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People are talking about integrity; governments should be listening and acting

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The Transparency International Australia National Integrity 2017 conference in Brisbane last week brought together 160 government, business and civil society delegates from all corners of Australia, including senior legal figures, heads of integrity agencies, federal, state and local parliamentarians, community groups, corporate leaders and individual TI Australia members. Lots of energy at the conference and a perceptible whiff that positive change is in the air with more voices calling for improvements in integrity in the public and corporate sectors. The release of a major paper canvassing key issues for the design of a federal anti-corruption commission was one of many highlights. Here's me giving a rundown on lessons learned from Australia's experience in developing the national action plan required as a result of the commitment by PM Turnbull in December 2015 to join the Open Government Partnership. Someone told me the only thing missing from the timeline diagram ar...

The Diary Wars; Who ministers plan to meet in the course of their duties should be no state secret.

 Crikey this morning "A monumental waste of everyone's time." That's how shadow attorney-general Mark Dreyfus has described the three-year battle to release Attorney General George Brandis' diary for the months leading up to the 2014 budget. Brandis has finally released a heavily redacted version of his diary, after challenging Dreyfus' freedom of information request all the way to the Federal Court, which ordered Brandis to hand over the diary in September. So what does it show? The 34-page printout of his Outlook calendar doesn't include any meetings with community legal centres, which had their funding slashed in the 2014 budget. The Attorney-General's office says this isn't the whole story though, as the diary doesn't show meetings made at short notice or by the Attorney-General himself. The only correction to this and Adam Gartrell's longer piece in the Sydney Morning Herald is that the Federal Court ruled there was no valid reason f...

Has the PM answered the call: An integrity agenda for 2017?

The Prime Minister in conjunction with the resignation of Health minister Sussan Ley has announced a commitment to further changes to the parliamentary entitlements system. The changes go beyond the recommendations in the Conde report already accepted in principle and according to an earlier announcement to be acted upon in the first half of 2017. The PM: "Australians are entitled to expect that politicians spend taxpayers' money carefully, ensuring at all times that their work expenditure represents an efficient, effective and ethical use of public resources," he said. "We should be, as politicians, backbenchers and ministers, we should be as careful and as accountable with taxpayers' money as we possibly can be." Mr Turnbull also announced that a new body overseeing parliamentary expenses would be created. " The Government believes that the work expenses of parliamentarians, including ministers, should be administered and overseen by an independe...

Happy days!

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Dear Neglected Reader, I've been otherwise occupied for large chunks of this year in my role as interim Convener of the Australian Open Government Partnership Network. Postings in this our tenth year suffered I'm afraid.   Loads of things I planned to bring to your attention... but alas, 140 characters was sometimes the best I could manage. (Follow @FOIguru) The good news is that after a a bumpy, frequently interrupted less than perfect process, Australia now has a national action plan with 15 commitments that constitute a broad program of reforms.  Some of those commitments will be of particular interest to you: 1.3 Extractive industries transparency Australia will enhance disclosure of company payments and government revenues from the oil, gas and mining sectors. We will do this by implementing the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) Standard (including working to enhance company disclosure of payments to governments for the sale of petroleum and minerals...

Freedom of Information: 250 years since Sweden laid the first cornerstone

On 2 December 1766 Sweden enacted what is regarded as the first freedom of information law. The most recent translation into English was done by Ian Giles and Peter Graves, Scandinavian Studies, University of Edinburgh and released on 7th October 2016 in Edinburgh. The Australian information commissioners and the New Zealand Ombudsman have issued the  statement below to mark the occasion. From the Australian perspective as we wait for release of the government's first Open Government Partnership National Action, thought to be next week, let's hope for a commitment to necessary reforms that truly recognises the right to access government information "is a cornerstone of modern democratic society."  Cornerstone- a foundation stone, mainstay, linchpin, centrepiece, core, heart, backbone, anchor. Submissions on this aspect of the draft commitment released by the government for public comment on 31 October suggested the cornerstone is in need of close inspection, fundame...

Australian National Audit Office taking a peek at FOI efficiency and effectiveness

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We know auditors go about their work quietly.... Even so I was surprised to learn recently that the Australian National Audit Office has underway a performance audit Administration of the Freedom of Information Act : Entities : Attorney-General’s Department; Office of the Australian Information Commissioner; Department of Social Services; Department of Veterans' Affairs.   Objective : To assess the effectiveness and efficiency of entities’ implementation of the Freedom of Information Act 1982 . Audit Criteria: The Attorney-General’s Department and Office of the Australian Information Commissioner effectively and efficiently perform their respective roles in providing guidance and assistance to entities and monitoring compliance with the FOI Act. The selected entities effectively and efficiently process FOI document access requests. The selected entities release relevant information under the Information Publication Scheme (IPS). Wikimedia Commons:Paty Montano Mention of the a...

Input invited on draft OGP National Action Plan

It's been quite a journey since Australia was first invited to join the Open Government Partnership in August 2011, since the Labor Government signed on in May 2013, and since Prime Minister Turnbull revived Australia's commitment in November 2015, but... A draft Open Government National Action Plan has been released this morning by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet for public consultation. The Minister for Finance has drawn attention to the plan and invited public comment. (Administrative responsibility remains with PM&C) The draft Plan can be accessed/downloaded here: PDF:  Australia’s first Open Government National Action Plan DOCX:  Australia’s first Open Government National Action Plan HTML: Australia’s first Open Government National Action Plan As the minister states, the draft was developed through a consultation process that began in December 2015 and was informed by an interim working group established in August 2016.  The extent of 'ambition' i...