Chapter 5 Financial and resource implications
Introduction: who administers the site?
5.1
A number of contributors proposed that the House would initiate an
electronic petitions website under its own administration. This was favoured by
the Department of the House of Representatives.
5.2
Such an approach echoed the Queensland Parliament’s focus on security
and verification of signatures, which led to the site being managed under the Parliament’s
administration. While the electronic petitions website was managed by a third
party in Scotland, there were aspirations to bring it under the administration
of Parliament.[1]
5.3
Clearly, creating and maintaining a website of this nature would involve
expenditure and resources. This chapter considers the kinds of costs involved in
an electronic petitions website for the House of Representatives, and the
resource needs that could result.
Financial background
5.4
The Clerk of the House advised the Committee that ‘financial and
resource implications of an e-petitions system on a dedicated web-site model’ were
‘an important issue for the department’ since it had:
for a long time, 15 years … had the tradition of absorbing
new functions and trying to do them without additional expenditure to the
public purse. I think we have just about reached the limit of where we can go
to that extent.[2]
5.5
As a result:
The implementation of such a system would need to be
adequately funded, and the department's view, as a matter of principle, is that
it needs to be fully funded from new and additional Budget funding for the
department. While there are significant uncertainties as to the initial set up
and ongoing operational costs of such a system, the department believes that it
would not be able to fund an e-petitions system based on a dedicated website model,
without such supplementation.[3]
System cost
5.6
The Clerk told the Committee that potential costs for an electronic petitions
system lay within a range. At the upper end of estimates, there was ‘UK£500,000
with annual running costs of £750,000’ estimated by the UK Management Board for
a House of Commons electronic petitions system (modelled on the 10 Downing St electronic
petitions facility). Another figure was the AUD$80,000 that had been invested for
development and implementation for the Queensland Parliament hosted facility, ‘with
modest ongoing costs’.[4]
5.7
However, a further less expensive option was raised. The Speaker of the
Queensland Legislative Assembly offered the House of Representatives a licence
to the software system developed for the Queensland Parliament for a ‘nominal’ licence
fee.[5]
Similar arrangements had already been made with the Tasmanian Parliament, where
a system had been operating in both the Legislative Assembly and Legislative
Council following a 2004 Committee report recommendation.[6]
5.8
In a response to a proposal put to him by the Committee, the Clerk
agreed to the advisability of trialling an initial low-cost implementation,
employing ‘the same host as we have in the Queensland and Tasmanian parliaments’.
This would mean that the House of Representatives ‘would not have to pay the
full set-up cost and it would be a basic system’. This, it was suggested,
‘would be a start’ in implementing an electronic petitioning system in the
House.[7]
5.9
The Committee also received advice on financial aspects of an electronic
petitions website from Mr David Elder, Serjeant-at-Arms of the House of
Representatives. Mr Elder noted the offer from the Queensland Parliament of a licence
for its system at nominal cost. He suggested that while there ‘would need to be
some adaptations’, and the Department ‘would need to run a project to bring
that on board and make it work effectively in our own system’, it was anticipated
that this ‘could probably be done at a relatively modest cost’.[8]
5.10
Mr Elder also advised that such a project could ‘be done using capital
funds through the Department of Parliamentary Services’, noting that while:
there is certainly a lot of pressure on our operational
budget and on DPS’s operational budget, for capital items such as this there is
less pressure. We believe that we can probably develop the system without
additional funding, using capital funds available to DPS. I have flagged that
possibility with DPS and they do not see any great impediment to that.[9]
5.11
This opens the possibility that a House of Representatives electronic
petitioning system could be implemented on the basis of a low initial cost for
the software licence. Capital funds could be used for implementation and other
initial costs, including additional hardware (such as servers) that was needed
and other software licences that would be needed for the proprietary database
management software used in the Queensland system.[10]
5.12
Ms Ann Mackinnon from the Department of the House of Representatives
advised on the practicality of this option ‘from an IT point of view’, saying
that ‘it would be a relatively straight forward process’. It would, she
suggested, ‘be a project’, but the Queensland Parliament had ‘established this
system’ and the House of Representatives would simply be ‘re-implementing it
and modifying it here slightly for our situation’.[11]
5.13
It is important to note that the system used by the Queensland
Parliament allows petitions to be submitted for initial approval, posted so
that they may attract signatures, and be taken down at the end of the signature
period, and other basic elements of the management of electronic petitions. It
does not include discussion forums or other social-networking facilities such
as those employed in the Scottish Parliament’s petitions system. Mr Elder advised
that:
to the extent we go to a system with more bells and whistles,
it becomes less affordable, and my comments about us being able to do this
without additional resources may need some qualification.[12]
Day-to-day costs
5.14
If the House of Representatives adopts the system developed by the
Queensland Parliament it could implement an electronic petitions website for
comparatively little cost. However this still leaves open questions of cost for
the day-to-day administration of the system.
5.15
In assessing the potential exposure of the House in this regard, it is
useful to consider the experience of the Queensland Parliament. The Clerk of
the Queensland Parliament also spoke to the Committee about resource
implications. He told the Committee that the software system had ‘very low’
maintenance requirements’. [13] In terms of daily
work-flow, the Clerk told the Committee that the ‘day-to-day operation of the
system is run through my office, which comprises my secretary and me’:
Literally, when a member sends in an e-petition request form,
my secretary brings it through to me. I approve the wording on the form and
ensure that it is within the rules. She then enters the details onto the
database and then presses the required buttons, if you like, built into the
software to put it up on the website. The petition system automatically shuts
itself down on the closing date. My secretary then prints it out and we present
the petition to the house on the next sitting day.[14]
5.16
Resource implications were also described by the Speaker of the
Queensland Parliament, who told the Committee that:
[t]he processes are not completely automated and require some
data input and processing from Parliamentary Service staff including the follow
up process of posting Ministerial responses on the site. Total maintenance of
the site is estimated at about .4 of a full time equivalent officer.[15]
5.17
This confirmed Mr Elder’s suggestion that, in view of the anticipated
low cost of initial implementation, most of the ‘operational costs’ for the
system ‘might be largely ones for your committee secretariat rather than
back-end IT sort of expenditure’.[16] As a result, the
Department did not ‘see resourcing as necessarily being an impediment in being able
to proceed overall’.[17]
Committee comment
5.18
In the Committee’s view, on the basis of advice from the Queensland
Parliament, there are relatively low overheads for maintaining the electronic
petitions system. However, numbers of petitions are likely to be greater for
the House of Representatives, based on a sample over five years:[18]
Year
|
Queensland Parliament
|
House of Representatives
|
2007
|
205
|
148
|
2006
|
166
|
276
|
2005
|
176
|
235
|
2004
|
133
|
471
|
2003
|
137
|
369
|
5.19
Moreover, if electronic petitioning facilities were to capture public
interest, the House of Representatives could become a focus for petitioners
around the country, further increasing number of electronic petitions.
5.20
The Committee also notes the increased limits on functionality that stem
from cost constraints. Earlier the report noted risk to reputation as an
argument against adopting discussion forums. To that can be added the argument
that cost precludes their use in the near-term: due both to costs for
development (especially in view of these facilities not being available in the
current Queensland system), and in view of the further resources that would be
needed to administer them.
5.21
However the Committee believes that a watching brief should be
maintained on these forms of functionality. It may prove to be the case that
Parliament risks falling behind contemporary methods of communication unless it
maintains an awareness of developments in the area.
5.22
The Committee is also aware of an argument that the provision of
discussion forums could serve as a way of controlling risk. Discussion forums would
offer an alternative to independent forums where the House has no ability to
moderate discussion. This would increase the ability of the House to protect
against loss of reputation if offensive material were seen to be associated with
a petition to the House.
5.23
Consistent with this, the Committee believes that where possible a
system installed to manage electronic petitions in the House of Representatives
should not only be scalable, but should leave open technical avenues so that further
functionality could be added when the House reviewed its requirements.