industries in Queensland:
Those are Defence Business 101: what is the supply chain
beast; and what does it mean? I think that probably is also touching on the
requirements of trying to get work in Defence. I have done that program with
Major General Mick Fairweather over the last four years. We have touched on
hundreds of companies in trying to help them understand what is required, what
the depth of requirement is and their own preparation and positioning for the
various aspects and the complications of dealing with Defence.[31]
2.31
Specifically in relation to workshops run in the Rockhampton area, Mr
Wilson advised:
We have delivered the three programs of Defence Business 101,
quad charts and the tendering for defence in Rockhampton in association with
DIQ and the Department of State Development. We have also run a number of
profile improvement workshops helping people on that journey to be able to
express their business on their registration on ICN, and we do one-on-one
workshops with them.[32]
2.32
However:
In every case in the Rockhampton region, we have been struggling
for numbers. I am not sure what that really is about. It is disappointing
sometimes, and it is not until we really push the barrow, if you like, right at
the last minute to get people to come along to these things. As I said, we've
run them a number of times. We've probably run the three programs at least
twice over the past three or four years in Rockhampton, Gladstone, Maryborough,
Mackay and Bundaberg, and in all of those areas we've struggled to get numbers.
I'm not sure what the answer is. We're there, we're running the programs, and
we probably get a dozen companies come along, or a dozen people, in general.[33]
Encouraging collaboration
2.33
Mr Cassidy, Chair of the Capricornia Business Advisory Alliance,
commented on a coordinated approach to tendering for Defence work:
An opportunity has already been identified to cluster local
businesses to be engaged in a consortium model to be tender ready as an
alternative or parallel framework to the normal prime or tier 1 tender and
contract relationship with Defence. There is, however, as you have heard this
morning, genuine concern within the local business community that the
traditional tier 1 or prime contract model will not drive the desired level of
local economic benefit and associated local jobs unless there's a change in the
traditional tender model.
...
Regional Development Australia Fitzroy and Central West are
also undertaking a sector based capability audit to enable our local business
community to firstly identify and then promote the diversity and strength of
what's available right here in this region, allowing Defence to have a clearer
understanding of what local suppliers can offer, both in the construction of
new facilities and during the annual training exercises. If we can cluster
appropriate businesses across sectors who are enthusiastic to work in the
defence space, then this will enable even the smallest operation to join with
others in their sector to pitch for work.[34]
2.34
Mr Cassidy advised the Alliance's role and the progress they expect to
make in the next 12 months:
By this time next year we should be well and truly across the
scope of work that Defence are currently doing at Shoalwater Bay. We should be
a fair way down the track of then having an understanding of what local
capabilities we need to either look at clustering or identifying from the local
perspective, and we should be having some fairly advanced discussions with
Defence as to how best to package that up to try to get the bulk of those
dollars spent locally in this community. That is what I would hope would be
happening.[35]
2.35
Mr Goodwin of the SMW Group, further advised that he had previously been
involved in a successful cluster arrangement in Townsville put together by the
state government and suggested there may be similar opportunities in the
Rockhampton region:
It enabled 10 or 12 Townsville businesses to collaborate and
provide a service through a tier 1 or to compete with a tier 1 provider, which
we did. We managed to obtain a large equipment service contract at Lavarack Barracks
and we were competing against the likes of Thiess and Leighton at the time. As
a region, we also need to understand those opportunities and what we can do
together as a group of companies within the region. We need to get together and
deliver on services that the ADF wants. But, for us to be able to develop that
cluster, that service or that capability, we need to understand what the ADF
wants, and, listening to everybody here, we don't know what that is.[36]
2.36
Mr Goodwin reiterated the benefits of a coordinated approach for local
businesses:
If you look at the capability within the Rockhampton region,
we have got everything to be a tier one supplier. If you look at us as
individuals, of course we do not. If we could get some form of support or
coordination together, definitely we will go a long way to supporting it.[37]
Engaging with Tier 1 contractors
2.37
Mr Wilson of the Industry Capability Network, noted that they see
engagement with tier 1 contractors as an important way for regional businesses
to engage with Defence. He suggested that a possible next stage was to
introduce primes to regional areas to enable regional companies to understand
what they require.[38]
Mr Wilson also explained that the Australian Industry Defence Network of
SMEs assist SMEs to find their way through the process.[39]
Drawing on other successful
processes
2.38
It was noted that the Singapore Joint Development Implementation Team is
based in Townsville. The committee heard evidence from Capricorn Enterprise
that they would prefer to have a Defence contact or presence in the region,
noting that Townsville is a seven hour drive from Rockhampton.[40]
Communication about exercises
2.39
The issue of dissemination of information about Defence training
activities was also raised as an ongoing concern during the committee's hearing
in Rockhampton. Mr John Baker, a member of Agforce and a local grazier,
raised concerns about the lack of notification to landholders and other locals
about exercises which may impact on the community, such as road closures. He explained
that it is crucial for landowners to be notified of training exercises
conducted in airspace as some graziers have light aircraft or helicopters, or
engage contractors for mustering. He understood that notice of such activity
does appear on Facebook and in the local pub, but suggested that a local
contact point from Defence would assist.[41]
2.40
Commodore Norris added that in relation to the Talisman Sabre exercise,
Defence had been engaging with Rockhampton Regional Council in particular, but
also with Livingstone Shire Council.[42]
Noise impacting on cattle
2.41
Mr Bill Geddes, a local landowner, called for better consultation for
things like noise and plane activities over animals, especially cattle at
weaning time.[43]
Mr Roger Toole, Committee Member of the North Queensland Regional Airspace
and Procedures Advisory Committee and landholder around Shoalwater Bay also
voiced his concern about low flying planes and the difficulty in getting
information from Defence and then conveying his concerns to the relevant areas
in Defence:
I was heavily involved in that with the squadron leader in
Canberra about the ROZ [restricted operating zone] for Talisman Sabre. I need
to advise you that I have been trying to get something done about that for a
month. We knew there was going to be a problem. It has taken me four weeks of
banging on every door I could find in the military to get somebody to take
notice of what I was talking about.
Craig Mace had the experience last Sunday of a C-130 right
over the top of him with a mob of cattle. If we had been able to get to
somebody and get them to listen to what we were saying—and we weren't saying it
just for the sake of it. I've been flying all my life. I've been in the
military and I understand what can happen with these aircraft at low level. I'm
also a grazier. We were very aware of what was going to take place, and it took
us a month of banging on doors to get somebody to take notice of what we were
doing. They were very lucky that they didn't have their children in the lead on
those cattle, because there could have been a very serious accident. It does
happen.
We have the same situation about to happen, four weeks after
this exercise finishes, with the Singaporeans. I only, this morning, got a copy
of the AIP SUP [Aeronautical Information Publication Supplement] for Exercise
Wallaby 2017. They are also planning to run low-level flights over cattle
properties with C-130s. That is a real problem. Nobody has been informed that
these things are going to take place. I know that there has been information
given about when the exercise starts and what have you, but there was no
information given to anybody about surface to 2½ thousand feet in Talisman
Sabre over those cattle pockets until I got the AIP SUP. I thought, 'Goodness
me, what's going on here?' Nobody wants to see the exercise stopped, but
Defence need to understand that these people are like everybody else and that
they are putting lives and businesses at risk doing what they are
doing—especially when we can't get to anybody's door to find out what is going
on. It took a month.[44]
2.42
Defence acknowledged the impact of aircraft noise during training
exercises on the local community, including graziers, and confirmed that there
had been recent complaints. Commodore Norris outlined the steps taken to
address this issue, including implementing a restricted operating zone to
ensure that there are not low passes, except on approach to the airfield for
take-off and landing through the flight path.[45]
Commodore Norris further advised that Talisman Sabre has a hotline set up which
is manned 24/7 to respond to such concerns and reassured the committee that
Defence would ensure that they maintain their activities in a safe and
appropriate manner.[46]
Communication about proposed expansion of training areas and land acquisition
Defence engagement and consultation
process
Rockhampton community perspective
2.43
Councillor Bill Ludwig, Mayor, Livingstone Shire Council, expressed his
concern and disappointment on the processes and level of consultation by
Defence on the proposed expansion of the training areas in the Livingstone
Shire. Councillor Ludwig advised that the council was given confidential
briefings and were informed that Defence would be handling the communication
with the public. He advised that property owners 'got letters about five weeks
before Christmas and effectively the letters were the precursor to compulsory
acquisition, and that's where the bushfire started.'[47]
2.44
Councillor Ludwig was of the view that there was no mechanism in place
for consulting on the expansion and suggested that the process would have been
improved with the establishment of a reference group to consult and disseminate
information. He advised that he made his dissatisfaction with the process known
to Defence and the Minister:
I said, 'You guys got it horribly wrong. You came and you
outlined to local government, to the council, what you intended to do.' Then
they went and blew it because they did not get everybody in the tent. They did
not form a reference group where they could have put the information out
broadly. They elected to send letters to people five weeks before Christmas.
Those people felt that they were being picked off one by one. They felt that
they were being intimidated and bullied. That came out of those meetings. I
have never seen my community as angry as they were at those meetings. I went,
'Rule 101: how not to do a consultation; how not to engage.' Put that into Hansard
and say, 'Never, ever do what they did.' If they had started with the town
hall meetings, they could have given an overview and then prepared people for
what the process was going to be rather than give them letters. And then when
they had the one-on-ones, when the property owner said, 'By the way, what if we
don't want to sell?' they said, 'We're just going to be compulsorily acquiring
you anyway.' Throw petrol onto the fire and you have an idea of what happened
at the end of last year and what transpired at the start of the year when
people were so angry and up in arms. We ended up having to settle it down, but
everybody had to go through so much angst. Because we were given confidential
briefings, we were not able to flag to our community in advance. We were told
that the ADF was taking the lead on this and we were told from the minister all
the way down: 'Trust; we've got this in hand.' They read out all that stuff.
That is what they will be doing. And that is what transpired.[48]
2.45
Although outside the Livingstone Shire area, Councillor Strelow, also
offered her view of the consultation process concerning the proposed expansion
of the training areas:
As I heard from the community, for those first letters the
timing was appalling. But the ADF did not actually know what they wanted...That
was after they had already created the problem by sending letters to a broad
group of people without really knowing whether they were going to need their
land or not, not being able to justify why they might need it, where a boundary
might go. All it did was create this huge amount of uncertainty when they could
not answer any decent questions. If they had had some clear understanding of
what they needed first and then engaged directly, I think a lot of the problems
could have been resolved.[49]
2.46
The committee also heard directly from landowners in the area around the
SBTA who were impacted by the proposed expansion plans as well as local
business owners who may be impacted by the reduction of productive land in the
area resulting in a reduced clientele base. Mr Bill Geddes, a local landowner,
was concerned about the lack of information that has been forthcoming:
There are properties that have supposedly been bought by the
Defence department, and no-one is actually coming forth and giving people
information. We are obviously laymen. We know how things work and we make stuff
work. If you've got country separate to the Shoalwater that they have
purchased, do they intend to fence that separately? How do they intend to run
it? Do they eventually want to choke the other properties out in between?
That's the indication we all get. At the end of the day, they should come
forward and put on the table what they are intending to do.[50]
2.47
Mrs Danielle McKenzie, Chairperson of the Marlborough Against Defence
Land Grab and the owner of Marlborough Motors, further explained that Defence engagement
was only with landowners and that local business owners potentially impacted by
the expansion plans were not engaged as they were not considered stakeholders.[51]
Mrs McKenzie gave details of her attempt to seek information from Defence:
I rang up to ask if I could get a one-to-one appointment,
only to be laughed at. They had no idea why I was going to make an appointment.
I was a business owner, not a landowner, so why would I want an appointment?
They are taking my clientele base. Everything that makes my business a
business, they are about to take from me. I'm not being compensated at all, and
I am going to have to file bankruptcy. I am very concerned about my position
right now. Basically, we walked into the meetings to be rolled out a map
saying: 'We could potentially take this. This is a most likely. We don't know.
Hang in there.' What a joke! That is basically what we had to live with and
what we still are living with.[52]
Defence perspective
2.48
Mr Grzeskowiak stated that the processes implemented by Defence in
relation to engaging with the community on the proposed expansion of the SBTA
and TFTA were informed by the Cultana Training Area expansion process in South
Australia. He advised that Defence's approach was intended to let locals know
as soon as possible about what was proposed, but acknowledged that there should
have been more direct engagement rather than just sending letters. His view was
that they have learnt from the process so far and advised that a local
community engagement officer has now been appointed who will be based in
Townsville.[53]
2.49
Brigadier Timothy Bayliss, Director General, US Force Posture
Initiative; and Program Manager, Australia-Singapore Military Training
Initiative, Department of Defence, provided some more detail of the current arrangements:
We have got a permanent office established up in Townsville,
and they travel back and forth between Rockhampton and Townsville in order to
manage that engagement. I also travel frequently up from Canberra to engage
directly with local councils and chambers of commerce—indeed, I will be up here
over the next few weeks talking through the detail of the socioeconomic report.[54]
Potential economic impacts
2.50
The committee heard of both the potential positive and negative impacts
of the proposed land acquisition to expand training areas. Livingstone Shire
Council raised the issue of the impact of a further reduction in the rate-base
on revenue as a result of the training area expansion. The council provided an
estimate of the rates loss under the current Defence occupation of 25 per cent
of the Shire:
Currently (not including recent acquisitions) there is an
estimated loss of rates revenue of approximately $32 million for the last 52
years, up to $50 million taking into consideration the potential lost opportunity
costs and investment in the region.[55]
2.51
Councillor Ludwig noted that the proposed acquisitions would increase
the level of Defence occupation to 30 per cent of the Shire and he highlighted
the potential economic impact:
We knew that there would be some acquisitions, but we almost
fell off our chairs when we saw the scope of it...[T]hat's a huge hit. Forget
about the rate base; look at the economic exodus of beef production and all the
flow-on through the meatworks, the supply chains and everything else.[56]
2.52
The Livingstone Shire submission advises that:
The increased financial pressure on the entire rateable
Livingstone Shire community by a significant reduction in rates revenue from
SWBTA expansion property purchases currently being undertaken must also be
accounted for and offset both financially and through long-term investment in
the host council area.[57]
2.53
Councillor Ludwig raised his concerns about how much investment would
flow into expenditure on infrastructure:
When I saw the map that they put on the table of what they
would like to do, and we did the calculations, we thought, 'There'll probably
be about $500 left over by the time they acquire all of that land,' and we
weren't going to see a cracker go into infrastructure and all of those other
things. I thought, 'How is this going to play out?' You need to look at those
significant maps, and I think everybody was caught on the hop, because I think
the generals got together and thought, 'Here's an opportunity for us to have
this bigger than the proverbial Ben-Hur,' when really what they should
have been doing is looking at the shared uses, which they're starting to do
now.
In fact, if they spent the $1 billion buying the land,
there'd be no injection. It'd all be going out, because we'd be losing all the
productive capacity of that land and all of the support jobs and industry that
go with that. So I think that's where they're coming from. Let's see how much
land we can get. When you look at their map to increase it to 30 per cent of
our land base, we then had some really serious concerns, but we had to wait to
see how that was going to play out, and that played out very quickly.[58]
2.54
Mr Peter Fraser, President of the Capricornia Chamber of Commerce advised:
I certainly wouldn't tell the Singaporeans how to spend their
money but, to go one step further, if the infrastructure spend that they were
intending to do at Shoalwater Bay included potentially building an airport or
even building some form of residential accommodation or shops for their 18,000
troops to use, this would have a significant detrimental effect on all the
economies around Shoalwater Bay.
...
Without any knowledge of what the infrastructure spend looks
like to a Singaporean who's making the call, this could have enormous
ramifications for our local economy, and we just don't know at the moment.[59]
2.55
Another impact of the reduction on productive land in the Shire is the
flow-on effect to local businesses currently supporting agricultural producers
in the region. Mrs Joanne Rea, a committee member of the Marlborough
Against Defence Land Grab noted the importance of the cattle industry in
particular to Rockhampton's economy:
...Rockhampton is a cow town, so there are a lot of stock and
station agents. There are people whose businesses rely on supplying people who
own cattle properties. They can't just say, 'Well, I do business in Rocky, so
I'm going to repurpose to try to get Army contracts.' The hoops are just too
numerous and the bars just too high, and the history required is too stringent.
So, perfectly good businesspeople are going to be put out of business, simply
because the product they supply is a product for cattle property owners and not
for Defence.[60]
2.56
Mrs McKenzie voiced concerns of other local business owners, not
exclusively servicing the agricultural sector, on the expansion plans:
If the Australian Defence Force continues to purchase land
from willing sellers over the years to come and slowly remove local businesses'
clientele without a promise of financial replacement or compensation, this will
clearly mean for local businesses like me that the financial struggle will
slowly and eventually drain them out, forcing us and many others to close
doors. How do we then relocate, repurchase and restart after being financially
disabled? We can't.
...
And we can't sell our business now, because this is known.
Who's going to want to buy my business? Who's going to want to buy anything in
Marlborough?[61]
2.57
Mrs McKenzie explained to the committee that she does get 'highway work',
but 90 per cent of her business is reliant on the surrounding clientele which
lie within the Defence expansion area.[62]
Mrs McKenzie also raised the question of whether compensation to business
owners affected by the land acquisition would be considered:
I think the Defence Force needs to recognise that it is not
just landowners that are being impacted by this; local businesses are going to
suffer dramatically from this. I can't repurchase; I can't restart my life, my
business, my family without any compensation or financial replacement of
financial loss from what they are taking from me. I've tried really hard to
work with the Australian Defence Force. They can't provide me with a guarantee
that they will replace our financial loss. Until they do, I will continue to
push as hard as I can for compensation.[63]
2.58
Brigadier Bayliss responded to the concerns raised about the potential
detrimental effects of the proposed expansion to the regional economy,
particularly in relation to the agricultural sector:
The socioeconomic report which has just come out does
acknowledge the potential impact, in terms of the agricultural sector in
particular, were we to take this land or purchase this land. It acknowledges
the impact it may have on the agricultural sector itself. It also acknowledges
the benefits in terms of the construction industry, which will benefit from the
development of this, and the enduring effect of the increased activities we
will conduct in the region. It balances it out. The big message that I get out of
the socioeconomic report is: how do I maximise the benefits, in terms of local
industry involvement, and how do I minimise that impact into the agricultural
sector? And the things that we're looking at to inform our decision-making as
we go forward are: what do we have to do to get local industry more engaged in
the project and, indeed, how do we lessen that agricultural impact by either
purchasing land of lesser agricultural value, minimising the amount of land
that we purchase or looking at creative potential solutions for how we work
together with the agricultural sector to further minimise the impact in that
sector?[64]
2.59
Ms Debra Howe, Director, Strategic Growth, Livingstone Shire Council,
questioned some of the findings and assumptions of the KPMG report:
KPMG said the Defence spend at Shoalwater Bay does not just
include capital; it includes wages and salary for both military personnel and
civilians. It defies logic that people who come and go over short visits drop
their wages in our economy; when you roll that up and say it is X million
dollars and so many hundreds of jobs as a direct result of that contribution
being spent at Shoalwater Bay, I do not believe that is factually correct. The
people who are paid to go there go there for a reason. They will bring their
cut lunch—or whatever analogy you like use. They are self-contained and they
leave. So I think there needs to be a reality check around how the figures are
used and the feel-good value that is supposedly left behind. We are asking for
that to be real.[65]
Further opportunities
Opportunities for growing regional
infrastructure from enhanced Defence presence
2.60
The Rockhampton Regional Council advised the committee of the
opportunities it saw for developing a 'set-aside military area' at the Rockhampton
Airport[66]
which could include housing. Noting the costs of transporting equipment, which
it suggested are not used anywhere but Shoalwater Bay, the Council highlighted
the potential benefits for Defence of a more permanent presence in the region.[67]
2.61
Councillor Margaret Strelow, Mayor, noted that, while the council is
very supportive of the presence of military exercises, the current level of
activity is beginning to impinge on the space at the airport for general
aviation, particularly affecting the council's wish to develop freight export
through the airport.[68]
Councillor Strelow elaborated:
We actually have an area adjacent to the tarmac that we have
a master plan for that would be able to be locked up and owned; perhaps
multi-user just with Defence only and we could get the security right. We would
gladly enter into a commercial relationship about that.[69]
2.62
The council further noted that it had been putting proposals for this
type of development to Defence for some time.[70]
Mr Grzeskowiak confirmed that Defence was aware of the Council's proposal:
I think we've seen the proposals over some years; this is not
an idea that's very new. Thus far, our view has been that we wouldn't require
that. That's our view thus far. Whether that would change going forward with an
increased exercise presence I don't know, but if people come to us with those
sorts of proposals we'd consider them. But our first consideration is: is there
a Defence capability need for that or not? Our judgement thus far has been that
there is not.[71]
2.63
Councillor Ludwig, Mayor of the Livingstone Shire, presented the
committee with a range of potential infrastructure opportunities in regard to
the proposed expansion of the training areas. Ms Howe, Director, Strategic
Growth, emphasised the opportunity for Defence involvement in infrastructure
projects with shared benefits to not only improve capacity for Defence
activities now, but provide an ongoing legacy to the region. Upgrades to road
infrastructure in the shire were noted as a key area where immediate direct and
shared benefits could be delivered for both Defence and regional primary
producers. In particular the upgrade to Stanage Bay Road was cited as having
potential to generate opportunities to grow beef cattle production, tourism and
fisheries industries.[72]
2.64
Mr Grzeskowiak noted that Defence has paid $8.6 million, excluding GST, to
the Livingstone Shire Council for roads over the past decade; with $450,000
contributed as a user-pays fee over the last 10 years for Stanage Bay Road.[73]
He further advised:
If we are developing the training area, particularly if there
was an expansion involved as part of that development, the road capacity and
whether we needed to invest in that would be part of that consideration in the
planning in detail of what the infrastructure development would be. I can't say
what the answer would be but it would certainly be one of the things that would
be considered.[74]
2.65
Another area of potential infrastructure development which was raised was
improved telecommunications, where certain areas experience issues with service
failures during major joint army exercises.[75]
Ms Howe elaborated at the hearing:
So spend on the facilities and on other infrastructure, but
please allow that to be a legacy to the communities that are impacted—for
example, telecommunications. Don't try to call Grandma when you have Talisman
Sabre on, because if you're a resident you cannot get bandwidth. To Defence's
credit, after we submitted our proposal, they have this time installed some
additional facilities to increase their capacity and be less detrimental. Why
do that temporarily and take it away? Why not do that and upgrade the facility,
and leave that legacy to the community which they're operating in?[76]
2.66
Ms Mary Carroll, Chief Executive Officer, Capricorn Enterprise, set out
for the committee what she saw as future development opportunities:
Major opportunities include the commencement of our two
anchor major resorts on the Capricorn Coast, including Great Keppel Island and
Capricorn Resort; the sealing of Stanage Bay Road, which would enhance the
opportunities for Stanage Bay as mentioned by Livingstone Shire Council Mayor
Bill Ludwig this morning; and elevating the Blue Route through Byfield in
regard to accessing and servicing facilities at Yeppoon. I'm sure you're
familiar with the terminologies of the Blue Route, the Green Route, the Brown
Route and, to a lower standard, the Yellow and Grey routes.
I note that a recent KPMG report, released yesterday,
includes the major projects, including the two resorts at Great Keppel Island
and Yeppoon. It also includes the Stanage Bay Road opportunities for tourism.
Mayor Ludwig also mentioned this morning the ecotourism opportunities for Three
Rivers, which is currently locked up by Defence, and we support the view
expressed by the mayor this morning.[77]
Underutilisation of the Shoalwater
Bay Training Area
2.67
Mr Peter Fraser, President, Capricornia Chamber of Commerce, noted
opportunities from greater utilisation of the SBTA:
It's more so in the amount of times it's used. Its
two-pronged: the amount of times that it is used currently and the Australian
allies that currently use it, and the present standing ADF contingent here in
the local area. I will address the first part of it first. Talisman Sabre is
currently on. It is a biennial event. It is on for three weeks. We get our
inflow of US servicemen for that three-week period. I think it's already
mentioned that they tend to not stay in our region or to spend a lot of money.
We certainly don't see it. I've talked to many, many people, and they can
certainly recognise the presence of Singaporean soldiers from time to time, but
the US defence personnel to a much lesser extent.
...
The 2004 study mentioned that for the 2,000 US servicemen surveyed
the average spend was around $2,500 in Central Queensland. I personally cannot
see that from my last exposure to Talisman Sabre here two years ago, and I've
seen very little of American servicemen in our shopping centres currently in
the area. The other point I was looking to raise is that at the moment we have
I think 6,000 or 6,500 Singaporean soldiers who come through our training
facility every year. That is being looked to be increased to 14,000. I think
their current tenure here is six weeks, and they might have a couple of days
off, perhaps book-ended on both ends. That is being increased to 18 weeks. So,
there is clearly opportunity there. With the last Talisman Sabre we had a
contingent of 600 Japanese, and I think we had 500 New Zealand servicemen come
through. So clearly there appears to be an appetite for the ADF to include our
Pacific neighbours. I would certainly suggest, not being a serviceman
obviously, that, given the capabilities from there being 52 weeks in a year, we
are underutilising it simply based on the amount of time.[78]
Shared use of land arrangements
2.68
Councillor Ludwig acknowledged that there may be potential for
opportunities for shared use of land arrangements for some parts of the
training areas where appropriate, which may be a solution for proposed future
expansion plans. He also suggested the use of leases as a potential way
forward.[79]
He also suggested that:
There may be an opportunity for us to get some land back at
Three Rivers. Three Rivers is like our Fraser Island. It has been locked up.
Halfway down the beach there has been a border and there are major big signs:
'Keep Out', 'Keep Out', 'Keep Out.' Talk about visual pollution in a pristine
area! ADF have in recent years, the last couple of years since I have become mayor
again, acknowledged that it is of no strategic use to them. So there are some
of those other areas where there may also be some ecotourism at times when they
are not going to be used and in areas that are not going to be compromised by
unexploded ordnance or safety issues. What we do not get back is that we cannot
get our rate base back, but also you will not get full capacity back. But
certainly in the beef industry and in the new area where they want to establish
flyovers and things like that in their buffer zones, perhaps they can maintain
their agricultural production. In a war situation the troops are going to be
going through places that are going to have farms and cattle. That can be
managed, and it would actually put a level of realism into what they are doing.[80]
2.69
The possibility of opening up the Three Rivers area was put to Defence
who advised that they would be open to looking at the proposition.[81]
2.70
The committee noted that the Capricorn Conservation Council in its
submission stated its strong opposition to the suggestion of 'unlocking' the
Three Rivers for ecotourism due to the fragility of the coastal zone. The
Council commented on:
[the] risks to nearby high value ecosystems, already under
pressure from unauthorised entry and the escaped fires from recreational
drivers and illegal campers would be exacerbated if this current buffer zone
was exploited for tourism.[82]
Environmental impacts of Defence activities
Land management of training areas by
Defence
2.71
Noting that Defence has had a presence in the area for approximately 50
years, the committee sought details on the reasons for the emergence of recent
issues, including in the area of land management.
2.72
The Marlborough Against Defence Land Grab Committee raised concerns
about the management and condition of Defence land. They suggested the
engagement of a land manager by Defence, rather than an environmental officer,
to tackle concerns over grass cover and erosion control.[83]
Mr Bill Geddes, a local landowner, explained that with better maintenance, and
therefore making better use of existing property, Defence may reduce their need
to acquire more land.[84]
Mr Geddes further explained:
And it's not just bringing in the bulldozers. Land clearing
is so much more. It's exactly what I said about maintaining someone's garden.
If someone told you to stop pruning your garden and keeping your house up, it's
not going to last long, is it? But that's exactly what happens. It's like they
go on holidays. They just leave it be. Then, when they do get a fire up there,
it's a humongous big sucker, and quite often it's started from the activities
that they run anyway. So, at the end of the day, it's just common sense.
They're buying country that they want because it's in the condition that they
want it at, but they're not keeping the stuff they've already got up to the
standard that they're trying to buy it at. It doesn't make sense.[85]
2.73
The Capricorn Conservation Council expressed its concerns that the
increasing frequency of military exercises:
...will limit the capacity of environmental manager[s] and
contractors to properly assess and manage whole of landscape environmental
impacts ...The reducing time gaps between exercises combined with the last decade
of weather extremes...suggest the need for more investment and longer periods for
flora and fauna recovery, lest the values which underpin Shoalwater's 'due use'
decline beyond their point of resilience.[86]
2.74
Defence explained to the committee that their approach is to look to
optimise the use of the current training areas before they look to expansion:
The training areas we have are fantastic, but they have
limitations. I look at some geography factors around Shoalwater Bay where a
third of the range itself is water. There is a large range that runs through
the middle of the range which limits our ability to manoeuvre and fire. There
are also damp areas which affect our ability to move heavy equipment into it. I
look at our environmental constraints in order to comply with our obligations under
environmental law which require us to rest areas and let them recuperate. Then
I look at the concurrency issues that we have; if I look just at the
Singaporean training, they train on the training area for six weeks a year and
consume the whole range, and there is no ability for ADF to train on the range
at the same time. So, when I look at our initiative which looks to expand the
training to almost triple that amount, the maths do not work in terms of
occupying the range at the same time.
Then I look at the future requirements for ADF. As the dep
sec said, we have got heavier vehicles coming down the range with the LAND
400s, where the weight of our vehicles will double, which will create more
damage to our environment that we will need to then manage more carefully. We
are looking at ranges for our weapons systems that are just getting longer. So,
when we look at potentially rocket-based artillery systems in our future, we
just need more space in order to accommodate the future requirements for the ADF.
Particularly pertinent for Shoalwater Bay are our growing
amphibious requirements. In order to meet that training requirement, Shoalwater
Bay provides the only real option in order to do the large-scale activities...[87]
2.75
Mr Geddes and Mr Baker noted that Defence used to engage 'day-to-day
property managers' who could operate as a local point of contact who are no
longer there. Mr Baker advised that:
As a representative of AgForce, I've been talking to some of
the landholders up there, and they were saying the defence department used to
have some rangers in the area who would patrol the area and keep an eye on
things and that sort of thing and then they would liaise with the landholders
who were adjoining the area. They would be a point of contact if there were any
issues—maintaining fences and those sorts of things. But in recent times,
apparently, that hasn't happened and there's no point of contact—someone you
can ring up and get on the phone and say, 'What's going on? Can we sort this
problem out?' There isn't that contact.[88]
2.76
Mr Grzeskowiak, confirmed that two people used to be based locally for dealing
issues around the Rockhampton estate, including land management, but were
relocated to Townsville approximately two years ago. He confirmed that they
were still available for that purpose, but said that they would review the
current arrangements going forward particularly in light of the Talisman Sabre
exercise and also the comprehensive strategic partnership.[89]
2.77
During examination of the Queensland Department of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Partnerships, Mr David Thompson, Program Manager, Rockhampton Office, agreed
with the proposal put forward that there may potentially be opportunities to
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander businesses to be involved in the management
of Defence land training areas:
I think it is an opportunity to have a range of positions
based within Defence to be able to do restoration work after each exercise has
been carried out, to bring the land back and to look after some significant sites
or some cultural area sites that are on that parcel of land, because it is
quite a significant amount of land.[90]
2.78
Mr Grzreskowiak noted that Defence has ongoing environment and land
management programs in place for all Defence properties and he confirmed they
also have in place bushfire management and weed management plans.[91]
Defence confirmed that the SBTA Environmental Advisory Committee (SBTAEAC) was
established in 1998 as a result of a recommendation of the 1994 Commonwealth
Commission of Inquiry into the Shoalwater Bay Training Area. The SBTAEAC
meets twice per year and has wide ranging membership including representatives
from Defence, Commonwealth and State agriculture and environmental
organisations, local government, local Indigenous groups, neighbouring
landowners and conservation groups.[92]
Other initiatives in the procurement area
Indigenous procurement policy
2.79
Mr David Thompson, Program Manager, Rockhampton Office of the Queensland
Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships advised the
committee that there were currently approximately 80 Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander businesses across the region participating in state government
procurement. However, he was not aware any Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander businesses currently involved in Defence procurement in the region.[93]
2.80
Mr Grzeskowiak was able to advise that Defence currently contract Spotless
to perform service delivery and management in the region, which in turn
subcontracts to around 20 local companies, of which two are Indigenous owned.[94]
2.81
In relation to the possible reason why there is limited engagement with
Indigenous businesses, Mr Thompson suggested the need to develop more
relationships leading to joint venture arrangements. He further advised that
there has not been contact with Defence in relation to the Rockhampton region.[95]
2.82
Mr Thompson believed that the smaller size of Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander businesses was a factor impacting the level of engagement with
Defence:
I think the challenge is for the Indigenous businesses to be
a prime, or a tier 1, contractor. Whilst Defence, or the Australian government,
has put out a commitment to increase Indigenous spend within their portfolios,
the bar is too high in relation to that because Indigenous businesses are
mainly mums and dads, with the odd apprentice or trainee in places. So we do
not have the turnover, the capital or the assets to be able to compete for some
of the bigger spend that Defence Force does. So how do we do that through a
joint venture arrangement? How do you manage that locally rather than through a
prime based out of Brisbane, Melbourne or Sydney, or so forth. How do we pull
together an alliance where we can actually take out the mitigation for risk for
the Indigenous parties to be a major shareholder in the project or in the
contract? So that is a challenge. We can do it with the state projects, because
some of the Indigenous parties are quite capable of delivering, whether it be
civil construction, general maintenance housing and so forth. But from a
Defence perspective, it's probably a lot larger. But it's not just the
construction side of things; it's the ongoing maintenance and upkeep, so I
think there's another key area where the Aboriginal parties need to be
involved. They're on country; it's their land. It's probably a good thing that
Defence looks at that as well, and what the benefits would be.[96]
2.83
Mr Thompson told the committee about its publication Deadly Directory,
which lists all the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander businesses in the
region and includes the ABN number for each and the details of the services
delivered. Mr Thompson also advised the committee that the department was
aware of, and has engaged, the Industry Capability Network in their workshops.[97]
2.84
It was noted by the committee that at the national level, Defence
exceeded its target of 70 contracts with Indigenous businesses in 2015-16,
awarding 285 contracts valued at $141 million. This compares to the state
government's Indigenous spend of $134 million.[98]
2.85
Mr Grzeskowiak noted significant growth in Defence Indigenous
procurement in the last two years. He noted that the 2015-16 result of $141
million was an significant increase to the figure from only two years before of
approximately $2 million; and represented approximately half of all
Commonwealth expenditure to Indigenous companies as recorded through Supply Nation
and the Indigenous Procurement Policy.[99]
2.86
Mr Grzeskowiak noted that he had recently been appointed the Defence
Indigenous champion because of his interest in this area and spoke about some
recent initiatives:
I recently had a meeting with representatives from around 20
of the Indigenous companies that we deal with, mainly in the construction and
services sector—that's my area of business in Defence—and they gave me some
really good messages about how we can continue to take this forward.
Interestingly, one of the key messages—and I think we are hearing that in some
of these hearings as well—is that it's no good to have a huge splash of cash in
a particular financial year or over a couple of years. What small companies in
particular need to see is a steady and growing stream of work, particularly for
the Indigenous companies, who are very keen to take on Indigenous apprentices.
Obviously an apprentice needs to be there for a few years, and so you need some
form of surety of supply.[100]
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