Chapter 4 Additional Issues
Introduction
4.1
Chapter 4 considers three issues of interest during the Fifth Review
reporting period of the Joint Committee on the National Broadband Network (JCNBN):
n private equity
engagement in funding the National Broadband Network (NBN); and
n workforce issues,
including Telstra workforce retraining issues related to the NBN rollout and NBN
workforce planning (NBN Co contract issues are discussed in Chapter 2).
4.2
The committee discussed the operation of emergency alarms under the NBN
rollout, including battery back-up issues, in its Fourth Review report and made
a recommendation in this area.[1] Evidence relating to this
matter received over the Fifth Review covered similar issues.[2]
Private Equity Engagement
Background
4.3
The issue of private equity engagement in funding the NBN has been
discussed in each of the committee’s reports to date.
4.4
This section of the report again considers this issue and
provides a brief overview of the Government’s response to the committee’s
recommendations to date in this area. (Government funding of the NBN over the
rollout period, under the equity agreement between the Government and the NBN
Co, and broader matters relating to NBN policy and alternative network models are
discussed in Chapter 2.)
Current Review
4.5
Over the Fifth Review reporting period, there continued to be interest
in when and how private equity might be engaged in funding the NBN wholesale platform.
4.6
The Allen and Overy/Venture Consulting submission highlighted ‘Ownership
and funding—[t]he best structure and ownership model for the NBN, whether it
should remain as a GBE or have private sector involvement and what form that
private sector involvement should take’—as a key issue for the NBN rollout.[3]
4.7
Previous committee reports have explored the cost-benefit of bringing
forward a timeframe for private equity engagement in funding the NBN. That
discussion has highlighted a number of key factors affecting the use of private
investment, including the amount available for investment, the rates of return
required on investment and the level of control required by investors.[4]
4.8
This matter again arose during the Fifth Review, with Allen and Overy/Venture
Consulting outlining a range of private equity engagement options for the NBN.[5]
Private sector rates of return required on investment were similarly discussed.[6]
Allen and Overy/Venture Consulting commented that ‘the private sector should
be involved in delivering and funding
NBN solutions to the fullest extent that this is practicable and efficient’ but observed that:
In the short
to medium term there are outcomes that may only be
achievable under government ownership. Entrenched industry positions, regulatory risk and funding during a period
of limited debt availability are relevant in this context.[7]
4.9
Allen and Overy/Venture Consulting further noted:
…the market has failed to deliver and the private sector has
failed to deliver a comprehensive national broadband network to date. That is
the result of, in our view, risk factors around Telstra’s structural separation,
the financial crisis and capital markets, but clearly that failure needs to be
addressed by government and, hence, we have a government sponsored plan.[8]
4.10
However, in the ‘mid to long term, there should be a plan to transition
that back to private sector investment’.[9]
Government Response to Committee Recommendations
4.11
The committee’s previous reports have considered the points of entry
for private investment in the NBN—both in
the form of equity and debt
funding.
4.12
In its Third Review, the committee urged progress in ‘gauging investor interest
in the NBN’ and ‘exploring the cost/benefit of
different capital structures for the NBN’.[10]
In its response to the Third Review, the Government commented that:
Following completion of the rollout, the government will
consider the optimum capital structure for the Company, noting that NBN Co
is required to operate within the ownership and investment settings determined
through the National Broadband Network Companies Act 2011.[11]
4.13
Noting this response, in its Fourth Review the committee observed that
there was ‘merit, at this point in time, in beginning to gauge investor
interest in the NBN and explore the optimum capital structure for the company’.[12]
4.14
In terms of debt financing, the Government’s Statement of Expectations
specifies that ‘NBN Co should seek to raise debt capital at the earliest
opportunity it is able without external support’.[13]
NBN Co’s Corporate Plan 2012-15 assumes initial debt-raising in 2015.[14]
4.15
During its Third Review, the committee heard that the NBN Co had ‘not
had any discussions on debt financing yet’.[15] With the NBN Co Corporate
Plan 2012-15 projecting debt financing to commence in 2015, the committee therefore
recommended that:
n NBN Co progress its
consideration of debt financing arrangements as a priority.[16]
4.16
The Government response to the Third Review report supported this
recommendation.[17] However, the Government
response further observed that ‘debt arrangements are subject to market
conditions outside of NBN Co and the government’s control and will need to
be assessed closer to the point that debt is required’.[18]
Workforce Issues
Telstra Workforce Retraining Issues
Background
4.17
This section of the report looks at Telstra workforce retraining issues
related to the NBN rollout, including the Telstra Retraining Funding Deed (RFD)
and Telstra Training Plan. In particular, it provides a brief overview of the
Government’s response to the committee’s recommendations to date in this area.
4.18
The Binding Definitive Agreements between the NBN Co and Telstra
form the basis of Telstra‘s participation in assisting with the NBN rollout.[19]
In support of these agreements, the Government has committed to provide
$100 million to Telstra under the RFD to assist it in the retraining and
redeployment of Telstra employees affected by structural reforms of the
telecommunications industry.[20] The RFD between the Commonwealth
and Telstra came into force when the Binding Definitive Agreements commenced in
March 2012. The term of the RFD is eight years.
4.19
The objectives of the RFD are ‘to support the availability of an
appropriately trained workforce for the NBN and to retrain Telstra staff who
may otherwise face redundancy as a consequence of the rollout of the NBN’.[21]
4.20
The RFD sets out how Telstra will identify employees eligible for
retraining in NBN related technical, process and system activities; the scope
of training courses to be made available; the standards and quality that must
be met; and the timing of training. It operates by identifying two categories
of employee: an Automatically Eligible Workgroup (AEW) and another group of
employees who may be determined to be eligible. The AEW group includes the
Telstra:
n copper and hybrid
fibre coaxial (HFC) based field workforce which undertakes installation and
maintenance and construction and maintenance activity on Telstra’s Customer
Access Network;
n direct field support
workforce which conducts copper/HFC based field workforce support, including
workforce management, workforce and resource planning, and construction program
management;
n support of copper/HFC
operations workforce which provides design of products, management of damages,
network integrity, plant assigning, customer network improvements and contract
management; and
n wholesale copper
service workforce which provides the interface between retail service providers
and Telstra in relation to copper services.[22]
4.21
The other eligible group comprises those ‘employees who Telstra is
satisfied may face redundancy over time (if not retrained) as a consequence of
the decommissioning of the copper network or the deactivation of the HFC
network’.[23]
4.22
The RFD requires that a Training Plan be developed by Telstra and
approved by the Commonwealth. Each Training Plan covers a three-year period,
with the initial Training Plan covering the period 30 April 2012 to 30 June
2014.[24] The scope of the
Training Plan is to identify training needs, course development, training
methodology and targets for retraining.
4.23
The RFD and Training Plan include a detailed reporting regime, covering
both financial and training activities. Telstra must:
n provide a half yearly
report to the Department on progress against the training plan and a more
detailed annual report to the Department on the training plan; and
n meet with the
Department every six months and, unless agreed otherwise, to discuss, among
other things, the progress of the retraining; and
n hold quarterly
meetings with its unions which the Department will attend as an observer.[25]
Government Response to Committee Recommendations
4.24
The committee’s Third Review and Fourth Review reports discussed the Telstra RFD and Training Plan in
detail.
4.25
In order to better monitor progress under the Telstra RFD and Training
Plan in supporting the availability of an appropriately trained workforce for
the NBN, the committee recommended in its Third Review that:
…the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital
Economy publicly disseminate a reporting document on annual progress under the
Telstra Retraining Funding Deed.[26]
4.26
In its response to the Third Review the Government noted that it ‘broadly support[ed] this recommendation’ and agreed that information about progress under the RFD could
be included in its ‘annual statement outlining the direct and indirect
employment benefits of the National
Broadband Network’ as part of the Government response to the committee’s
reports.[27]
NBN Workforce Planning
Background
4.27
Over the Fifth Review reporting period, there was continued interest in
workforce issues in the context of the NBN rollout. This matter has been discussed in each of the committee’s reports to date.
4.28
This section of the report looks at NBN workforce planning—in
particular:
n training and
accreditation;
n subcontractor
workforce planning (NBN Co contract issues are discussed in Chapter 2);
and
n participation of
local recruitment firms and the local construction industry.
Training and Accreditation
4.29
The Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the committee on
the NBN rollout noted that work had commenced on the development of a Training
and Accreditation Program to establish ‘a number of accreditations that will be
required by workers who perform specific tasks in the construction and
maintenance of the NBN’, with the accreditations designed to ‘minimise the risk
of quality and safety issues through a national system of training and
assessment’.[28]
4.30
The NBN Co has also applied
to
the Australian Skills
and Qualification Authority for ‘approval of a suite of
NBN Co specific national skills
sets
and NBN Co branded
qualifications to provide training for job
seekers’,
with approval expected
before the end of 2013.[29]
Subcontractor Workforce Planning
4.31
The Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report noted that an update of 2010
workforce modelling data was completed over the reporting period.[30]
This process sought to ‘update the forecast level of demand for construction
and design roles’, as well as the impact of a number of other matters.[31]
The 2012 modelling forecasts a ‘peak workforce of 16,000-18,000, which is
consistent with the 2010 forecast’ but reflects ‘changes in the demand for
specific occupations’.[32]
4.32
As explained in previous reports, this workforce modelling draws on national
rollout schedules to:
n identify where and when
NBN construction activities will take place and the type of network architecture
to be built;
n identify the rollout schedule
data which is then overlayed with assumptions built upon construction activities,
including; crew composition, productivity rates, occupations and installation guidelines;
and
n provide a forecast of
demand for workers, by region, occupation and time.[33]
4.33
In March 2013, the NBN Co announced a construction
delay of about three months in its fibre rollout timeline.[34]
It was noted that this delay was a ‘short-term issue’ that would ‘not affect
the long-term delivery of the NBN or the overall cost of the project’.[35]
The NBN Co commented that some of its construction contractors had
‘progressed work on the ground at a slower rate than forecast’:
“The problem is we are just not seeing the ramp
up of construction workers on the ground that would be needed to deliver these
targets.
“This lack of mobilisation, combined with some
of our contractors recently lowering their forecasts, has led us to make the
judgment call to reforecast our end-of-year projections…[36]
4.34
The NBN Co announced a series of actions to address
this delay, including that:
n NBN Co
will directly manage the Northern Territory rollout to ensure the delivery of
fast broadband to the NT and to allow contractor Syntheo to focus on WA and SA.
This will see NBN Co create up to 200 jobs in the NT at the peak of the
rollout
n NBN Co
and its construction partners will train and employ additional specialist
telecoms workers (“fibre splicers”) to help recover lost time in the rollout of
the network
n NBN Co’s
fibre construction contractors will increase their investment in equipment and
manpower as well as technology to accelerate on-the-ground design and planning.[37]
4.35
The short-term delay in the fibre rollout timeline raised a number of issues
concerning the mobilisation of skilled labour by subcontractors and the
training and employment of additional fibre splicers. On this point, Mr Mike Quigley, Chief Executive Officer of
NBN Co, acknowledged that:
In hindsight, we probably should have been more involved in
the details of the construction companies. We keep across them in general terms.
We have some 21 or 22 major partners doing everything from launching satellites
to building satellites to building fixed wireless networks and delivering ethernet
aggregation equipment…We did not anticipate having to get into this level of detail
in the construction. That is why we contracted it. What we subsequently found out
is that we needed to, that we have to, and that is what we are doing now and have
been doing since that time.[38]
4.36
Mr Ralph Steffens, Chief Operating Officer of NBN Co, added that:
We need to remind ourselves that the area we are struggling
with is predominantly cable holding, cable splicing and cable testing, and some
civil activities around boring, trenching and pit replacement. We are struggling
with the fact that we have relatively small projects on a relatively large scale
across large geography. There is a challenge, clearly, for the delivery partners.
They have to make sure that the right people are there at the right time with the
right material and the right skills, and then you achieve enormous productivity.
That is the area we are working with. There is nothing which led me to believe
that the industry would not fix this problem. The peak run rate we are looking at,
which we have not changed, is certainly achievable.[39]
4.37
In terms of fibre splicing, the NBN Co confirmed that they had ‘rework on the splicing front’:
Where you clearly see a correlation is in the difference between
experienced and unexperienced operators. The unexperienced are driving a higher
degree of rework…
With a very experienced operator versus an operator who has just
come out of training school, there is easily a three- or four-fold difference in
performance.[40]
4.38
Concerning the number of fibre splicers, the NBN Co further confirmed
that:
The good news is that we do not need thousands or tens of thousands
of splicers across the network. We are talking about hundreds. It is a high-skilled,
well-paid job, which is there for many years to come—way beyond the build, obviously,
because there will always be augmentation work to be done—so there are a lot of
splicers coming out of school today; hence you have more issues today than we will
have in the future.[41]
4.39
The NBN Co concluded that ‘[w]e have to say that it is true that this
learning curve on splicing was one of the things that has caused the delay in
getting to the number that we hoped to, by the end of June’.[42]
4.40
Against this background, it is noted that a series of NBN Co Subcontractors
Jobs and Training Forums have been held with delivery
partners to plan for the future labour mobilisation required for the rollout. As
the Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the committee
highlighted, a Subcontractors Jobs
and Training Forum was held in conjunction with Silcar
in Western Sydney during September 2012, with over 70 subcontractors
in
attendance.[43] The purpose of the forum was to ‘inform
subcontractors about the significant increase in future workload and options
for
growing their workforce’.[44] Other forums were held
in Melbourne (Transfield) and Hobart (Visionstream),
with further forums being organised
with other delivery partners.[45]
Local Workforce Participation
4.41
The participation of local
recruitment firms and the local construction industry in the NBN rollout was
also of interest over the Fifth Review reporting period—in particular, whether
some of these groups at the local level might perceive they had been ‘shut out’
of contract processes. Mr Quigley responded that:
We are getting that message and we are doing all that we can
to try to connect those people we are receiving that message from to our construction
partners. It is clear that there is still substantial work to be done to optimise
that, to try to ensure that this kind of layering that we have in the construction
industry in Australia is not impeding rapid progress. I have to say today it is.[46]
4.42
Mr Steffens further noted that this is ‘one of the fundamental issues’:
You have this so-called supply chain, this layering where work
packages go through many hands before they reach the people who actually execute
the work. We on a local level are having events where we connect the local community
with our delivery partners to ensure that the communication flow gets improved
in that we cut through these layers as efficiently as possible. That is probably
the most important area that we need to focus on in order to speed up the rollout.[47]
4.43
The Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report further noted that, as a
result of work with various industry groups, ‘an umbrella model for accessing
funding’ has been established to ‘support sub-contractors in taking on trainees
and increasing their workforce’.[48] This umbrella approach
to funding proposals will ‘facilitate principal contractors/delivery partners
and their sub-contractors being engaged with large federally funded programs’
and ‘assist their understanding of how to access government funding and how to
connect with apprentices, local job seekers and Indigenous Australians’.[49]
Concluding Comments
Private Equity Engagement
4.44
The committee has investigated the points of entry
for private investment in the NBN—both in
the form of equity and debt
funding—in all five of its reports to date. This discussion has been in the
interest of ensuring the most efficient build of the NBN.
4.45
The committee reiterates the recommendation made in its Fourth Review
report that the Government should commence gauging investor interest in the NBN
and considering the optimum capital structure for the NBN Co.[50]
4.46
Noting the current projected timeframe for debt financing to commence in
2015,[51] the committee
understands that the NBN Co has now ‘sought advice and held discussions with a
range of external third parties’ concerning this matter.[52]
The committee encourages the NBN Co to continue this process and include an
update on this area in its revised Corporate Plan.
Workforce Issues
4.47
The committee continues to be interested in Telstra workforce retraining
issues and NBN workforce planning as part of the NBN rollout. In its Fourth
Review, the committee recommended that:
… in providing an annual statement to the committee on the
progress of the Telstra Retraining Funding Deed (RFD), the Department of
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy include in this information
an update on:
n ongoing company
retention rates for employees in the Automatically Eligible Workgroup,
retrained under the RFD;
n the current numbers
and roles of employees in the other eligible workgroup under the RFD and an
overview of the current reasons for eligibility or exclusion in terms of this
group.[53]
4.48
The committee looks forward to receiving updated information about
progress under the Telstra RFD and Training Plan as a regular part of the
Government’s response to the committee’s reports. The committee will continue
to investigate any further matters of interest arising in this area. The
Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (DBCDE) is also
encouraged to continue to make regular public reports on progress under the
Telstra RFD and Training Plan.
4.49
As discussed earlier, the committee notes that the DBCDE and the
NBN Co have undertaken a number of initiatives to communicate, plan for
and address emerging NBN training needs and workforce demand, to identify
future skills gaps and ensure an appropriately skilled workforce to support the
rollout.[54] Other initiatives include
the NBN Co’s recent announcement that it will be working with construction
partners to ‘train and employ additional specialist telecoms workers (“fibre
splicers”) to help recover lost time in the rollout’.[55]
4.50
In previous committee reviews, the department and the NBN Co have
also indicated that they are ‘working closely with all stakeholders including
the NBN Co’s service delivery partners, the industry skills boards and training
organisations to facilitate partnerships and support an appropriately skilled
workforce to support the rollout’.[56]
4.51
The committee further notes the Government response to recommendations
in its previous reports concerning the issue of NBN workforce planning. In its
Third Review, the committee recommended that:
…NBN Co publicly communicate major areas of emerging training
need and workforce demand with regard to the rollout of the National Broadband
Network, to assist with future Australian workforce planning in this sector.[57]
4.52
In its response to the Third Review, the Government supported this
recommendation and provided a detailed overview of NBN Co initiatives in this
area.[58]
4.53
In its Fourth Review, the committee suggested that further coordination in
this area may be of benefit, in developing and implementing an overall NBN
workforce strategy. It therefore recommended that:
…in providing an annual statement to the committee outlining
the major areas of emerging National Broadband Network (NBN) workforce demand
and training need, the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital
Economy include in this information a more detailed report on:
n the workforce
development strategy supporting the NBN rollout, including current workforce
modelling and outcomes from work with training organisations and industry
skills boards, to identify skills gaps in this area and develop training
programs;
n how the development
and implementation of this overall workforce strategy is being coordinated.[59]
4.54
The committee looks forward to receiving updated information about
progress in this area as a regular part of the Government’s response to the
committee’s reports. The NBN Co and the DBCDE are also encouraged to continue
to make regular public reports on progress in this area.
4.55
The committee notes the significance of workforce
planning in meeting projected NBN rollout targets. The NBN Co’s March 2013
announcement concerning a short-term delay in the fibre rollout timeline as a
result of issues with subcontractor mobilisation of skilled labour,[60]
as discussed earlier, suggests that this area requires continued attention.
Recommendation 4 |
4.56
|
The committee recommends that the Government continue
considering investor interest in the National Broadband Network and the
optimum capital structure for the NBN Co Limited.
|
Recommendation 5 |
4.57
|
The committee recommends that the NBN Co Limited continue
to:
n work
with contractors to ensure sufficient mobilisation of skilled labour to meet
National Broadband Network (NBN) rollout targets;
n update
NBN workforce modelling data to assist with communicating and planning for
changing NBN training needs and workforce demand; and
n encourage
the participation of local recruitment firms and the local construction
industry in the NBN rollout.
|
Robert
Oakeshott MP
Chair
4 June 2013
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