Annual report – 2010 - Report 1/2011
Members of the Committee at 31 December 2010
Senator C Bernardi |
(LP) |
SA |
(Chair) |
Senator M. Forshaw |
(ALP) |
NSW |
(Deputy Chair) |
Senator J Adams |
(LP) |
WA |
|
Senator C Bilyk |
(ALP) |
TAS |
|
Senator G. Humphries |
(LP) |
ACT |
|
Senator D Johnston |
(LP) |
WA |
|
Senator L Pratt |
(ALP) |
WA |
|
Senator R Siewert |
(AG) |
WA |
|
Contact:
Committee Secretary and
Registrar of Senators’ Interests
Department of the Senate
Parliament House
CANBERRA ACT 2600
Telephone: (02) 6277 3360
Fax: (02) 6277 3199
Email:
senators.interests@aph.gov.au
Internet: https://www.aph.gov.au/senate/committee/interests_ctte/index.htm
22A Senators' Interests
(1)
A
Committee of Senators’ Interests shall be appointed at the commencement of each
Parliament:
(a)
to
inquire into and report upon the arrangements made for the compilation,
maintenance and accessibility of a Register of Senators’ Interests;
(b)
to
consider any proposals made by senators and others as to the form and content
of the register;
(c)
to
consider any submissions made in relation to the registering or declaring of
interests;
(d)
to
consider what classes of person, if any, other than senators ought to be
required to register and declare their interests; and
(e)
to
make recommendations upon these and any other matters which are relevant.
(2) (a) The
membership of the committee shall as closely as possible reflect the
composition of the Senate and, until modified by a subsequent resolution, shall
consist of 8 senators, 3 nominated by the Leader of the Government in the
Senate, 4 nominated by the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate and 1
nominated by any minority groups or independent senators.
(b) The nominations of the minority
groups or independent senators shall be determined by agreement between the
minority groups and independent senators, and, in the absence of agreement duly
notified to the President, the question of the representation on the committee
shall be determined by the Senate.
(3)
The
committee shall elect as its chair one of its members nominated by the Leader
of the Opposition in the Senate.
(4)
The
quorum of the committee shall be 3 members
(5)
The
chairman may from time to time appoint a member of the committee to be deputy
chairman, and the member so appointed shall act as chairman of the committee
when there is no chairman or the chairman is not present at a meeting of the
committee.
(6) Where
votes on a question before the committee are equally divided, the chairman, or
the deputy chairman when acting as chairman, shall have a casting vote.
(7)
The
committee shall have power to send for persons or documents, but shall not
exercise that power, nor undertake an investigation of the private interests of
any person, except in accordance with a decision agreed to by not less than 3
members of the committee other than the chairman.
(8)
The
committee shall have power to confer with a similar committee of the House of
Representatives.
(9) The
committee shall, as soon as practicable after 31 December in each year, prepare
and table in the Senate a report on its operations during that year, and shall
also have power to report from time to time.
Report
1/2011
Annual
Report — 2010
Introduction
1. Standing order
22A requires the Committee of Senators’ Interests, as soon as practicable after
31 December each year, to prepare and table a report on its operations
during the year. This report is the sixteenth annual report of the committee.
Background
2. On 17 March 1994 the Senate adopted a resolution on the registration of senators’
interests which requires that each senator provide a statement of registrable
interests within 28 days of making and subscribing an oath or affirmation of
allegiance as a senator. The senator is also required to provide a statement of
the registrable interests of which the senator is aware of the senator’s spouse
or partner and of any children who are wholly or mainly dependent on the
senator for support. The resolution, as amended on 10 August 2006, also requires any alterations in these interests to be notified within 35 days of the
alteration occurring and, since September 2003, requires all senators to
provide full statements once at least in each Parliament.
3. The statements of
senators’ interests are kept on a public Register of Senators’ Interests.
Statements of the registrable interests of a senator’s spouse or partner and of
any dependent children remain confidential to the Committee of Senators’
Interests except where the committee considers that a conflict of interest
arises, at which time the committee may table the declaration.
4. The resolution
provides that the statements of registrable interests must accord with the
resolution and must be in a form determined by the Committee of Senators’
Interests. The resolution also provides that the Register of Senators’
Interests shall be maintained by the Registrar of Senators’ Interests in
accordance with procedures, and in a form, determined by the committee, and that
the public register shall be available for inspection by any person under
conditions laid down by the committee.
5. Standing order
22A, also adopted on 17 March 1994, establishes the Committee of Senators’
Interests. The committee has the responsibility of overseeing and reporting on
the registration requirements. The committee met three times in 2010, compared
with two meetings in 2009.
6. The committee’s
terms of reference require it to report on a number of matters. The committee
reports on these matters as at 31 December 2010. All documents referred to in
the above paragraphs are available on the committee’s website. Copies of the
documents have been compiled into a handbook, which is periodically updated and
may be obtained from the Registrar of Senators’ Interests.
Arrangements for the compilation, maintenance
and accessibility of the Register of Senators’ Interests
7. In 2009 the
committee considered a proposal from the Chair of the House of Representatives
Standing Committee on Privileges and Members’ Interests, Mr Brett Raguse, that
the Register should be published online. The committee had also noted the work
of the public interest group, openaustalia.org, in publishing the register.
8. In
Report 2 of 2009, the committee presented a proposal to the Senate that the
Register should be published online on the committee’s website. The committee
sought feedback from senators on the proposal. During 2010, the committee
received a small number of submissions supporting the proposal and none
opposing it. The committee continues to work toward its original timeframe of
publication of the Register online from 1 July 2011. The committee intends to
put to the Senate during the first half of 2011 a proposal to alter the
relevant resolutions about access to the Register.
9. In
its 2009 report the committee also undertook to examine the cost and
feasibility of developing a version of the Register which would allow senators
to register their interests online. The committee continued to examine this
matter during 2010.
10. In the meantime, the
compilation and publication of the Register continued as usual.
11. By longstanding
instruction of the committee, the Registrar writes to all senators twice a year
to remind them of their obligations under the resolutions. The Registrar wrote
to senators in May and December 2010. Volumes of updates, comprising new
statements and notifications of alterations of interests, were tabled on:
- 23
June 2010, covering the period 24 November 2009 to 21 June 2010
- 15
December 2010, covering the period 22 June to 13 December 2010.
12. Requests for access
to the Register of Senators’ Interests in 2010 reflected the higher long-term average
levels evident since 2005, with 53 requests met. Statistics for the period 1996
– 2010 are shown in Figure 1.
Proposals made by senators and others as to
the form and content of the register
Submissions made in relation to the
registering or declaring of interests
13. As in previous years,
the committee continued to consider submissions from individual senators
raising particular queries or matters of concern but made no further changes to
its explanatory material as a result of any submission in 2010.
14. The committee
received no proposals during the year on the form and content of the register,
other than those supporting the online publication of the Register, referred to
above.
Registration of interests by other classes of
persons
15. The committee
considered no such matters during the year.
Register of Gifts to
the Senate and the Parliament
16. Under the Senate resolution of 26 August 1997, senators must declare gifts received by them but intended by the
donor for the parliamentary institution. There was one declaration under this
resolution during 2010.
Figure
1.
Cory Bernardi
Chair
March 2011
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