Chapter 1 The inquiry
1.1
The Joint Select Committee on Constitutional Recognition of Local
Government was established by the passing of a Resolution of Appointment
through the Parliament on 1 November 2012. The Committee received full
membership by 28 November 2012, and its first meeting was held on 29 November
2012.
1.2
The Committee invited submissions to the inquiry, and received a total
of 252 submissions and seven supplementary submissions. A full list of
submissions is at Appendix A. A summary of the content of submissions is below.
The Committee also received a number of exhibits, and these are listed at
Appendix B.
1.3
The Committee held two public hearings in Sydney, on 16 January and 20 February
2013. Full details of these hearings are at Appendix C, and transcripts of the
hearings are available on the Committee’s website.[1]
1.4
The Committee presented its preliminary report to the Parliament’s
Presiding Officers on 24 January 2013 which is available on the Committee’s
website.[2] Further discussion of the
preliminary report is below.
1.5
The Committee’s Resolution of Appointment was varied by the Parliament on
6 February 2013 to provide for this final report to be presented no later than
March 2013.
Scope of the inquiry
1.6
The Committee’s Resolution of Appointment directed it to inquire into,
and report on, the majority finding of the Expert Panel on Constitutional
Recognition of Local Government (the Expert Panel), being that:
- a constitutional
amendment to give effect to financial recognition was the most viable option
(of those options considered) in the 2013 timeframe proposed by the
Commonwealth;
- the Commonwealth
should negotiate with states and territories to achieve their support for the
financial recognition option; and
- the Commonwealth
adopt steps suggested by the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA) to
ensure success of such a referendum, necessitating temporary amendment to the Referendum
(Machinery Provisions) Act 1984.[3]
1.7
The Expert Panel was appointed in August 2011, and comprised 18 members.
The Final Report of the Expert Panel was presented to the Commonwealth
Government in December 2011, and is available online.[4]
Major findings
1.8
The Committee’s preliminary report made four recommendations, and the
Committee maintains its support for the report and its recommendations.
1.9
The Committee believes that there are four strong arguments in favour of
financial recognition of local government, and these are reported in Chapter 2,
The case for recognition.
1.10
Since the preliminary report was published, the Committee has found
increasing support for a referendum in important places. In a supplementary
submission to the Committee, the President of the ALGA, Felicity-Ann Lewis,
stated that:
ALGA will support and campaign for a referendum to amend [section
96] of the Constitution to support direct funding of local government, as soon
as it is proposed by the Federal Government...[5]
1.11
The Committee has reported on the Expert Panel’s conditions for success,
in Chapter 3, Likelihood of success. In particular, the Committee has
considered the level of state support and the fulfilment of the ALGA
preconditions.
1.12
The Committee believes that it is entirely feasible for the Commonwealth
Government to negotiate for and secure the support of at least four state
governments, including New South Wales and Queensland, as well as the two
territories. This is now a matter of immediate priority for the Commonwealth
Government, and the Committee understands that the Minister for Local
Government, the Hon Simon Crean MP, has been discussing this issue with those
parties, and will be pursuing these negotiations in coming days and weeks.
1.13
In respect of the preconditions, the Committee believes that there is
sufficient time for these conditions to be met.
1.14
The Committee has taken compelling evidence from local governments
around Australia about their appetite and preparedness to campaign for the
referendum. Mayors, shire presidents, councillors, council staff and people who
use local government facilities will together be a powerful grass-roots
movement to lead the referendum campaign at a local level.
1.15
The Committee has also considered the broader historical context of this
referendum, and reports its findings in Chapter 4, Lessons from history.
In particular, the Committee notes that this referendum has the rare support of
all sides of politics at a national level. Such unusual bipartisan support
should not be squandered. As noted above, local government as a group will be a
powerful campaigning force, and will help to build a momentum for change in the
coming months. Finally, the Committee has reported on the significant risks
involved in a delay of the referendum.
Content of submissions
1.16
The majority of submissions came from local government bodies. There
were also submissions from state governments, local government associations,
constitutional experts, Commonwealth Government departments and individuals.
1.17
While opinions for and against the referendum varied, the 173
submissions from local government bodies and seven from local government
associations were resoundingly in favour of holding a referendum to effect financial
recognition by amending section 96 of the Constitution.
1.18
Some of the local government bodies asked that if any preamble to the
Constitution is proposed that local government be recognised in that also.
1.19
The majority of submissions in favour of a referendum requested that it
be held at a time most likely to result in success.
1.20
Some concerns were raised by constitutional experts regarding:
- centralisation of
power;
- certain local
government bodies being appointed rather than democratically elected;
- the extent of the
problem that the referendum would address;
- previous mismanagement
of policy initiatives by some local governments;
- available time for
public debate on the issue;
- suitability of the
recommended amendment; and
- broader ramifications
for the constitution.
1.21
Some private individuals expressed views concerning:
- the cost to taxpayers
of holding a referendum;
- the issue of whether local
councils, being incorporated entities, could be a valid form of government;
- the Westminster
system is based on only two tiers of government;
- a perceived lack of
public consultation on the issue and the Committee’s time frame; and
- allegations of corruption
in some local government bodies.
1.22
Some submissions were evidently distributed between numerous individuals,
and additional copies of particular submissions forwarded to the Committee. While
in most cases the Committee has published the original submission, it has taken
subsequent copies of the same submission as correspondence, and these have not
been published. Some of these distributed submissions raised questionable
concerns which did not address the inquiry’s terms of reference.