Chapter 9 Other matters raised during the inquiry
Introduction
9.1
As noted earlier in the report, while legislation is important it is insufficient
in itself to bring about the level of change required to promote accountability
and integrity in public administration through a new public interest disclosure
system. For example, it has been noted that cultural change in the public
sector will be required to support the objectives of the legislation.
9.2
This chapter covers a number of areas that are not directly referred to
in the terms of reference but have nonetheless been recurring themes in
evidence to the Committee. These other matters include disclosures concerning
wrongdoing in the private sector, the need to change workplace culture, and the
role of support services. This chapter includes a brief discussion of the relationship
between the Committee's preferred model of public interest disclosure
provisions and existing Commonwealth laws.
Disclosures concerning the private sector
9.3
In some instances, wrongdoing within the private sector
can be just as important to the public interest as wrongdoing in the public
sector. Therefore it was argued, legislation should be focused on employment,
such as the UK Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998, rather than focus on
the public sector.[1]
9.4
Another argument for including misconduct in the private sector raised
with the Committee was based on the principle that anyone should be able to
receive protection for any public interest matter. As Whistleblowers Australia
told the Committee:
… we can see no reason why any person should not be entitled
and encouraged to report public sector misconduct or other wrongdoing which is
contrary to the public interest. Any person who makes such a report must be
protected against any form of reprisal which may arise as a consequence of
making the report.[2]
9.5
Similarly, Associate Professor Faunce argued:
… if you are trying to develop a comprehensive and effective
system of whistleblowing protections it is quite an artificial distinction to
be simply looking at the public sector service employees as if they operate in
isolation from the private sector.[3]
9.6
In a 2005 report on Australia's National Integrity Systems, Transparency
International Australia recommended a consistent legislative basis to facilitate
whistleblowing across the public, private and civil society sectors for current
and former employees based on the Australian Standard 8004-2003.[4]
9.7
While unable to provide data on the take up rate of Australian Standard
8004-2003, Whistleblower protection programs for entities, Standards
Australia advised the Committee of anecdotal evidence that the Standard was
being used in the private sector:
… I know for a fact that it was pushed under the [Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program 9] initiatives, and I know, for example, that NAB and a few other big organisations like that have used AS 8004 as their model. I just recently
did some work for the Brisbane Airport Corporation, and they have adopted AS
8004 as their model. So AS 8004 certainly does have a profile out in the
marketplace.[5]
9.8
The 1994 Senate Select Committee Report on Public Interest
Whistleblowing noted possible constitutional limitations for Commonwealth
legislation to cover disclosures concerning private sector entities. It
nonetheless recommended that, to the extent of its legislative competence,
Commonwealth whistleblower provisions include the public and private sector,
particularly in the education, health care and banking industries.[6]
9.9
Ms Kardell submitted that since the 1994 Senate report, public sector
outsourcing, privatisation, and major corporate scandals such as HIH, OneTel
and AWB there has been a change of attitude towards private sector misconduct:
The public thinking has changed as we have come to fully
appreciate just how much an ethical, accountable and properly run public and
private sector is in the public interest.[7]
9.10
However, since that Senate report, a number of private sector
whistleblower protection instruments have been developed in a variety of
regulatory regimes including:
n The Australian
Standard on Whistleblower Protection Programs for Entities (AS 8004-2003);
n The Corporate Law
Economic Reform Program (Audit Reform and Corporate Disclosure) Act 2004 which
amended the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) providing protection for whistleblowers;
and
n Other legislative
provisions in relation to financial services, unions and employer associations.[8]
The need to change workplace culture
Issues with current workplace culture
9.11
The need to change workplace culture to support a pro-disclosure or ‘if
in doubt, report’ ethos was a strong theme in evidence to the Committee. A pro-disclosure
culture would support the making of public interest disclosures, encourage
management to be responsive to the disclosures made and reduce the risk of
adverse action against people who have made disclosures. The Public Service
Commissioner noted that change towards a pro-disclosure culture required
leadership in the public sector:
Any new system would also need managers and agencies to do
more to promote the notion of an employee’s duty to report, within a climate of
pro-disclosure. This goes to the heart of the issue of cultural change within
agencies.[9]
9.12
A number of contributors to the inquiry asserted that current
bureaucratic culture is not sufficiently supportive of those who speak out. The
CPSU submission noted that the topic of whistleblowing is ‘somewhat “taboo”,
poorly understood by employees and managers alike’ in the public service.[10]
9.13
The Chief Executive Officer of the Post Office Agents Association Ltd
noted a lack of awareness about whistleblowing among his members:
In researching our submission, I contacted many of our
members, both licensed post office operators and mail contractors. None of them
knew about the policy. One of them eventually recalled something that he had
received a couple of years ago. So I think it would be fair to say that it is
not front of mind.[11]
9.14
Ms Dawn Phillips wrote to the Committee to express concerns that there
are limited opportunities for people to access legislation, understand it, and
apply it in a practical day-to-day setting. She expressed the view that the
inability of non-specialists to adequately represent their own best interests
is a matter of concern.[12]
9.15
Mr Peter Ellis drew the Committee’s attention to what he perceives as a
lack of ethical standards owing to a failure of senior management to model ethical
behaviour, respond to issues and adequately deal with allegations of misconduct.[13]
Case study Culture and processes: Ms Vivian Alvarez
Background
On 17 July 2001, Vivian Alvarez was listed as a missing
person. Three days later, she was unlawfully removed to the Philippines by the Department of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs
(DIMIA). Her family knew nothing of her whereabouts until May 2005. On 14 July 2003, DIMIA officers, responding to a missing persons request, found evidence
that tended to identify Vivian as an Australian citizen. These officers
advised their supervisor of their discovery but the police missing persons
branch was not told.
On 20 August 2003, Vivian was featured on a television
show about missing persons. A DIMIA officer saw the program and investigated
further. The investigation identified with certainty that Vivian had been illegally removed from Australia. DIMIA then informed the police but did
nothing else about the matter, either to rectify the mistake or inform senior
management or the Minister's office.
Meanwhile, Ms Alvarez was physically and mentally unwell,
languishing in a missionary hospice in the Philippines. Her former husband
had been told by the police that Vivian had been illegally removed and it was
his persistence that finally stirred DIMIA into action.
Discussion
Failure by a public officer to correct an error may be an
offence and it would more than likely be a breach of the public service Code
of Conduct. All of Vivian’s circumstances should have been reported to
senior management when they first came to light, and action could then have
been taken to establish the facts.
DIMIA lacked systems, and a culture, for reporting middle
management’s failure to act. Supervisors are a logical first point of
reference when an employee identifies a problem. In this case the junior
staff did the right thing. But, an individual must have scope to escalate a
disclosure when it appears that a problem is not being addressed by a
supervisor.
Any disclosure scheme should include a standard against
which a person can evaluate whether a matter should be escalated within an
agency, or referred to an oversight or integrity agency, when it seems that
remedial action has not been taken.
|
Suggestions for improving workplace culture
9.16
Some optimism was expressed about the prospect of transforming the traditional
closed bureaucratic culture to one that is more receptive to those who speak out.
One witness related the process of cultural change in the public sector to the
process of changing community attitudes about drink driving. The key to the
successful drink driving strategy, it was argued, was that it involved
redefining the behaviour as unacceptable and actively enforcing to law:
Thirty years ago many of my friends would brag that they were
so drunk the night before they could not remember driving home. This was a
source of pride. Of course there were laws against drink driving, but nobody
took them seriously. Now, 30 years later, drink drivers are condemned, and I
frequently hear comments like: ‘I can only have two drinks because I have to
drive home.’ This is an amazing turnaround which demonstrates how social values
and human behaviours can be changed.[14]
9.17
The Community and Public Sector Union National Secretary suggested that
new legislation should be accompanied by seminars and training for public
servants on their role in the new public interest disclosure system.[15]
9.18
The Confidant Network of the Australian Federal Police (AFP) was suggested to the Committee as an example of a system designed to ‘build a culture of
accountability that is “pro-disclosure” and which seeks to extinguish any
stigma associated with reporting’.[16] The Confidant Network
aims to provide secure and confidential advice and support to AFP members through experienced colleagues trained in handling ethical dilemmas.[17]
9.19
The AFP noted several factors contributing to the success of the Confidant
Network including:
n the use of the
independent database. Employees have more trust in the confidentiality of the
program;
n continued support
from the Senior Executive of the AFP, a number of which are Confidants. The
Commissioner is a Confidant and regularly refers to the functional capability
and purpose of the Confidant network in staff messages;
n the Confidants
themselves and their commitment to the role and the independence of the
Confidant Network external to the Professional Standards Portfolio; and
n the reporting by the
Coordinator of the Confidant Network directly to the National Manager, Human Resources.[18]
9.20
The WWTW project findings suggest that promoting awareness of
legislation and procedure can have the effect of reinforcing a positive culture
in relation to the making of disclosures:
… higher levels of reporting can and do appear to flow
logically from a greater willingness by employees to speak up, based on a more
positive culture in the organisation, encouraged by direct awareness raising.
The reverse, however, also appears true: specific factors can be identified
that correlate with reduced reporting rates and higher inaction rates.[19]
9.21
The Secretary to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
considered that legislation or ‘hard law’ can drive values and behaviour or
what he calls ‘soft law’. For example, legislative obligations for agencies to
report on the use of public interest disclosure provisions would strengthen
perceptions about the importance of the system:
If departments were obliged to report about those
arrangements to some external body, there would be some ability for confidence
that each of the numerous agencies has proper arrangements in place. That, to
me, would seem to be a substantial embedding of this as a key cultural issue,
the so-called ‘soft law’: ‘This is the way we do things around here. You never
cover up.’ You do raise issues and you are supported when you raise issues as
opposed to a perception of the opposite.[20]
The role of support services
9.22
Research undertaken by the WWTW study showed that systems for supporting
whistleblowers were not well established:
… about 1.3 per cent of all public interest whistleblowers in
our agencies had received organised internal witness support of some kind, but
that was actually 6.5 per cent of all those public interest whistleblowers who
said they had been treated badly …[21]
9.23
Professor Sampford pointed to the need to have a facility where
potential whistleblowers could access confidential advice:
… the whole point is to engage them in advice like this:
‘Here is your dilemma; I understand it. If you do this you are in the clear.’
… there can be genuine uncertainty in these matters and people of goodwill,
even whistleblowers, might say ‘Should I do it?’ or ‘Shouldn’t I do it?’ It is
very valuable to have that advice, and very valuable then when they go along
the process to know their rights and what things they have to be careful of—for
example, ‘If you are lying about these … matters then do not expect
protection.’[22]
9.24
The Executive Director (Public Sector Practice) of the Office of Public
Sector Standards Commission WA emphasised the importance of recognising the
need for support of not only whistleblowers, but those against whom allegations
have been made:
There is quite an array of things in there that require
sensitive management. Behind all of that is appropriate support for the person
who is making the disclosure and appropriate support for the person or group of
people that the disclosure is being made against, as well as the whole
workplace itself. So they are complex matters in terms of trying to tease out
what the best systems are that support the ultimate goal of ensuring that there
is a culture within an organisation that says ‘If in doubt, report,’ because
reporting any suspected wrongdoing is the best way of getting things out in the
open and dealt with and improvements made.[23]
9.25
Ms Deborah Ralston of the Queensland Council of Unions commented that,
often, support for whistleblowers will be available under other legislation of
more general application. She observed to the Committee that:
Perhaps how we view the legislation is that other assistance
is provided in additional pieces of legislation which enable the whistleblower
protection legislation to operate more robustly. So, in gauging its success, we
also have to draw our attention to those other areas and say that,
intrinsically, they all mould in together.[24]
9.26
In the Commonwealth setting, s. 16(2)(d) of the Occupational Health
and Safety Act 1991 states that the employer must take all reasonably
practicable steps to:
n develop, in
consultation with any involved unions, a policy relating to health and safety
that will:
§
enable effective cooperation between the employer and the
employees in promoting and developing measures to ensure the employees' health,
safety and welfare at work; and
§
provide adequate mechanisms for reviewing the effectiveness of
the measures.
9.27
Some contributors to the inquiry called for greater support for
whistleblowers including counselling through workplace schemes such as Employee
Assistance Programs.[25] The implementation of
Employee Assistance Programs is a response to the requirements of the Occupational
Health and Safety Act 1991.
9.28
Other support mechanisms through family, friends, unions and
organisations such as Whistleblowers Australia provide valuable forms of
assistance and advice.
Relationships with existing laws
9.29
The Committee was asked to consider the relationship between the
Committee's preferred model of public interest disclosure legislation and
existing Commonwealth laws. Appendix E provides an overview of some of the specific
legislation that may have some bearing on the provisions proposed by the
Committee. Some of the more notable legislative relationships are discussed
below.
n Existing
whistleblower protection provisions for public servants under s. 16 of the Public
Service Act 1999 and for parliamentary officers under s. 16 of the Parliamentary
Service Act 1999 are to be repealed.
n The legislation
should note that its provisions have no effect on the immunity of proceedings
in Parliament under s. 49 of the Constitution and the Parliamentary
Privileges Act 1987.
n The offence for the
unauthorised disclosure of information by Commonwealth officers under s. 70 Crimes
Act 1914 is unaffected. The Australian Law Reform Commission is currently
undertaking a review of secrecy provisions and any possible changes to this
provision will be handled through that process.
n There is no effect on
current freedom of information laws. The Government has announced that there
will be reform of the Freedom of Information Act 1982.
n Protection under new
public interest disclosure legislation will be available when the disclosure
meets the threshold test set out in this Report. To ensure that public interest
disclosure legislation adds to, and does not detract from, existing complaint,
investigative and oversight arrangements, the following general principles on
the relationship between public interest disclosure legislation and other Acts
should apply:
n Where there are
powers under another Act to investigate or deal with a matter reported as a
public interest disclosure, the matter should be dealt with using those powers notwithstanding
that the disclosure may not have been expressly made under that Act.
n Where there are
powers or requirements to take action under another Act in relation to the
investigation of any matter contained in a public interest disclosure, the
provisions of the public interest disclosure legislation are to be taken as
also applying to the investigation of the disclosure unless there is an
inconsistency, in which case the provisions of the other Act will prevail.
n Where it is decided
not to investigate, or discontinue the investigation of a matter under public
interest disclosure legislation, nothing in the public interest disclosure
legislation prevents an investigation of the same matter under any other Act.[26]
View of the Committee
9.30
Australian legislation on protection for disclosures concerning
misconduct within the private sector appears piecemeal. In view of the concerns
raised on the issue during the course of this inquiry, the Committee considers
that protections for the disclosure of wrongdoing within the private sector could
usefully be reviewed in the future.
9.31
The Committee accepts that existing workplace culture, in addition to
the lack of protection currently available, is a major disincentive for people
to speak out about suspected wrong doing. The development of a culture that is
more accepting and responsive to people who raise concerns will be an important
factor in the success of new public interest disclosure legislation.
9.32
Ideally, people should feel free to raise their concerns through both
informal and formal channels, about a range of matters regardless of their
ability to substantiate an issue. It should be considered part of normal
business activity to speak up when in doubt. As discussed in Chapter 7,
appropriate support mechanisms should be available to whistleblowers.
9.33
Some of the recommendations made by the Committee are made with the
intention to help drive cultural change from the top down by, for example,
imposing an obligation on agencies to ensure disclosures are investigated in
accordance with the legislation and notify those who make disclosures of the
outcome and the reasons for any decisions taken.
9.34
However, driving cultural change from the top down is only part of the
challenge. Public sector leaders need to model the values of transparency and
accountability and initiate a dialogue with staff about the importance of open
communication within organisations.
9.35
It is intended that part of the extended role of the Commonwealth
Ombudsman will be to conduct education and awareness raising activities in the
sector and establish confidential and anonymous avenues for people to seek
advice or make a disclosure.
Conclusions
9.36
The Committee has made recommendations on what it considers to be
priorities for model provisions for public interest disclosure legislation for
the Australian Government public sector. The overarching purpose of the
legislation is to promote accountability and integrity in public administration.
The recommendations are guided by the following principles:
n it is in the public
interest that accountability and integrity in public administration are
promoted by identifying and addressing wrongdoing in the public sector;
n people within the
public sector have a right to raise their concerns about wrongdoing within the sector
without fear of reprisal;
n people have a
responsibility to raise those concerns in good faith;
n governments have a
right to consider policy in private; and
n government and the
public sector have a responsibility to be receptive to concerns which are
raised.
9.37
Evidence to the inquiry from integrity bodies, whistleblowers, academics
and other public sector agencies indicates that Commonwealth public interest
disclosure legislation should address four main features: comprehensive
coverage; clear guidance for participants; flexibility; and workplace culture
issues.
9.38
The recommendations in this report provide for a comprehensive public interest
disclosure system that includes not only current Australian Public Service
employees, but current and former members of the broader public service
including agencies under the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Act 1997,
contractors, consultants and the employees, persons overseas and Parliamentary
staff. The scope of statutory protection available has been expanded to include
protection against detrimental action, immunity from criminal liability and
from liability for civil penalties, and immunity from civil actions such as
defamation and breach of confidence.
9.39
Clear guidance for participants in public interest disclosures is
provided for in recommendations that, in plain language, describe the range of matters
that can attract protection and the circumstances in which protection would
still apply where a disclosure is reported publicly or to third parties.
9.40
The recommendations outline a public interest disclosure system that is
appropriately flexible by providing discretion for decision makers in accepting
a disclosure where procedures are not strictly adhered to, prescribing more
than one pathway for making a disclosure, enabling the range of disclosable
conduct to be reported to a variety of authorised external recipients without
penalty, and establishing processes for finalising disclosures
9.41
Finally, the report recognises the limits of legislation in achieving
the desired outcome of accountability and integrity in public administration.
Some of the recommendations note where procedures and obligations can assist in
shaping organisational culture. The report acknowledges the role of policy, the
administration and leadership within the public sector to facilitate and
support those who speak out and ensure appropriate action is taken on
disclosures. This requires fostering a culture of disclosure where people feel
comfortable to speak out about their doubts.
Mark Dreyfus QC MP
February 2009.