The world is still deceived with ornament…
…Thus
ornament is but the guiled shore
To
a most dangerous sea.
Merchant of Venice Act III,
scene ii
A recent article (link
here)
in the National Indigenous Times revealed that the Registrar of Indigenous
Corporations had issued a compliance notice related to a number of apparent
irregularities and made a number of recommendations for immediate action in
relation to the administration of the Winun Ngari Aboriginal Corporation (WN), a significant Kimberley
Aboriginal corporation which operates in the West Kimberley. Key documents
related to WN including the compliance notice and the latest financial
statements can be found on the ORIC website (link here).
The
compliance notice while carefully drafted provides very little comfort that the
corporation’s directors have been effectively managing the affairs of the
Corporation over the last few years, and raises issues related to the
administration of the corporation by its senior management.
The
Corporation is heavily involved in delivering three important and high profile
programs in the West Kimberley, the Community Development Program, the Remote
School Attendance Strategy Program, and the Kimberley Money Management program.
The latest available financial statements suggest Winun Ngari has revenues of
around $10m plus per annum, mainly for delivering these programs, and also
operates a number of other smaller businesses. Its balance sheet is carrying loans
to a range of related and third party entities exceeding $1 million in value.
Senior management (which is undefined in the financial statements) is reported
as being paid around $300k per annum.
While
hardly unprecedented in relation to matters of corporate governance, the issue of
poor corporate governance in a publicly funded entity takes on greater
significance (as noted by the National
Indigenous Times) because the CEO of Winun Ngari since October 2013 has
been Ms Susan Murphy, a relatively new member of the Prime Minister’s
Indigenous Advisory Council (IAC).
Ms Murphy
was also appointed to the ‘independent’ review of the Remote Housing Strategy
by Minister Scullion in November last year (link here), a matter not mentioned
in the NIT article.
Ms Susan Murphy is described as follows on the PMC
website page on the membership of the IAC (link
here):
Ms Susan Murphy is the CEO
of Winun Ngari Aboriginal Corporation, the largest community development
provider for remote Aboriginal communities in the West Kimberley. Ms Murphy has
previously held positions in a number of government organisations and has extensive
experience working within Aboriginal health, child care and justice.
While not a good look, the appropriateness of her appointments
to high profile government roles in the light of the regulator’s findings is
largely a matter for the Prime Minister and the Minister who appointed her. In
particular, it is the Directors of Winun Ngari Aboriginal Corporation who must
take ultimate responsibility for any shortfalls in corporate governance
performance of the corporation.
Of wider policy significance in my view is the lack of
transparency in the operations of both the Indigenous Advisory Council and the current
remote Housing Review, matters which are thrown into sharper relief by the
Murphy imbroglio. When issues such as that reported above emerge, the lack of
transparency in the activities of these key bodies makes it extremely difficult
for an interested observer to assess whether there is in fact a potential conflict
of interest or a risk of reputational damage to the wider activities of the government
bodies involved.
Governments can hardly make a persuasive case for strong
accountability and corporate governance in funded organisations when they fail
to operate in a transparent manner themselves. Let’s take each in turn.
The Prime Minister’s Indigenous Advisory Council was
established in the early months of the Abbott Prime Ministership. The Council
was initially chaired by Warren Mundine, who held a full time appointment.
A review of the Council was undertaken in 2015, see link
here to the heavily redacted document on the PMC
FOI Disclosure Log. There appears to have been no public announcement regarding
the findings of the review, nor the government’s decisions in relation to it.
Following the accession of Mr Turnbull to the Prime Ministership,
the Council has undergone a revamp; Mr Mundine’s term was not renewed, and new
members were appointed.
The Terms of Reference for the Prime Minister’s
Indigenous Advisory Council were revised in 2016, and are available here.
Along with the new appointments, in a sensible gesture Prime
Minister Turnbull allowed the Council members to decide their Chair. The
Council has appointed Andrea Mason and Chris Sarra as co-chairs, both of whom have
been courageous contributors to Indigenous policy issues over a considerable
period. The PMC web site notes that the new members are:
highly regarded, pre-eminent thinkers and
practitioners who have been appointed to the Council for the depth of their
experience in their respective fields and will bring a strong focus to policy
design, implementation and practice.
The communique from the latest meeting (and first with
the new membership) is available here.
One interesting snippet of information mentioned in the communique, of which I
had not previously been aware, is mention of a new Indigenous policy committee
within the Government, presumably involving either a range of ministers, or senior
public servants.
The Council’s annual letters to the Prime Minister for
2014 and 2015 are here,
again from the PMC Disclosure Log. While the letters each canvass a score or
more of issues which have been the subject of ‘advice’, there is no inkling of
the substantive content of that advice in the letter, nor in the communiques
issued after each formal meeting. While the disclosure log indicates that the FOI
request included the 2016 year, and was finalised in March 2017, the response
does not include the 2016 letter from the then Chair, Mr Mundine, which
suggests that it may not exist.
The only other point of interest is that the signature
over the Mr Mundine’s signature block has been redacted, citing section 47F of
the FOI Act, which protects the ‘unreasonable disclosure of personal
information about any person…’ It seems quite strange to apply such an exclusion
in relation to a person’s signature, though I suppose one might make an
argument for doing so. Nevertheless, it serves to add a degree of uncertainty
as to whether Mr Mundine actually signed the letters sent to the Prime Minister
in his name.
I think there are two substantive points to be made in
relation to the current advisory arrangements in relation to the Indigenous
affairs policy domain.
First, it is well past the time when governments should
find it acceptable to appoint
Indigenous representatives to a formal advisory body with a wide ranging policy
remit. There has been a long history in Australia of elected advisory and
representative bodies: the National Aboriginal Conference, the National
Aboriginal Consultative Committee, and of course ATSIC are cases in point.
There is a case for appointing individuals who bring
particular expertise for targeted exercises, but in terms of the provision of
overarching advice in relation to Indigenous affairs policy, it strikes me that
the current IAC arrangements are fatally flawed insofar as they ignore the
existence of a large number of peak bodies and (whether it is actually the case
or not) raise the spectre of a government choosing and appointing
‘representatives’ who will provide the sort of advice the government feels
comfortable in receiving.
The second point which requires consideration is the
total opacity and lack of transparency in relation to the advice which is being
provided by the advisory body. There is an argument (which I believe is
overrated) that public servants require a degree of confidentiality to ensure
that they proffer independent and fearless advice to governments. Hence the
existence of an exemption to the FOI laws around ‘deliberative advice’. Even
accepting that this constraint of transparency is warranted for public
servants, It does not follow that ‘advisory bodies’ without executive
responsibilities should be provided with the same privilege. There is no
obligation on governments to follow advice from the IAC, and governments will
nevertheless have access to the hopefully robust advice of its public servants,
and thus public policy will not be held hostage to the risk that an advisory
council will not have the courage to speak its mind because it will be made public.
Moreover, there is a public interest in knowing what
advice is being proffered on behalf of Indigenous interests generally, and Indigenous
citizens in particular deserve to know what the appointed representatives are
saying to government effectively in their name. This lack of transparency
serves to feed the deep scepticism and cynicism in the Indigenous community
(and indeed beyond) regarding the motives of government in its handling of Indigenous
affairs.
Indeed, if the public knew, at least in broad terms, the
substance of the advice being provided by the IAC, any suggestion that the
Government had appointed ‘yes men and women’ would have less force, with a
consequential strengthening of the authority of those appointed as indigenous
representatives.
To cut to the chase, the risk of the current Advisory Council
arrangements is that sooner or later they degrade into a generalised ‘talk
shop’ without any real substantive policy content, with the real purpose being
to provide a cover or façade to shield what are in effect unilateral government
decisions from criticism.
Turning to the ‘independent’ review of Indigenous housing
announced by the Minister in November 2016, the PMC website explains as
follows:
An expert panel consisting of the
following members has been appointed to conduct the Review.
·
Ms
Rachelle Towart and Mr Robert Griew (co-Chairs)
· Mr Fred Pascoe
· Ms Susan Murphy
The expert panel will work with
government officers to ensure Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices are
at the centre of the Review. Additionally the expert panel will work together,
drawing on their expertise and knowledge of remote Indigenous housing
throughout the Review, and will provide leadership on consultation and
engagement with Indigenous communities and businesses, housing service
providers, peak bodies, land councils and state governments.
A consultative committee has
also been established to support the Review comprising of representatives from
the Commonwealth, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the
Northern Territory governments.
Here is
the link to the information on the review on the PMC web site. The members of
the expert panel all looked to have relevant backgrounds. Robert Griew, the
only non-Indigenous member, is a Principal with the Nous Group (link here) and an extremely experienced
former bureaucrat with a deep knowledge of Indigenous affairs. The Minister did
not mention the connection to Nous in his announcement.
I previously commented in depth on this review in shortly
after it was announced. Here is
the link. Please read the post in full, but my key conclusion was encapsulated
in the following two sentences:
The initiation of the recently announced Review is potentially a
pre-emptive attempt to change the narrative away from sustaining the capital
investment required [for housing in remote Australia] towards one of
encouraging much greater Indigenous involvement in a much smaller and shorter
program. Such an outcome if it occurs would be an abdication of political
responsibility for the most disadvantaged citizens in Australia.
While the PMC web site page is replete with references to
consultation with Indigenous organisations and state and territory governments,
there appears to have been no invitation for public submissions, nor any
attempt (at least so far) to publish an interim report suggesting what the
review team has in mind.
The Government will eventually release this review,
probably only after it has settled on its decisions in relation to the future
of the remote housing program. Nevertheless, in contrast to the IAC, we will probably
get to see the advice proffered (albeit retrospectively), though whether and to
what extent it will be truly ‘independent’ of government or ministerial
influence (what else does ‘independent’ suggest?) given the use of the Nous
consultancy, the iterative process involving state and territory governments,
and the secretariat of public servants assisting the review are matters which
in my view should attract a degree of scepticism.
If this is the case, and the review actually lacks independence,
then the three Indigenous members of the review panel will (unintentionally) have
served as a cover or façade for the Government’s underlying policy agenda. Of
course, the capacity of the Government to deal with the remote Indigenous
housing program in this way is facilitated by the absence of any Indigenous
peak body or advocacy group for social housing, or remote housing.
One would hope that in these circumstances, the IAC would
step in and take a strong interest in what is being considered. Unfortunately,
we will likely never know whether it does or not, and what its substantive
advice to the Prime Minister was.
Of course, one might question the wisdom of a Government
appointing individuals to its primary advisory structure who are also
undertaking policy reviews on major programs (as is the case with Ms Murphy).
The potential for a conflict of interest to arise (which for example could in
theory operate to ensure that the IAC does not even substantively consider the
remote housing review issues, or if they do, are influenced to consider limited
sets of options) seems extremely high.
Perhaps the strongest argument for greater transparency
around Indigenous advisory structures would be to eliminate the possibility
that sceptics such as myself have cause to doubt the robustness of the policy
process itself.
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