Chapter 10 Audit Report No. 33 2009-10 Building the Education Revolution –
Primary Schools for the 21st Century
Introduction[1]
10.1
The onset of the global financial crisis in 2008 caused a severe loss of
confidence, not only in the financial sector, but also in households and
businesses around the world. The crisis has been attributed to a range of
factors including: the sudden end of the United States housing boom; novel debt
financing arrangements; and weaknesses in regulatory oversight. The result was
a period of worldwide economic downturn and a prospect of rising unemployment
in many countries.
10.2
In response, many governments around the world have adopted fiscal
measures to support employment and economic recovery. There has also been
coordinated international action through the Group of Twenty (G-20) countries,
of which Australia is a member, to provide liquidity, address regulatory
deficiencies, unfreeze credit markets and ensure that international financial
institutions are able to provide support for the global economy.
10.3
Domestically, the Australian Government announced a series of stimulus
measures in late 2008 and early 2009. The largest was the $42.1 billion Nation
Building and Jobs Plan, announced on 3 February 2009. To oversee the
implementation of the Plan, the Government established a network of
jurisdictional and sectoral coordinators headed by a Coordinator-General within
the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.[2]
10.4
The largest component of the Nation Building and Jobs Plan is the
delivery of school infrastructure under the Building the Education Revolution
(BER) program. The Government decided on school-based infrastructure spending
because it has a number of elements that supported stimulus objectives,
including:
- it has the advantage
of providing stimulus to almost every population area of the country, as the
economic slowdown was expected to be geographically widespread;
- school land is
available immediately without the need for planning approval, hence no planning
delays were envisaged; and
- school infrastructure
projects have low import content, which raises the domestic stimulatory impact.[3]
10.5
The objectives of the BER program are first, to provide economic
stimulus through the rapid construction and refurbishment of school
infrastructure and, second, to build learning environments to help children,
families and communities participate in activities that will support
achievement, develop learning potential and bring communities together.[4]
10.6
The program comprises three elements:
- Primary Schools for
the 21st Century (P21), which initially provided $12.4 billion
(later, $14.1 billion) for Australian primary schools to build new facilities,
such as libraries and multipurpose halls, or to upgrade existing facilities, by
31 March 2011[5];
- National School
Pride, which provided $1.3 billion for minor capital works and refurbishment
projects in all eligible Australian schools, to be completed by February 2010;
and
- Science and Language
Centres, which initially provided $1 billion (later, $821.8 million) for
construction of new, or refurbishment of existing, science laboratories or
language learning centres in secondary schools by 30 June 2010.
10.7
The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR)
was given responsibility for implementing the program, working through state
and territory education departments and Block Grant Authorities (collectively
referred to as ‘Education Authorities’) to facilitate the achievement of program
outputs and outcomes.[6] These Education
Authorities are responsible for implementing the program in government and
non-government schools respectively, including responsibility for ensuring that
individual projects achieve value-for-money.
10.8
The BER program is being delivered under the new federal financial
relations framework through the National Partnership Agreement (NPA) on the
Nation Building and Jobs Plan: Building Prosperity and Supporting Jobs Now.[7]
The NPA sets out high level governance arrangements for delivery of the BER
program in partnership with the states and territories including: outputs and
outcomes; roles and responsibilities; and performance benchmarks. The devolved
delivery of the program by Education Authorities has been governed by the establishment
of bilateral agreements and funding agreements with non-government Education
Authorities. These documents were drafted by DEEWR and are supported by BER
Program Guidelines, with implementation plans submitted by Education
Authorities to outline their delivery approaches.
The Audit
Audit objective[8]
10.9
The audit objective was to examine the effectiveness of the department’s
establishment of the P21 element of the BER program. The focus of the audit was
on: the establishment of administrative arrangements for BER P21 in accordance
with government policy; the assessment and approval of funding allocations; and
the arrangements to monitor and report BER P21 progress and achievement of
broader program outcomes. An examination of individual BER P21 projects was
outside the scope of the audit.
10.10
The Committee notes that the jurisdictional issues brought into focus by
the BER audit have been examined in more detail in the Committee’s review of
the Auditor-General Act 1997. A report on this inquiry is being finalised
as at November 2010.
Overall audit conclusion
10.11
The ANAO made the following overall audit conclusion:
The Building the Education Revolution (BER) program formed a
major part of the Australian Government’s response to the global financial
crisis. At $12.4 billion (later, $14.1 billion), the P21 element of the BER
program represented a doubling of recent levels of capital investment in
schools and the single largest component of the Government’s economic stimulus
package.
BER P21 is a large, high profile program that required rapid
establishment to maximise its stimulatory effect. ... The focus on quick
implementation needed to be balanced with the objective of delivering quality,
sustainable and value-for-money primary school infrastructure.
... The task facing DEEWR and Education Authorities was
considerable, with infrastructure projects to be delivered in almost every
school across the country within very compressed timeframes – as little as a
third of the time usually set aside for school infrastructure projects. The
program was also established within a new framework for intergovernmental
program delivery that was untested for a program of this kind, and a
coordination structure that added to the monitoring and reporting obligations
on administering agencies.[9]
10.12
The ANAO found that there are some early indicators that the program is
achieving its intended outcomes:
Lead economic indicators, including construction approvals,
show that the introduction of BER P21 contributed to a reversal in the decline
in non-residential construction activity that resulted from the global
financial crisis. Education industry stakeholders, including peak bodies,
Education Authorities and a substantial majority of school principals have also
been positive about the improvement in primary school facilities that will
result from the program.
10.13
The ANAO noted that DEEWR had put in place governance and delivery
arrangements to ensure the challenging timeframe was met:
The department established a BER Taskforce to develop governance
and delivery arrangements. This work comprised: drafting the BER Guidelines
(publicly released in late February 2009) and negotiating bilateral/funding
agreements with all Education Authorities (executed by mid-April 2009). Within
six months from the program’s announcement, DEEWR completed three funding
rounds, approving 10,700 BER P21 projects in around 8,000 schools. This
represented a substantial body of work undertaken in a compressed timeframe.[10]
10.14
The ANAO found that the BER Guidelines ensured that around 78 per cent
of BER P21 projects commenced on time.[11] However, construction of
the projects has progressed more slowly than intended to provide the full
benefit of the stimulus. Completion milestones were adjusted depending on the
size of the school and the ANAO found that 34 per cent of Round 1 projects and
9.6 per cent of Round 2 projects had been completed at the time of the audit.[12]
10.15
The ANAO noted that both the Strategic Priorities and Budget Committee
of Cabinet (SPBC) and DEEWR were aware that the funding allocated to the BER
P21 program would be inadequate to meet the demand:
In establishing the program, the Government decided on
funding maxima per school depending on school size, and allocated $12.4 billion
to BER P21. However, within six months of announcing BER P21, the Government
found it necessary to allocate a further $1.7 billion to the program.
Essentially, the original BER P21 budget was based on an underlying assumption
that BER P21 as a whole would be completed for 90 per cent of the cost of
providing the maximum funding for each school. In establishing the program, the
approach adopted made maximum per school funding available to all schools. As
was evident to DEEWR at the outset, this approach would require greater overall
funding than had been formally approved by government. In the normal course of
events, particularly when the increase in funding is likely to be substantial,
administering agencies would be expected to return promptly to government to
outline the case for additional funding and seek formal approval. However, in
the case of BER P21, Ministers comprising the Strategic Priorities and Budget
Committee of Cabinet (SPBC) advised that they understood schools would be able
to undertake a project or a number of projects to fully utilise the amount of
funds allocated to the school based on school size; they were aware from the
outset that the BER P21 funding envelope represented only 90 per cent of
possible expenditure; and it was therefore evident and transparent to SPBC
ministers that, depending on the response of schools, a budget estimates
variation may be required.[13]
10.16
The ANAO acknowledged the economic imperative to implement the program
expeditiously, but was critical of the constraints placed on Education
Authorities by DEEWR. The ANAO found that the administrative rules and
requirements put in place by DEEWR also went against the current reforms for
the delivery of intergovernmental programs:
The establishment of the BER program, in the context of the
financial crisis and need for a prompt government response, meant that
implementation issues were more likely to arise due to the limited time
available for policy development and program planning. This was acknowledged by
the Government at the time delivery arrangements were announced. It was,
therefore, important for DEEWR to develop effective arrangements for
collaboration both with other Commonwealth agencies and with the Education
Authorities responsible for delivering the program.
Nevertheless, administrative decisions taken by the
department in establishing BER P21, while designed to drive delivery of the
program by Education Authorities, have unduly constrained the flexibility of
authorities to determine how the program will be delivered within their
jurisdictions to achieve the intended objectives and increased the
administrative effort necessary to deliver the program.[14]
The adoption of this approach for states and territories
expanded DEEWR’s role in service delivery and, as such, was not in step with
the thrust of recent reforms to the delivery of intergovernmental programs –
that is to reduce prescriptive rules on how services are delivered through a
focus on mutually agreed outputs and outcomes. While designed to give effect to
the objective of the stimulus package, the approach adopted by the department
has reduced the capacity of school systems to take account of system priorities
and the differing needs of schools in their systems, within the Australian
Government’s policy parameters for the program. Additionally some of the
administrative arrangements put in place by the department were unduly
complicated and time-consuming for Education Authorities.[15]
10.17
The ANAO acknowledged that many of the issues that arose in the delivery
of the program were a result of the ‘compressed timetable for the establishment
of the program, given the prevailing economic downturn’ and did not make any
recommendations.[16]
The Committee’s review
10.18
The Committee held a public hearing on Monday 21 June 2010, with the
following witnesses:
- Australian National
Audit Office (ANAO); and
- Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR).
10.19
The Committee took evidence on the following issues:
- program rules;
- flexibility;
- costing;
- value for money;
- non-government
schools;
- monitoring data;
- local labour; and
- progress to date.
Program rules
10.20
The ANAO noted that DEEWR had established a number of rules to govern
funding applications from Education Authorities and that one of these rules
required the Education Authorities to ‘obtain agreement from school principals
to decisions to allocate their school less funding than they were notionally
entitled.’[17] The ANAO found that this
rule effectively gave principals control over funding decisions in this area and
affected the flexibility of Education Authorities to prioritise the use of
funding.[18]
10.21
The Committee indicated that this is contrary to the usual order of
decision making in Education Authorities and asked DEEWR why the rule had been
put in place. The Department explained that, while it was aware that the
underlying objective of the program was to promote economic stimulus in every
community across Australia, it wanted to ensure that principals had the final
say in what happened in their school.[19] DEEWR was concerned that
the speed with which the BER had to be implemented to fulfil the stimulus
requirements would led to Education Authorities putting forward projects that
did not satisfy individual school’s needs.[20] The rule was designed
to prevent this happening:
There was some quite early media of principals in Victoria
who were not agreeing with what their Education Authorities were putting up.
That is why we introduced this step. We wanted some assurance, if you like,
from principals that they were in accord [with the proposed project].[21]
10.22
The Committee noted that the rule applied when an Education Authority
decided to allocate less funding than a school was entitled to and asked why
such a decision would be made. DEEWR provided a number of examples where this
might occur:
It may simply have been a project which cost less. ... It
could have been because it was a newish school, and so that school did not
actually need a multipurpose hall or a library, but there could have been a
school nearby which was really quite old and needed a much, much larger
project.[22]
Flexibility
10.23
Members of the Committee were particularly interested to find out
whether or not the program had been flexible and adaptable to the needs of
individual schools. DEEWR cited two local examples to demonstrate the
flexibility of the program with regard to special needs schools:
In one case, there was a hall that had been extended, and a
whole lot of fantastic technology and other things had been brought to bear to
make that facility effective for the school community. In the other, there was
a very significant degree of refurbishment for a young children’s special
school involving a lot of bathroom work and a whole lot of stuff to do with the
particular needs of young disabled children.[23]
10.24
Members of the Committee were aware of anecdotal evidence where school
communities had co-contributed to projects under the program to ensure that the
school got exactly what was required. The Committee asked if the Department had
any data on the extent of co-contribution projects. DEEWR informed the
Committee that 1,101 P21 projects involved co-contributions.[24]
10.25
Table 6.1 shows a number of examples of co-contribution projects
provided by the Department to the Committee.[25]
Table 10.1 Examples of co-contribution P 21 projects
Government |
Example |
NT Government |
Elliott School is receiving $850,000 for the
construction of a covered outdoor facility for learning and other school
activity. The application identified that enrolments have steadily grown and
there is a significant demand for a covered outdoor learning space. The
project is strongly supported by the School Council and a co-contribution
amount of $300,000 was identified bringing the total funding to $1.15m for
the project.
|
Victorian Government |
Dingley Primary School is receiving $2.5m for construction
of a multipurpose building including a combination of library, gymnasium,
halls, classrooms or administration offices. Co-funding with the State
government of $2.5m was identified bringing the total project funding to $5m.
|
NSW Government |
Epping West Public School is receiving $3.02
million for the construction of a new library under the P21 element of the
BER with a co-contribution amount of $314,924. NSW DET advises the school
wishes to add a classroom to the approved library project, to meet increased
enrolments. The revised project amount is now $3,334,924 and the additional
funds are being provided by the school. |
ACT Government |
Amaroo School is receiving $3 million for an
extension to the library under the P21 element of the BER with a co-contribution
amount of $400,000 to improve project outcomes. The total value of the
project at the school will be $3.4 million. The multipurpose building
includes six additional classrooms and a large central shared area. |
ACT Government |
Harrison School is receiving $3 million for the
construction of a new multi purpose building under the P21 element of the BER
with a co-contribution amount of $400,00 to improve project outcomes. The
total value fo the project at the school will be $3.4 million. The multi-purpose
building will include six classrooms and an adjoining outdoor shade
structure. Bifold doors will fold completely out of the way to give access from
the Performing Arts Building to a paved area outside, allowing for a
performance or presentation to use the doorway as a stage while the audience uses
the paved area as outdoor seating.
|
10.26
The Committee asked DEEWR if there were any constraints on the program
that prevented it from being as flexible as other programs administered by the
Department. DEEWR identified the need for speedy implementation to met the
program’s stimulus objective as the chief constraint on the program and
provided two examples:
... under our existing capital grants program, we allow
education authorities up to a year for planning and there is no real deadline
on the construction, but we have an expectation of around three years. Clearly
that was entirely unviable because of the stimulus objective. Secondly, under
our capital grants program we allow, for example, block grant authorities and
other education authorities the capacity to meet their own priorities ... which
could well involve ... an education authority ... concentrating a given year’s
investment ... in a particular region. ... That was unviable too, because of
the stimulus objective, which was for jobs to be created or maintained in every
community. So we explicitly rejected that part of our existing time frames.[26]
10.27
DEEWR added that more onerous reporting requirements had also provided
some constraints on the flexibility of the program as education authorities
were asked to supply more information than the standard reporting requirements.[27]
10.28
Members of the Committee expressed concern that the systemic oversight
of the program by DEEWR could have constrained individual principals who wished
to advocate a project that did not fit within the parameters of the list of
building priorities. The Department reiterated that the program allowed
sufficient flexibility to accommodate the objectives of both schools and
education authorities.[28]
Costing
10.29
The Audit Report noted that the BER program was originally costed at
$12.4 billion but was increased to $14.1 billion after take-up of the program
exceeded expectations. The ANAO was advised that the Strategic Priorities and
Budget Committee of Cabinet (SPBC) were aware that the original costing
‘represented only 90 per cent of possible expenditure’ for the program.[29]
10.30
The Committee asked DEEWR why the program went to $14.1 billion. The
Department told the Committee that the original calculation was based on the
premise that a majority of schools would take up only 90 per cent of the funds
on offer. However, a high level of schools took up their full entitlement and
this resulted in the extra expenditure:
... the difference between the $12 billion and the final
estimates variation was simply the difference between a 90 per cent envelope
and more or less 100 per cent.[30]
Value for money
10.31
The ANAO expressed some doubt that established benchmarks had provided a
useful basis for monitoring the use of funding.[31]
The Committee asked DEEWR for assurance that the Commonwealth is receiving
value for money for projects constructed under the BER.
10.32
The Department explained that value for money on a project-by-project
basis is the responsibility of the Education Authorities but accepted that
DEEWR is responsible for ensuring that overall value for money is achieved for
the Commonwealth.[32] The Department maintained
that it had been concerned about value for money from the beginning of the
program and told the Committee that bilateral agreements with states and
territories ‘captured the notion of value for money’ in a variety of ways.[33]
10.33
The Committee asked for specific evidence that value for money is being
achieved. The Department admitted that it could not provide definite evidence
of value for money until each project was acquitted but maintained that it was
satisfied that the procurement processes put in place for the program are
providing assurance of value for money.[34] DEEWR explained that the
steps in place ensure that each project is scrutinised and that areas of
concern are identified and rectified:
You go through many steps: you go through the step of
tendering, and we kept a very close eye, for example, on some education
authorities which felt that they were not getting value for money and needed to
re-tender because in one region or another there might have been – as they saw
it – overheating. Or, for example we also kept very close tabs in some regional
areas where labour was hard to get and so on.[35]
10.34
In light of DEEWR’s assertion, the Committee asked ANAO to clarify its
findings to the effect that there was insufficient data to establish if the
Commonwealth was receiving value for money. The ANAO acknowledged that the
audit was conducted early in the program’s life and had looked at the estimates
for projects, before implementation.[36] The ANAO conceded that
more up-to-date information may give a clearer picture of whether or not value
for money is being achieved:
They were early estimates and, obviously, as you go through a
construction process [you] get greater clarity, that material was not up to date
at the time when we conducted the audit. So there might be more current
information.[37]
Non-government schools
10.35
The Committee noted anecdotal evidence and media reports regarding
allegations that money invested in non-government schools was being used more
effectively than money invested in government schools.[38]
The Committee asked DEEWR to comment on this issue.
10.36
DEEWR indicated that the allegations were the subject of an inquiry by
the Building the Education
Revolution Implementation Taskforce appointed in April 2010.[39]
The Department told the Committee that the allegations were being made before
the actual cost of projects are known and that projects would need to be looked
at on a case by case basis to determine value for money and effectiveness:
A lot of the commentary about the costs of state schools in
some jurisdictions is commentary that is based on estimates not actual, so we
may find that actual costs in some cases are lower than expected. Then there
are a variety of other conditions at play in any given case that might give
rise to costs being higher than one might have expected whether it is to do
with demolishing buildings that had asbestos in them in order to make way for
the new classroom or what have you. There are a multitude of factors that can
bear on that ...[40]
10.37
The Committee notes that the Taskforce released an Interim Report on
6 August 2010 and that a Final Report is expected to be provided to the
Minister in November 2010.[41]
Monitoring data
10.38
The ANAO identified a number of data integrity problems including
collection and interpretation.[42] The Committee asked
DEEWR if steps were being taken to improve the range and relevance of the data
being collected by the Department.
10.39
DEEWR told the Committee that the Department was expecting Education Authorities
to collect more data for this program than for the monitoring of any previous
program. The Department indicated that, in addition, the Coordinator-General
was demanding more data as was Mr Orgill, the head of the Building the
Education Revolution Implementation Taskforce.[43]
Local labour
10.40
The Committee noted anecdotal evidence suggesting that local builders
were not being employed to undertake P21 projects but that outside contractors
were being brought in. The Committee expressed concern that this practice would
not provide the intended stimulus for the local economy and asked DEEWR if it
was aware of any evidence to support these claims.
10.41
DEEWR informed the Committee that the data collected by the Education
Authorities did not ‘indicate whether or not the jobs were occupied by local
people.’[44] However, the Department
noted that the ANAO survey of primary school principals found that the majority
of principals believed that P21 projects were supporting local employment.[45]
Progress to date
10.42
The Committee acknowledged that the ANAO audit had been undertaken very
early in the program and that, at that stage, actual expenditure was low. The
Committee sited the Coordinator-General’s progress report from February 2010
indicating that completion rates were ‘tracking slightly behind interim
milestones’ but were expected to catch up during 2010. The Committee asked for
an update on completion rates and tracking against milestones.
10.43
DEEWR told the Committee that:
As at 31 July 2010, 85 per cent of Primary School for the 21st
Century projects have met or are expected to meet their target completion date
or approved varied completion date.[46]
Conclusion
10.44
The Committee acknowledges that the audit was undertaken early in the
program’s implementation and that a full assessment of the effectiveness of the
program will have to wait until the P21 projects are completed and acquitted.
The Committee is concerned about the data integrity issues identified by the
ANAO and urges DEEWR to ensure that these are addressed and that relevant and
sufficient data is collected to enable the program to be monitored and
evaluated.
10.45
The Committee recognises that the primary objective of the BER program
was to provide economic stimulus during the global financial crisis and
understands that rapid implementation was necessary to achieve this goal.
However, the Committee is concerned that the governance arrangements put in
place by DEEWR to facilitate the rapid implementation of the program may have compromised
the ability of individual schools to obtain value for money.
10.46
The Committee is aware that DEEWR has faced considerable scrutiny over
the BER program in addition to the ANAO audit, including a Senate inquiry and the
Building the Education Revolution Taskforce inquiry. The Committee expects that
this scrutiny will ensure that DEEWR will address the issues of concern
identified by these inquiries for the benefit of future such programs.
Robert
Oakeshott MP
Committee
Chair