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Preliminary pages
Foreword
The Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit (JCPAA), as
prescribed by its Act, examines all reports of the Auditor-General, and reports
the results of the Committee’s deliberations to the Parliament. This report
details the findings of the Committee’s examination of five performance audits
selected for detailed scrutiny from twenty four audit reports presented to
Parliament by the Auditor‑General between May and August 2012.
In selecting these reports, the Committee considered the
issues raised, the significance of the audit findings, the arguments advanced
by the audited agencies and the level of potential public interest in each
report. In order to maximise the opportunity for scrutiny, the Committee
decided to examine three audits by public hearing, and two others through
written questions to the responsible agencies.
The findings of the selected audit reports were largely
positive, but a range of areas for improvement were also identified.
Firstly, the Committee reviewed an audit on the
administration of the National Partnership for Literacy and Numeracy (LNNP)—a
program which funds efforts by states and territories to improve literacy and
numeracy outcomes for school students, especially those who are falling behind.
This audit complemented the Committee’s previous work inquiring into National
Funding Agreements.
While overall the LNNP appears to be having a positive
impact, the evidence presented to the Committee indicated that there was still
room for improvement in the design and implementation of future partnership
agreements. In particular, future programs would benefit from implementation
plans and reform targets being negotiated at the same time as partnership
agreements are made; performance data assurance mechanisms being built into
agreements; and more time being allowed in agreements for facilitation payments
to take effect before performance is assessed and reward payments made. In
general, departments and their Ministers need to be more active in ensuring
that the terms of National Partnership agreements are adhered to during their
implementation.
Two audits reviewed by the Committee examined programs that
had been fast tracked by the Government in their early stages, leading to
challenges in their implementation.
The Committee’s review of the Health and Hospital Fund’s
administration sought to clarify aspects of the process used to select projects
for funding and to confirm that the ANAO’s recommendations were being
implemented. The audit found that due to the fast tracking of two rounds of
funding, there was insufficient time for the Department of Health and Ageing to
develop a clear internal strategy to inform funding priorities, leading to a
reliance on states to identify their own infrastructure gaps and needs. Another
particular concern was the finding that the department did not advise the
Health Minister on the relative merits of the projects submitted for potential
funding, an issue the Committee has raised when reviewing previous audit
reports. Disappointingly, the Department of Health and Ageing’s response to the
Committee’s questions did very little to shed light on these matters. This lack
of transparency and responsiveness to Parliament can serve to reduce confidence
in the quality of decisions.
The ANAO’s audit of the Renewable Energy Demonstration
Program (REDP) revealed that the quality of the Department of Renewable Energy,
Resources and Tourism’s administration was negatively impacted by a Government
decision to fast track funding. Compressed timeframes contributed to lower
quality grant applications and inadequate documentation by the department of
decisions around project selection and probity. It appears that the accelerated
demands placed on the department were the major cause of the administration
shortcomings—particularly given the REDP was the then new department’s first major
program. Moreover, the decision to bring forward the program appears to have
produced little of the espoused benefits in terms of creating jobs, stimulating
the economy and ‘turbo-charging’ investment in renewable energy technologies.
As these two fast-tracked programs highlight, when making
decisions on program implementation the Government needs to give more
consideration to the capacity of agencies to manage large and complex projects
in compressed timeframes while still complying with administrative
requirements.
A fourth audit reviewed by the Committee dealt with the
important issue of quarantine in Northern Australia. The report contained
mostly positive findings, pointing to effective risk-based management of the
program by the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry. However, the
report’s findings highlighted a need for better data management systems to be
employed. The department could also make better use of its existing data to
inform its management decisions.
Finally, following up earlier work of the JCPAA, the
Committee examined an audit of Customs’ processing and risk assessing of
incoming international passengers at Australia’s airports—activities at the
front line of Australia’s national security efforts. In its review, the Committee
focused its attention on the automated SmartGate clearance system, which has
been rolled out at airports around Australia. The audit findings suggested a
more strategic approach was needed to increase SmartGate usage and to help
address a gap between the planned and achieved efficiency gains from the
system. The Committee heard about recent efforts by Customs to improve SmartGate
clearance rates, and noted that there were encouraging signs of progress in the
most recent data.
In closing, I would like to sincerely thank the Committee
members and agency representatives who appeared at public hearings for their
cooperative approach to the Committee’s important task of scrutinising the
spending of public money. I would also like to remind agencies of the importance
of providing full and complete information to parliament when asked to do so.
Written questions from parliamentary committees should not be seen as an
inconvenience, but rather as a necessary and important obligation that gives
departments an opportunity to provide additional context behind their efforts. My
hope is that closer engagement with the Committee will, over time, lead to
sustained improvement to the way government agencies do their business.
Rob Oakeshott MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
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Mr Robert Oakeshott MP
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Deputy
Chair
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Ms Yvette D’Ath MP
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Members
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Hon Dick Adams MP
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Senator Mark Bishop
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Mr Jamie Briggs MP
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Senator Helen Kroger (30/09/10–13/09/12)
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Ms Gai Brodtmann MP
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Senator Louise Pratt
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Mr Darren Cheeseman MP
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Senator Anne Ruston (from 13/09/12)
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Mr Josh Frydenberg MP
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Senator Dean Smith
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Ms Deborah O’Neill MP
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Senator Matt Thistlethwaite
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Ms Laura Smyth MP
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Hon Alex Somlyay MP
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr David Brunoro
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Mr James Nelson
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Senior
Research Officer
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Mr Shane Armstrong
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Office
Manager
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Ms Louise Goss
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List of abbreviations
ACER
|
Australian Council for
Educational Research
|
ACRE
|
Australian Centre for Renewable
Energy
|
ANAO
|
Australian National Audit Office
|
ARENA
|
Australian Renewable Energy
Agency
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BioSIRT
|
Biosecurity Surveillance,
Incident, Response and Tracing software application
|
CGGs
|
Commonwealth Grant Guidelines
|
COAG
|
Council of Australian Governments
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CRC
|
COAG Reform Council
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DAFF
|
Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry
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DEEWR
|
Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations
|
DIAC
|
Department of Immigration and
Citizenship
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DoHA
|
Department of Health and Ageing
|
ECP
|
Entry Control Point
|
HHF
|
Health and Hospitals Fund
|
IGA FFR
|
Intergovernmental Agreement on
Federal Financial Relations
|
IT
|
Information Technology
|
JCPAA
|
Joint Committee of Public
Accounts and Audit
|
KPIs
|
Key Performance Indicators
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LNNP
|
National Partnership Agreement on
Literacy and Numeracy
|
NAQS
|
Northern Australia Quarantine
Strategy
|
NAPLAN
|
National Assessment Program –
Literacy and Numeracy
|
REC
|
Renewable Energy Committee
|
REDP
|
Renewable Energy Demonstration
Program
|
RET
|
Department of Resources, Energy
and Tourism
|
List of recommendations
2 National Partnership Agreement on Literacy and Numeracy
Recommendation 1
That the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations report to the Committee within six months on the progress of its
implementation of the Auditor-General’s Recommendation 2 regarding the
development of a longer term evaluation strategy for the National Partnership
Agreement on Literacy and Numeracy.
Recommendation 2
That, in order to help ensure the expectations of future
National Partnerships are met, the Department of Education, Employment and
Workplace Relations work with states and territories to develop implementation
plans and reform targets at the same time as any new National Partnership agreements
are developed, in accordance with advice from the Treasury.
Recommendation 3
That where state and territory co-investment obligations are
included in the terms of current National Partnership agreements, the
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations take responsibility
for monitoring these investments and assessing them before payments are made,
even if this requires negotiating more visibility of state and territory data.
Recommendation 4
That when negotiating National Partnership agreements, the
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations seek external
advice, potentially from the Auditor-General, on the monitoring and assurance
mechanisms that should be incorporated to enable verification of performance
data provided by states and territories.
Recommendation 5
That the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace
Relations and the Minister for School Education ensure that sufficient time is
allowed in future National Partnership agreements for facilitation payments to
take effect before measuring the performance of states and territories against
reform targets and making reward payments.
3 Administration of the Health and Hospitals Fund
Recommendation 6
That the Department of Health and Ageing identify and action
ways to apply the lessons of ANAO Recommendation 1 to its standard practices
and procedures for all current and future grants programs.
Recommendation 7
That, within 6 months, the Department of Health and Ageing
provide the Committee with an update on the progress of its evaluation of the
Health and Hospitals Fund. The update should include how the department’s
evaluation framework has incorporated ANAO Recommendation 3, and any
preliminary findings of the evaluation.
4 Administration of the Northern Australia Quarantine
Strategy
Recommendation 8
That, using information currently available, the Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry calculate and maintain inspection and
seizure rates of quarantine material for areas covered by the Northern
Australia Quarantine Strategy zone, and use this information to inform
management decisions regarding border operations.
Recommendation 9
That the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
ensure that support for Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy activities is a
high priority during the continuing development of the BioSIRT database in
order to address the deficiencies identified by the Australian National Audit
Office and in the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit’s review.
5 Processing and Risk Assessing Incoming International Air
Passengers
Recommendation 10
That, within six months of the tabling of this report, the
Australian Customs and Border Protection Service provide the Committee with an
update on its progress in developing and implementing a strategic plan for
SmartGate. The response should include:
- an
overview of measures introduced as part of the plan to improve SmartGate
clearance numbers;
- the
latest figures on the number and percentage of eligible passengers clearing
through SmartGate; and
- how
the year to date figures compare with the presentation and clearance targets
identified in the 2012–13 Portfolio Budget Statements.
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