Chapter 4 Accountability
4.1
The final measurement of a successful program is its level of
accountability. To be accountable, each decision made during the administration
of a program must be able to be adequately explained.
4.2
Unfortunately, the RPP was plagued with concerns about its
accountability. The ANAO cited delays, project cost increases and the adequacy
of departmental due diligence, financial management, and adherence to
departmental procedures as matters of concern. There were also concerns about
the relationship between political and administrative processes under the RPP.[1]
How do you make a new program more accountable?
4.3
The Committee’s interim report discussed several ways in which a new
program might be made more accountable. Centralising the assessment process in
a department equipped with adequate resources may be part of the solution, as
will be changes to the Financial Management and Accountability (FMA)
Regulations. Finally, program outcomes must be accurately assessed to ensure
that funding agreements have been properly executed and that public money has
been spent on its intended purpose.
A more accountable assessment process
4.4
For a program to be accountable, it must be administered by people with
the specific knowledge and skill sets required for the job. Just as it is
important for those assisting applicants to have regional knowledge, it is
equally important that application assessors have the skills to access the
financial viability of applications and projects, so as to not hinder the
decision making process. This could be achieved through a combination of senior
appointments made on the basis of the required skills, the use of third-party
providers and continued training for departmental staff.
4.5
The assessment process could then be made more accountable by ensuring
that skilled assessors are located in one office. The decentralised assessment
model of the RPP contributed to the below-standard administrative culture of
the program; therefore, the Committee has recommended that group administrative
functions be retained by the DITRDLG at a central office.[2]
4.6
This may have the advantage of increasing the agency’s capacity to
attract and retain the necessary financial expertise to administer the RLCIP,
while certainly creating clearer lines of responsibility and reducing the
number of administrative layers involved in the assessment process.[3]
Holding final decision makers to account
4.7
The Committee has supported the continued use of ministerial discretion
when approving regional funding under the RLCIP. Nevertheless, it did recognise
that the some of the problems which arose during the previous program stemmed
from considerable decision-making flexibility being granted to ministers.[4]
4.8
Flexibility was considered a strong point of the RPP on the basis that the
program could support innovative projects, including many which may not have
normally been funded because they involved more than one portfolio area. However,
ministers’ direct involvement in decisions over applications was seen as
calling the political neutrality of the program into question. In response, the
former government created a Ministerial Committee to consider applications,
with the object of improving transparency and reducing time-lines for
decision-making.[5]
4.9
Problems with ministerial discretion under the RPP also arose when
Minister’s made decisions which were at odds with program guidelines and the
advice tendered by DOTARS. This contributed to a sense of uncertainty about the
status of those guidelines, and had a negative effect on compliance within
DOTARS. Furthermore, reasons for decisions which departed from guidelines and
advice were often not recorded and were not required to be recorded under FMA
Regulations at the time.[6]
4.10
It was the Committee’s view that a new program should strive to remain
flexible while reducing the risk inherent in retaining ministerial discretion. To
that end, the Committee endorsed ANAO recommended changes to the FMA
Regulations which called for ministers (or other approvers) under FMA
Regulations to record ‘the basis on which the approver is satisfied’ that
expenditure ‘represents efficient and effective use of the public money’ and
‘is in accordance with the relevant policies of the Commonwealth’.[7]
4.11
The Government has since responded to the ANAO’s recommendation by
announcing reforms to the administration of Commonwealth grant programs.[8]
New Commonwealth Grant Guidelines will take effect on 1 July 2009 and will be ‘underpinned by a package of regulatory changes which will make it
a legal requirement for Ministers and government officials to follow the new
guidelines’.[9]
4.12
In addition, there will be a legal requirement for ministers and
officials to record the basis upon which they are satisfied that a particular
grant is an efficient and effective use of public money.[10]
4.13
These changes will reinforce ministerial responsibility for the new
program and help to reduce the discretionary risks associated with the RPP as ministers will now be held to greater account for their decisions and subject to the
penalties for offences against the Regulations.
Ensuring project success
4.14
During its inquiry, the Committee was particularly concerned about the RPP’s acquittal process. Evidence in the ANAO report suggested that during the audit period (2003
– 2006) the acquittal process was often deficient.[11]
In some instances, money was paid in advance to projects, making the acquittal
process retrospective. Furthermore, the Committee was advised that the
acquittal process was done through a one page template to be filled out by the
funding recipient and therefore, very little information was provided on where
the funds had been expended.[12]
4.15
The obvious concern for the Committee in framing recommendations for a
new program has been to ensure that money expended under the program is spent
as it is intended to be—this is a key element in ensuring the success of
projects under the program.
4.16
When the Committee questioned the DITRDLG about its acquittal processes,
it was advised that since the audit period, the Department has been asking for
‘the full financial details on accounting for expenditure of [Commonwealth]
funding’[13] and has withheld
payments when milestones have not been achieved. Also, the practice of paying
money before it has been expended has ceased.[14]
4.17
The Department also stressed the importance of examining the outcomes of
government investment, stating that the achievement of milestones would be
sufficient evidence that money was being well spent:
So long as the outcome is achieved, we can verify the outcome
has been achieved, and that is the milestone in the contract, we do not look at
how all the money was spent.[15]
4.18
The Committee does not disagree with an outcomes based approach but
stresses that the meeting of a milestone is an outcome that should represent an
expenditure of funds for a specific purpose and be confirmed in detail in order
for a thorough acquittal to have taken place. There cannot be a repeat of
circumstances where money has been expended and acquitted but nothing has
occurred.
4.19
In addition, project acquittals should be commensurate with the amount
of contribution and the Committee wishes to stress again that the prescribed
details of a funding agreement are vital to assessing a project’s outcomes and
should be clearly defined within a funding agreement. This will avoid confusion
on the part of funding recipients as to expected outcomes.[16]
4.20
There should also be language within all funding agreements which
specifies the exact purpose of the funding received. If the funding agreement
is sufficiently detailed, yet clearly stated, then it is reasonable to expect
that failure to meet objectives stipulated within the agreement would
constitute a breach of the agreement thereby providing the Commonwealth with a
measure of redress.
Conclusion
4.21
Given the level of scrutiny that the RPP had undergone, it should be
expected that any future program will be considerably more accountable than its
predecessor. Lessons have been learnt and many mistakes have already been rectified.
Departmental processes have changed drastically since the ANAO report and
recent changes to the FMA Regulations will help improve the accountability of
future programs.
4.22
A program featuring a centralised assessment process administered with
the appropriate resources will be a much more accountable one when considering
that changes which have already been implemented. In addition, an acquittal
process utilising well-structured funding agreements—where expenditure is based
on a thorough examination of each milestone—will also be an essential component
to the accountability of a new program.
Recommendation 5 |
4.23
|
The Committee recommends that the Government, in
establishing a new regional infrastructure funding program, ensure that in
addition to changes which have already occurred, a new funding program should
employ:
n a
centralised assessment process administered with the appropriate resources;
and
n an
acquittal process utilising well-structured funding agreements, where
expenditure is based on a thorough examination of each milestone.
|
Catherine King MP
Chair
June 2009