Attorney-General's portfolio
2.1
This chapter summarises some of the matters raised during the
committee's consideration of the additional estimates for the Attorney-General's
portfolio for the 2017–18 financial year on 27 February 2018.
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
2.2
The committee opened its questioning of the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal (AAT) by asking for the current lodgement figures for applications for
review. Ms Sian Leathem, Registrar, stated that the AAT received 51,426 applications
during the 2016–17 year, which was a 24 per cent increase from the 2015–16
year.[1]
Ms Leathem also noted:
For the first half of this 2017-18 year, we've received a
further 29,537 applications. That actually is equivalent to 57 per cent of what
we received at the same point in time the previous year, so it's effectively a
16 per cent increase from that period in time.[2]
2.3
A number of other topics were discussed, including:
-
a decision announced by the Attorney-General on 2 June 2017 not
to renew a number of appointments to the Tribunal;[3]
-
appeal rates in relation to the Migration and Refugee Division;[4]
-
applications related to social security, child support payments
and disability support payments;[5]
and
-
conflict of interest matters in relation to AAT members.[6]
Family Court of Australia, Federal Circuit Court of Australia, and Federal
Court of Australia
2.4
The committee called the Family Court of Australia, the Federal Circuit
Court of Australia, and the Federal Court of Australia (the courts). Prior to
the commencement of questioning, Mr Warwick Soden, Chief Executive Officer and
Principal Registrar of the Federal Court of Australia (FCA) and the Acting
Chief Executive Officer and Principal Registrar of the Family Court of
Australia (FamCA), explained that the Chief Justice of the FamCA had asked him
earlier in the year to act as Chief Executive and Principal Registrar of that
court. He was therefore appearing as a representative for the two agencies.[7]
2.5
The committee questioned the courts about discussions regarding the
possibility of restructuring the court systems. Dr Stewart Fenwick, Chief
Executive Officer and Principal Registrar, Federal Circuit Court of Australia
(FCCA), stated that discussions with officials, in addition to public
consultations, were underway but that they were in very early stages.[8]
It was also stressed that the process was not being considered as a review of
the courts, but instead as 'an exploration of possible options for reform,
looking at the effectiveness and efficiency of the existing structure'.[9]
2.6
The committee asked the courts a number of questions on topics,
including:
-
the impending retirement of Chief Justice of the FamCA and plans
for his eventual successor;[10]
-
timeliness statistics for the FamCA and the FCCA in relation to family
law matters;[11]
-
the number of judges and their associated workloads across the
FamCA and the FCCA;[12]
-
the role of registrars in the FCCA and the FamCA;[13]
and
-
pilot programs and studies regarding the use of night courts.[14]
Office of the Australian Information Commissioner
2.7
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC, the office)
provided an opening statement to the committee which detailed a number of
matters relevant to the agency. In particular, the opening statement
highlighted the impending retirement of Mr Timothy Pilgrim PSM, Australian
Information Commissioner, who noted his twenty years of appearances before the
committee in Senate estimates in various capacities and paid tribute to OAIC
staff.[15]
2.8
The committee questioned the OAIC regarding privacy concerns in
connection with drones. Mr Pilgrim explained that, as the OAIC's functions
extended only to informational privacy in relation to entities covered under
the Privacy Act, complaints between individuals regarding drone use were outside
its remit.[16]
When questioned about government agencies using drones to collect information,
Mr Pilgrim stated:
There would be two aspects we'd look at. We would look at the
statute that covered the particular agency's collection behaviours in the first
place. That is one consideration. We would also look at the application of the
Privacy Act. Certainly, they would need to comply with the privacy principles
if they were, in fact, collecting personal information by that means, in the
same way they would if they were collecting it by soliciting it through a form
or some other means like that.[17]
2.9
The committee queried the OAIC's response to proposed secrecy laws.
Mr Pilgrim stated that the office had given feedback to AGD in addition to
providing evidence to the bill inquiry led by the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Intelligence and Security.[18]
2.10
The committee inquired whether additional statutory office holders
should be appointed. The OAIC noted that a previous model had envisaged three
separate roles, but that the statutory framework allowed for the individual
officers in those roles to exercise powers under other acts.[19]
It further stated:
The government's view has been that it has been working have
very well with Mr Pilgrim as the Privacy Commissioner and the Information
Commissioner. The department engages with Mr Pilgrim on how the office is
functioning. Mr Pilgrim has pointed to a question of resourcing; that's often a
challenge for agencies in this portfolio, where they might be subject to
downstream workload impacts flowing from matters in other portfolios. For
example, if there are privacy issues flowing from the actions of another
portfolio then that workload is felt by the Officer of the Information
Commissioner. So it's a challenge sometimes to engage those other portfolios as
to whether they can provide additional resourcing for the OIC to cope with that
downstream workload impact.[20]
Australian Human Rights Commission
2.11
At the request of the committee, commissioners of the Australian Human
Rights Commission (AHRC) included the President, Emeritus Professor Rosalind
Croucher AM; the Race Discrimination Commissioner, Dr Tim Soutphommasane; the
Age Discrimination Commissioner, the Hon Dr Kay Patterson AO; and the
Disability Discrimination Commissioner, Mr Alistair McEwin. Officers from the AHRC
were also in attendance.
2.12
The committee discussed a number of topics in relation to disability
discrimination, including: complaints received by the AHRC in relation to the
Disability Discrimination Act;[21]
and recruitment practices and targets or quotas in order to increase the
representation of people with disabilities in the workforce.[22]
2.13
The committee asked the AHRC about the priorities of the work of the Age
Discrimination Commissioner. Dr Patterson stated that she was prioritising work
on reducing ageism in the workplace, elder abuse, and older women at risk of
homelessness.[23]
2.14
The committee also questioned the President regarding the work of the
Religious Freedom Review, of which Professor Croucher is a panel member.[24]
Attorney-General's Department and Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation
2.15
The committee called Groups 2 and 3 of the Attorney-General's Department
(AGD) to attend the estimates hearing. While the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) had originally been scheduled to appear
separately to AGD, delays in calling AGD prompted the committee to call ASIO in
conjunction with Group 3—Criminal Justice and National Security Group at 9.36
pm, after the evening tea break.
Oversight of the investigation into
the Australian Border Force Commissioner
2.16
The committee questioned AGD by seeking clarification on a number of
matters regarding the investigation into the Australian Border Force Commissioner.[25]
The Secretary, Mr Chris Moraitis, explained that AGD had played very
little role in the investigation, and that Dr Parkinson, Secretary of the
Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, was better placed to respond to
questions.[26]
Machinery-of-government changes
2.17
The committee asked questions regarding the changes to the
administrative arrangements in relation to staffing, finance and other related
matters. The Secretary stated that the machinery-of-government changes had
moved a number of staff and work areas to the new Home Affairs portfolio, with
the second phase expected subject to the passage of legislation.[27]
The Secretary also noted that a parallel process was in place in relation to
cyberactivities, which involved the creation of the Australian Signals
Directorate as a statutory authority within the Defence Portfolio, and would
require the movement of staff out of AGD into the new agency.[28]
2.18
The Secretary advised that, in relation to financial and staffing
matters, there had been a movement of accrued liabilities and leave
entitlements, which had been reconciled. He explained that a transfer of
responsibilities had occurred, which were reflected in the administrative
arrangement orders, including areas such as money laundering and criminal
justice.[29]
2.19
The committee also asked questions regarding the Attorney-General's future
role in relation to ASIO. Mr Moraitis advised that the Attorney-General would
continue to oversee warrants and special operations in ASIO, as announced by
the Prime Minister in July 2017. Consequentially, some staff would remain in
AGD to advise the Attorney-General in relation to authorising warrants.[30]
Mr Duncan Lewis AO DSC CSC, Director-General of ASIO, also noted that the
Attorney-General would continue to exercise ministerial discretions.[31]
Other matters
2.20
The committee also asked questions of AGD and ASIO relating to:
-
the legal status of extremist material;[32]
-
criteria and procedures for Commonwealth employees seeking assistance
from the Office of Legal Services Coordination;[33]
-
officers engaged in overseas programs or activities; examples
provided included officers assisting the Indonesian government to strengthen
the legal system; and prosecutors stationed in Papua New Guinea providing
skills in capacity building, particularly in relation to gender violence;[34]
-
whether proposed national security legislation addressed a perceived
threat of covert foreign influence in Australian elections;[35]
-
proposed legislative amendments to the Native Title Act;[36]
-
matters concerning the Royal Commission into Institutional
Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, including draft legislation and an AGD task
force established to coordinate the implementation of the recommendations;[37]
-
consultation regarding security concerns in relation to private
sector company participation in a 5G working group;[38]
and
-
correspondence from September 2013 between the Secretary of the
then-Department of Immigration and Border Protection and the former
Director-General of ASIO, in relation to security clearances for people seeking
permanent protection visas.[39]
National Archives of Australia
2.21
The committee asked the National Archives of Australia (NAA) about
applications to declassify historic Australian secret intelligence records
relating to East Timor and Indonesia.[40]
When queried about the decision-making process for the declassification of
secret intelligence records, Mr David Fricker, Director-General of NAA,
explained that documents contained by the Australian Secret Intelligence
Service were not held by NAA, and that arrangements made under the Archives Act
enabled NAA to begin a process of retrieval for release.[41]
2.22
In response to a question regarding the decision-maker in such
decisions, he stated:
The ultimate decision-maker is my office, the Office of
Director-General of the National Archives. As the occupant of that position, I
have to satisfy myself that the requirements for exemption have been fulfilled
as required under the act, so I do make it a practice to understand as
completely as possible what the nature of those records are and the reasons for
exemption. Ordinarily that would involve me seeing those records. However, I
further add that the section 35 arrangements as prescribed under the act allow
us to make arrangements for the proper examination and handling of records, and
the advice that I would receive from the controlling agencies would weigh very,
very heavily upon any decision that the Archives would make.[42]
2.23
The committee also questioned NAA's temporary relocation to Old Parliament
House in Canberra, which was stated to be as a result of the sale and
remediation of the East Block facilities.[43]
Mr Fricker noted that most functions of the agency had been maintained, with
the exception of certain public programs which could not be accommodated within
the temporary site.[44]
Senator the Hon. Ian Macdonald
Chair
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