Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1
Under the Public Works Committee Act 1969 (the Act), the
Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works is required to inquire into
and report on public works referred to it through either house of Parliament.
Referrals are generally made by a delegate of the Minister for Finance.
1.2
All public works that have an estimated cost exceeding $15 million must
be referred to the Committee and cannot be commenced until the Committee has
made its report to Parliament and the House of Representatives receives that
report and resolves that it is expedient to carry out the work.[1]
1.3
Under the Act, a public work is a work proposed to be undertaken by the
Commonwealth, or on behalf of the Commonwealth concerning:
n the construction,
alteration, repair, refurbishment or fitting-out of buildings and other
structures;
n the installation,
alteration or repair of plant and equipment designed to be used in, or in
relation to, the provision of services for buildings and other structures;
n the undertaking,
construction, alteration or repair of landscaping and earthworks (whether or
not in relation to buildings and other structures);
n the demolition,
destruction, dismantling or removal of buildings, plant and equipment,
earthworks, and other structures;
n the clearing of land
and the development of land for use as urban land or otherwise; and
n any other matter
declared by the regulations to be a work.[2]
1.4
The Act requires that the Committee consider and report on:
n the purpose of the
work and its suitability for that purpose;
n the need for, or the
advisability of, carrying out the work;
n whether the money to
be expended on the work is being spent in the most cost effective manner;
n the amount of revenue
the work will generate for the Commonwealth, if that is its purpose; and
n the present and
prospective public value of the work.[3]
1.5
The Committee pays attention to these and any other relevant factors
when considering the proposed work.
History of the Public Works Committee and immigration detention
1.6
The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works has had a long
history of involvement with immigration detention. Most recently, the Committee
has undertaken the following inquiries:
n Christmas Island
Immigration Detention Centre Project Update (September 2008)
n Maribyrnong
Immigration and Detention Centre (May 2005)
n Construction of a
respecified immigration reception and processing centre on Christmas Island
(December 2003)
1.7
Reports of these inquiries are available on the Committee’s website.
1.8
The redevelopment of the Villawood Immigration Detention Centre (VIDC)
was first referred to the Public Works Committee in February 2006. The then
Department of Finance and Administration and the then Department of Immigration
and Multicultural Affairs were unable to proceed with the proposal and the
inquiry lapsed. Submissions to this proposal are also available on the
Committee’s website.
1.9
Recommendations made by the Committee in Report 3/2005: Maribyrnong
Immigration and Detention Centre (MIDC) – Additional accommodation and related
works[4] resulted in the
development of the Standards for Design and Fitout for Immigration Detention
Facilities by the Department of Immigration and Citizenship as well as a
range of significant improvements to the MIDC.
1.10
The Committee is pleased to note the existence of these guidelines and
has made commentary and recommendations in this report with a view to
strengthening the guidelines and embedding them as a part of long-term
immigration facilities management in Australia.
Key Immigration Values
1.11
On 29 July 2008, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Senator
the Hon Chris Evans, announced a series of values that would underpin the
Australian Government’s immigration detention policy.[5]
1.12
The Australian Government’s immigration policy framework includes
mandatory detention of non-Australian citizens in breach of their visa
conditions. The policy for detention in immigration detention centres is
administrative and not intended to be punitive in nature. Detention facilities therefore
need to be constructed to operate with this policy construct as the principal
driver.
1.13
The proposed redesign of the VIDC is based on supporting this
immigration policy.
1.14
The Key Immigration Values are:
1. Mandatory
detention is an essential component of strong border control.
2. To
support the integrity of Australia’s immigration program, three groups will be
subject to mandatory detention:
a. All
unauthorised arrivals, for management of health, identity and security risks to
the community;
b. Unlawful
non-citizens who present unacceptable risks to the community; and
c. Unlawful
non-citizens who have repeatedly refused to comply with their visa conditions.
3. Children,
including juvenile foreign fishers and, where possible, their families, will
not be detained in an immigration detention centre (IDC).
4. Detention
that is indefinite or otherwise arbitrary is not acceptable and the length and
conditions of detention, including the appropriateness of both accommodation
and services provided, would be subject to regular review.
5. Detention
in immigration detention centres is only to be used as a last resort and for
the shortest practicable time.
6. People
in detention will be treated fairly and reasonably within the law.
7. Conditions
of detention will ensure the inherent dignity of the human person.[6]
1.15
The Committee considered the proposal in the context of these values.
1.16
It was not in the scope of this Committee’s inquiry to address matters
of immigration policy. However, some commentary and recommendations are
included in this report where the Committee observed practices that were not in
line with the Key Immigration Values.
Conduct of the inquiry
1.17
The proposal was referred to the Committee on 13 August 2009.
1.18
The inquiry was advertised in local and national newspapers and
submissions sought from those with a direct interest in the project. The
Committee received six submissions and two confidential supplementary
submissions detailing the project costs. A list of submissions can be found at
Appendix A.
1.19
The Committee undertook a site inspection at the redeveloped Maribyrnong
Detention Facility on 18 September 2009 in Melbourne as background to the
inquiry and to review the implementation of recommendations made by the Public
Works Committee in March 2005. The Committee undertook a site inspection of the
VIDC as well as a public hearing, and an in-camera hearing on the project costs
on
22 September 2009 in Sydney. A list of site inspections and witnesses at the
public hearing can be found at Appendix B.
1.20
The Committee also conducted a private informal discussion with some
detainees of the VIDC on 22 September 2009 about their experiences of the
facility and their views about the proposed redevelopment. This meeting was
extremely valuable for the Committee’s consideration of the proposed works, and
the detainee’s views are reflected through this report.
1.21
The transcript of the public hearing as well as the submissions to the
inquiry is available on the Committee’s website.[7] Plans for the proposed
works are detailed in Submission 1: Joint, Department of Finance and
Deregulation and Department of Immigration and Citizenship.
Matters addressed in this report
1.22
A range of matters were brought to the Committee’s attention during the
course of the inquiry and are addressed in this report. The Committee
considered its obligations under Section 17 (3) of the Act to have regard to
the suitability of the proposed works and the present and prospective value of
the works.
1.23
As a result, the Committee has made recommendations regarding current
infrastructure-related practices at the VIDC which it considers to have a
detrimental effect on detainees.
1.24
This report also addresses DIAC procedures, namely the document Standards
for design and fitout of immigration detention facilities, with a view to
ensuring that this and other proposed works at immigration detention facilities
are of the highest possible standard, suitable for purpose and providing value
for money for the Commonwealth.