LGMA poseurs fail to derail Award

The only dissident in the exercise was the Local Government Poseurs Association which, even though not registered as either an employer organisation or an employee organisation, likes to dabble every now in both roles and again, like a true dilettante, does both badly.

Starting out as the old Town Clerks Society, then the Institute of Municipal Management, then the Local Government Managers Association and now, Local Government Professionals Association - a name which pinches “Professionals” from the name we’ve had for a decade, also pinches the same word from “Professionals Australia”, the Federal name of the LGEA but, more importantly misrepresents its role with the sole purpose of sucking in professionals.

They offer networking and training but really relish the opportunity of acting like a narky 1950’s bosses’ organisation, ignorant of the processes of negotiation and uncomprehending of the nuances and intricacies of the Industrial Relations Act.

Their new interest in professionals unfortunately doesn’t extend to the employment conditions or salaries of professionals, whether at low levels or managerial levels, as they regularly demonstrate.

They had their chance to represent employee interests when involved in the Senior Staff Contracts Working Party last year but their representatives failed to look after the interests of senior staff as employees. They opposed the paying of cash bonuses, the removal of the term requirement altogether and the proper extension of the minimum notice period.

When they sat down to develop the first Standard Contract with the LGNSW and the DLG, they weren’t really sure what role they were playing. Still, desperate for recognition and flattered by being invited to sit down with public servants of the Crown with far better protection and entitlements and the LGSA (which really is the employers’ organisation and does do mature and sophisticated) they were unrestrained by their ignorance.

Away they went, allowing the DLG to then claim employees affected by the contracts were represented, and ultimately bearing responsibility for the rigidity and unacceptability of that first Standard Contract and the continued capacity of a Council to sack good general managers as well as bad. Thanks for that. It’s beyond argument that more good general managers get sacked under the “for any other reason” provisions than bad ones for any reason.

While the President of the IRC can acknowledge the significance of the harmonious industrial relations evident in the final agreement that came from 150 varied and diverse claims, LGPA, by resolution of their Board, intervened in the relationship between employer organisations and employee organisations wanting a harder line.

LGPA President Paul Bennet wrote to the President of LGNSW on 29 April (demonstrating his own professionalism by spelling his name wrong – hey Paul, its Keith, not Keth) and then later, with their CEO as a co-signatory, to the Manager of Employee Relations - two hysterical letters with multiple factual errors (especially the first one) and levels of shock and horror rarely seen in local government correspondence.

There were three things that they wanted to derail.

The first was a proposal in the negotiations to ensure that if councils set up employment arrangements, the employees concerned remained covered by the State Award. This was one of the original claims made but they claimed it was “lodged at the last minute” which was completely untrue. They argued in favour of Councils being able to set up other arrangements to pay less than the State Award and to provide worse conditions. Nice. Given that this claim, which did find its way into the final Award, would protect employees if a number of councils set up planners or EHOs, for example, to work across a number of council areas, we are entitled to challenge their commitment to the interests of professionals.

They opposed a provision restricting labour hire to encourage proper employment conditions in the industry but they revealed the depth of their misanthropy by opposing the provision to allow a Council to provide sick leave at half pay under “extenuating circumstances” - namely for the chronically ill or injured and dying.

The letter was ill-informed, ignorant of century-long processes developed in New South Wales for industrial relations and foresaw horrific consequences. The letter, signed by CEO Annalisa Haskell and President Paul Bennett claimed “the implications for the sector are significant and precedents are potentially nasty”, for a start. Nasty? Nothing much nasty about protecting pay and conditions.

The image from the Wizard of Oz is perfect - the cowardly lion, the tin man with no heart and the scarecrow with no brain - cowardly, heartless and brainless. That will always be LGMA/LGPA for us.

Beware.

Everyone loves the 2014 State Award - including the President of the IRC

IRC President Michael Walton

It’s not unusual for the IRC to acknowledge the significance of agreement from complicated and intricate negotiations and the President of the IRC Justice Michael Walton on 16 July handed down his Reasons for Decision, identifying the real achievements of the complex negotiations that led to the making of the 2014 Award on 25 June.

We thought there were significant achievements in the Award – general improvements in conditions, clarification of things that may have been unclear to make life easier and no loss of anything, plus: increased obligations on councils to facilitate and implement flexible arrangements for employees’ family needs; better provisions on adoption leave; access to sick leave for family reunions for stolen children and other closed adoptions; an acknowledgement of the importance of health and wellbeing by providing access to sick leave for preventative health and fitness measures; a discretion for councils to provide half pay sick leave in extenuating circumstances of chronically ill or injured employees; and many more.
 
Amongst other things, the President said this:

The award established conditions of employment which struck an appropriate balance between the provision of fair conditions of employment and the maintenance of an industry which is economically sustainable and meeting its core objectives. The public interest is served by this approach because the significant contribution that the Local Government industry makes to the community of New South Wales will be enhanced by a harmonious industrial environment and the maintenance of a vibrant and stable Local Government sector.

The Award represents the latest in a succession of consent awards made in the industry since 1992. This outcome is a reflection of the maturity and sophistication of the industrial parties and their capacity to reach agreement in circumstances involving complex negotiations across an industry which is diverse in nature.

The combination of these considerations represented an overwhelming basis for the grant of the amended application and should result in congratulations being extended to the industrial parties to the award for this significant achievement.
 
So, everyone was happy, we’re mature and sophisticated, it was a significant achievement, and we can now start building on these improvements.

But, not everyone was happy …

We have an offer for the 2014 State Award

The three unions and LGNSW started negotiations for a new 2014 State Award in November last year. The November issue of depaNews contained our 24 point log of claims, the employers had 44, the USU 80 and LGEA, 21. Plenty to talk about.

We always preface these negotiations to manage expectations by saying that this Award has been made by agreement between the employers and the unions since late 1991. Variations have been by agreement - although there have been a number of occasions when some issues could be resolved and we all agreed to allow the Commission to determine it.

The Committee of Management has followed the negotiations over the past seven months and at our May meeting considered about 50 proposed changes in a document which, over the intervening months, only got better.

Pay claims this time were made in the context of a 2.5% pay limit for employees of the NSW Government and a view of the Government, waiting on resolution in the High Court, that increases superannuation over the next three years should also come out of that figure.

The National Wage Increase this year was 2.6%, the State Wage Increase was 2.6% and, given that this isn’t really rocket science, if we could keep 2.6% this year untouched by the further 0.25% increase in SGC from 1 July, and similar increases untouched by the 0.5% increase in the SGC from 1 July 2015 and a further 0.5% from 1 July 2016, we would be doing all right. (SGC will continue to rise by 0.5% each year until it hits 12% on 1 July 2019.)

Of course, we all got used to the idea of 3% or a bit more but circumstances change.

Despite a narky, ignorant and ill-conceived assault on the negotiations by the Local Government Poseurs Association, the LGNSW Board on Friday 6 June adopted a package of negotiated changes recommended by their industrial staff after consultation with those representing the boss in the industry.

That means pay increases this year of 2.6% from the first pay period after 1 July, 2.7% from the first pay period after 1 July 2015 and 2.8% from the first pay period after 1 July 2016.
And all these increases are independent of the increases in the Superannuation Guarantee Charge.

Our log of the claims focused on a number of issues which had been problems for us and our members over the life of the 2010 Award. We wanted to see greater commitment from councils to flexible working arrangements for parents and more of an obligation to facilitate these arrangements; we wanted improvements in the role of the consultative committee - to stop brow-beating general managers and HR people bullying employee reps into acquiescence and to oblige the Council to be more consultative on organisational restructuring; clarity about being able to take a redundancy if there is not a job available of comparable skill and accountability levels; reinforcement of the obligation on councils to consult on changes to leaseback arrangements; improvements in adoption leave; special considerations for adoption leave for kids in difficult circumstances and access to sick leave for preventative health and well-being measures. We wanted some pay options for professionals as well to accommodate market pressures and other considerations.

And we’re pretty pleased with the way the negotiations went.

As the Committee Management has been well-briefed over the past seven months, we are continuing the process we have followed for the last few awards - I make a recommendation to the Committee of Management and, in turn, a decision by the Committee of Management to accept or reject the offer (I hope) consistent with my recommendation.

The Committee has unanimously resolved to accept the offer and we now refer the detail of the offer for your information and consideration. The offer is accepted in principle but we are open, as always, to your feedback.

As a final clarification, before you start to read through the list of changes, last week the Fair Work Commission decided there should be a 3% increase in the minimum wage. The minimum wage has never had an effect on the Award negotiations and the increase was actually a flat increase described as a percentage on the existing rate. It doesn’t mean that all workers covered by Federal awards receive a 3% increase. It really is irrelevant to our consideration. Don’t be confused.

There are 60 or so individual changes agreed between the unions and the employers in this package to create a new and improved 2014 Award. Remember, this is a package offer and its components are indivisible.

If you have any questions or concerns (and we’re also happy to hear from those of you who are pleased with the deal, just like we are) you can ring me or email on

Please take some time to go through the summary which appears below. It’s my summary, it’s the summary that went to the Committee on Friday and while there are changes to 39 separate clauses, some of them contain multiple changes as well. For example, the new clause 39 Workplace Change has lots.

You can use this link to check out the clauses in which you might have more of an interest after you have checked out the summary. It’s a link to the Draft Award in its entirety.

The USU and LGEA will be doing something similar. The USU Executive has already adopted the offer in principle and will be conducting meetings around the state for their members over the next two weeks.

The President of the Industrial Relations Commission Justice Walton has listed the Award application for a hearing on 25 June. Our expectation is that there is no reason why the Commission won’t make the Award as requested by the parties and note that it is made by consent.

Consent to these significant improvements and developments from both the unions and the employers is a great achievement.

 

Proposed changes to the 2014 Local Government (State) Award

1. Clause 2 Statement of Intent

Adds reference to increasing productivity and financial sustainability but more importantly adds to the dotpoints of intention to “promote job security”, the words “and facilitate” so that it reads to “ensure and facilitate flexibility for work and family responsibilities” (one of our claims), encouragement of innovation and, targeting consultative committees, to “promote cooperative and open change management processes”.

2. Clause 4 Definitions

Tidies up the name of LGNSW and, significantly and to remove risks associated with councils setting up bodies to employee under the Fair Work Act and the Modern Award, defines employer as “all employees in local government or in the local government industry within NSW that are covered by clause 43, Area Incidence and Duration of this Award. Clause 4 also makes a minor changes to the definition of ordinary pay to cover hours of work flexibility agreements allowances. (See clause 19 B)

3. Clause 7 Salary System

Clarifies that salary systems may provide for progression based on employee performance and 7(xii) ensures that existing employees cannot be disadvantaged.

4. Clause 11 Payment of Employees

11(iv) requires councils to make payroll deductions for union membership where authorised in writing by the employee and may make payroll deductions for other reasons; at (v) caps the period of time councils are required to maintain salary payments to employees prevented from attending work due to bushfires are other climatic circumstances at one week; and at (vi) allows councils to recover a potential shortfall in workers comp where the insurance payment is less than the sick leave payment. This follows recent changes to workers compensation where injured workers now receive 95% of ordinary time earnings for the first 13 weeks of incapacity.

5. Clause 12 Annualised Salaries

This is a new clause that will allow councils to annualise rates of pay, penalty rates and the monetary value of various other award entitlements.

6. Clause 15 Allowances, Additional Payments and Expenses

“Disability Allowances” have been renamed “Adverse Working Conditions Allowances” and amended to remove ambiguity. Of relevance to our members, (xi) travelling allowances been amended to provide that the allowances now payable for travel in both directions when employers are required to travel to a different work location and the usual; (xv) Civil Liability Allowance clarifies and removes exposure to future underpayment claims; (xvi) provides to accredited Chartered Professional Engineers the provisions that are provided for BPB accreditation and (in response to one of our claims) BPB accreditation obligations on the employer continue “whether  employees are on paid leave and/or unpaid parental leave”.

7. Clause 16 Motor Vehicle Leaseback

B(iii) allows a Council to terminate or suspend an arrangement where the employee is demoted (provided that at least two weeks’ notice is given) and C(iv)clarifies that any variation to leaseback agreements needs to go to the Consultative Committee “before a definite decision is made”.

8. Clause 18 Hours of Work

Allows designated wages staff functions to work on weekends - not us.

9. Clause 19 Overtime

A new subclause (vi) to allow councils to direct employees to take a accrued time in lieu of overtime if they have accrued in excess of one week, or for the purposes of an annual close down.

10. Clause 19B Hours of Work Flexibility Agreements

This is a new subclause that allows councils to reach agreement with employees in Band 3 or Band 4 to incorporate an allowance “of at least 10% of the employee’s salary system rate of pay” in lieu of overtime into ordinary pay. This is a good opportunity for professionals. Nice work, Gordo.

11. Clause 19E Remote Response

Requires councils to pay on-call employees for overtime work they perform remotely responding to callouts over the phone.

12. Subclause 20A General

Needs to be read in conjunction with 21 D (i) but provides five weeks annual leave for employees who are rotating roster employees.

13. Subclause 21A Sick Leave

Provides a discretion for councils to allow employees to take sick leave at half pay under “extenuating circumstances”.

14. Subclause 21B Carers’ Leave

Removes ambiguity by deleting “days” and replacing with “weeks”. This assists part-time employees.

15. Subclause 21C Emergency Services Leave

Provides eligible employees with an entitlement of up to 5 days paid emergency services leave per year of service to participate in designated voluntary emergency management activities. This is debited from the employee sick leave balance, with some restrictions.

16. Subclause 21D Annual Leave

Minor rewording changes to remove ambiguity for seven-day rotating roster employees.

17. Subclause 21E Long Service Leave

Clarifies that the Council may direct employees to take long service leave and also to remove the requirement that long service leave must be taken in minimums of one week.

18. Subclause 21J(ii) Adoption Leave

Increase paid adoption leave to eligible employees who will now be entitled up to 9 weeks paid leave (18 weeks at half pay) when adopting a child under 5 years of age, and four weeks paid adoption leave (eight weeks at half pay) when adopting a child between the ages of 5 and 16. This was one of our claims and the new clause also provides that if the child is between 5 and 16 and “there are special needs and reasons in the child’s life” employer cannot unreasonably refuse to provide the full nine weeks at full pay.

19. Subclause 21(iv) Family Reunion Leave

Again another of our clauses and it provides employees adopted under a “closed” adoption practice with an entitlement of up to 5 days family reunion leave from their sick leave balance to reunite with their biological parents for the first time.

20. Subclause 21K Bereavement Leave

Under the 2010 Award, employees were entitled to four days Bereavement Leave per death but not for the death of an aunt, uncle, niece or nephew. Four days will be available for “immediate family but two days for “extended family”.

21. Subclause 21L(ii) Union Training Leave

Minor amendment to clarify payment. I thought this unnecessary but apparently one part-time employee made a claim for a full-time payment.

22. Subclause 21M Leave Without Pay

Minor change for clarification.

23. Clause 22 Flexibility for Work and Family Responsibilities

One of our claims, this new provision recognises the commitment to flexibility for work and family responsibilities and the need to retain skills and experience and requires employers are “encouraged to develop and promote flexible work and leave arrangements to enable their employees to better manage their work and family responsibilities.”

24. Clause 24 Health and Wellbeing

One of our claims, cruelly described as our Anti-Fatty claim, allows councils at their discretion to provide up to 2 days paid leave per calendar year from the employee sick leave balance for the employee “to participate in a health and/or well-being activity.” “It is anticipated that the leave will be used for proactive preventative health measures, such as to allow employees to attend an annual medical/health check, dental visit and will skin cancer check” but let’s get creative. Two days is just the start.

25. Clause 26 Casual Employment

Clarifies that the loading is paid in lieu of any entitlement to long service leave and other paid leave.

26. Clause 28 Labour Hire

This is a new clause to provide “that an employee of a labour hire business shall not replace an employee of Council on a permanent basis.”

27. Clause 29 Multiple Employment

This will allow councils to employ staff in more than one position under separate contracts. There have been a number of examples of someone who is employed as a full-time employee but also on weekends or seasonally in another job and this resolves any complication.

28. Clause 31 Training and Development

This clause (ii)(c) obliges councils to provide education and training “that enhances career path development” for employees.

29. Clause 32 Consultative Committees

The addition of the words “that encourages a free and open exchange of views” in the Aim of the Committee discourages GM and HR bullies and boofheads. Again, one of our claims but really one of everyone’s.

30. Clause 33 Appointment and Promotion

Now provides a right to an internal job applicant unsuccessful in an application to request “a review of their individual education and training needs”. One of ours.

31. Clause 34 Term Contracts

Allows councils to use term contracts “to temporarily replace employees working reduced hours under flexible work and leave arrangements”, and to “perform seasonal work”, to remove any confusion.

32. Clause 37 Work, Health and Safety

Removes duplication and overlapping with the Work Health and Safety legislation and codes of practice.

33. Clause 39 Workplace Change

Provides obligations on the Council at (b)(1) if there are significant effects on employees, or that result in a reduction in the size of the workforce to notify the union to which the employees may belong “at least 28 days before the change is implemented, unless otherwise agreed”; at (b)(2) provides that notification proposed change can be given either before or after the definite decision and that the union must respond within seven days; at (b)(3) provides that notice to the union “shall not form part of any notice of termination under subclause 39 (v”); allows the Council at (i)(c) to proceed with the change with the consent of the employees where the union has been provided with the seven days’ notice; at (i)(c) to “not unreasonably refuse” a request by employed to work through the notice period and to provide that during this period “priority shall be given to activities that may enable the employee to find employment.” And at (vi) Redundancy some minor wording for clarity. One of our claims, but really everyone’s.

34. What would have been Clause 39 Competitive Tendering has been deleted.

35. Clause 40 Council Agreements

To clarify the process in circumstances in which agreements may be terminated consistent with the provisions of the on the Industrial Relations Act on enterprise agreements - where three months’ notice needs to be given after the nominal term has expired.

36. What would have been clause 38 Award Implementation Committee

Has been deleted as this was intended to be a temporary arrangement after the making of the award in 1992.

37. Clause 42 Leave Reserved

Change includes leave reserved “to apply to vary the award to reflect possible legislative changes to parental leave and fringe benefit tax” and “apply to vary the award to allow for the taking of annual leave at either half or double pay by consent” - this requires changes to be made to the Annual Holidays Act 1944.

38. Clause 43 Area Incidence and Duration

The Award will now apply to corporations controlled by one or more councils and which are declared to be non-national system employers.

39. Rates of Pay

Increases of 2.6% from the first pay period on after 1 July 2014, with a minimum increase of $20.40; 2.7% from the first full pay period on or after 1 July 2015, with a minimum increase of $21.75; and 2.8% from the first full pay period on or after 1 July 2016, with a minimum increase of $23.15.

Further, that the monetary allowances in the Award be increased if expense-related allowances to reflect movements in the applicable ABS indicator, work related allowances generally with the same percentage increases as the rates of pay and tool allowances in line with the Crown Employees (Skills Trades) Award.


Okay, we liked both the images, and couldn’t decide which one we preferred.

Fearless leaders copy everyone - Local Government Managers becomes Local Government Professionals! (But nothing changes)

If you don’t have the answer, copy from someone who does

For an organisation constantly boasting about their leadership to the industry, LGMA, or LGPA in its new disguise, is pretty short on original ideas. We don’t mind consenting adults getting together to pleasure themselves in a group, so we’ve always been bemused by the organisation that started representing the interests of town or shire clerks.

 
The Town Clerks Society, the Institute for Municipal Management, the Local Government Managers Association and now the Local Government Poseurs.  Oops, while that might be more accurate, it really is Professionals.
 
It was never a good business model to be a little organisation covering Town or Shire Clerks (there were never going to be many of them) so it makes sense for them to keep expanding and sucking into their vortex more and more of the hapless and the gullible. Still, rubbing shoulders, or whatever part of the body you prefer, with the self-important and particularly the “leaders”, does provide a degree of pleasure associated with it.
 
When we changed our name from the Environmental Health and Building Surveyors Association to the Development and Environmental Professionals’’ Association in 2003, they should have woken up. The true leaders did it all back more than a decade ago. It’s hard to boast about being the leaders in the industry when you do something that we did 11 ½ years ago. Still, nice to know we influence them in some way.
 
Committed to parenthood statements like management excellence and all that stuff, the LGMA really needs to get its act together about what it is, and what it does. 
 
We remember it most as the organisation responsible for lying back and thinking of the Empire and allowing their members to get well and truly rogered when they jointly developed the first statutory general managers and senior staff contract with the DLG and the LGSA.
 
This is the contract that prohibited the continuation of payment for untaken sick leave for anyone who had it (because they didn’t understand the provision in the Industrial Relations Act that does allow the continuation of payment for untaken sick leave other than in an industrial Award and took the advice of other people who didn’t know) and which famously thought it made sense to introduce a provision to allow the termination of good people by paying 38 weeks’ pay. What an achievement.
 
That meant that the concept of a standard contract, and its content, was developed by permanent bureaucrats in the DLG with all of the protections of the public sector and no expertise in industrial relations, the LGSA representing councillors (yes, the people who would employee general managers) and the IMM, purportedly representing the interests of people who would be employed under the contract but completely ignorant of employment law and industrial relations. Still, they were probably there representing management excellence.
 
The IMM always loved contracts, this was the first organisation that thought they should be introduced for general managers so that the status of the general manager would be better acknowledged. Wasn’t that fabulous vision and leadership! Nine GMs, with no performance problems at all, sacked in the last two years and with no protection or defence.
 
And when the standard contract came up for renewal through a working party, they sat there mute while the three unions argued to remove term employment for general managers and improve the capacity for bonuses and other flexibilities in remuneration. Even at the meeting that coincided with the unreasonable termination of a good GM at Camden, all they could say was that it’s unfortunate when their relationship problems between the GM and councillors. Unfortunate! The real leaders wanted to do something about it.
 
No interest at all in protecting senior staff as employees and, change their name as they might, no interest in in protecting professionals generally either.
 
And now they run HR conferences. Move on, nothing to learn here. 
 
If they were really looking for a P word, there are plenty of better and more accurate options.

The three last reasons why you would remain a member of AIBS have gone

Margaret, Bill and Shelley

The final, blundering and sad purge of the NSW office of the AIBS is complete. On 24 March the goths and vandals from the National Office waved goodbye to the remaining staff, bundled up some important stuff in boxes and shut the office for good.

 
NSW Chapter EO Bill Burns had worked for the AIBS for more than 20 years. Bill was a highly respected, admirable and decent bloke with a distinguished local government career and a long history as a member of the Committee of Management and President and of depa. Goodbye, Bill.
 
Administration Manager Margaret Bayliss had worked for the AIBS for 15 years and membership Officer Shelley Melville had worked for the AIBS for 12 years. Goodbye Margaret and Shelley.
 
Not just three good, faithful and reliable employees, but all that corporate knowledge lost in a federal takeover that will leave no familiar faces and no lasting relationship in the Pymple office with anyone from NSW.
 
More importantly, the power wielders in the Federal Office made no real attempt to explain what they were doing to members, who were left wondering as one-by-one, Margaret, Bill and Shelley disappeared.
 
Many members of ours are also members of the AIBS. We don’t really understand why, but they are, but they must really be wondering why they would bother now.
 
Don’t ask Bill, Margaret or Shelley because, as most of you will know, employees affected by the closing down of offices and businesses often end up with a Deed of Release which, amongst other things, pledges confidentiality and no disparagement.
 
Suffice to say, because Bill is a life member of depa, we provided access to our lawyers to assist in his exit, and advice to Margaret as well who, luckily for us, is now our Office Manager. It was messy, antagonistic and offensive, but it’s done.
 
You would have thought that NSW would have some influence on the Federal Executive, that the NSW representative would have gone in to bat for those three loyal employees but you would have been disappointed. He’s a diplomat, you see, in the grand Federal scheme of things. Peace in our time and all, that sort of diplomat.
 
So now NSW is just like the other states. No proportional representation (always a mistake when the BSI was first abandoned because the smart people in AIBS at the time thought you needed to be part of a federal body) will always mean that while NSW might have half the membership nationally, it gets the same vote as the Tasmanians.
 
And if that voter thinks his role means he has to be a diplomat and that, in turn only means appeasing the aggressors, then there is no hope.
 
Bill Margaret and Shelley all deserved a better departure.

Goodbye Don, hello Paul

 
Former Minister Don Page   New Minister Paul Toole
 
We are sorry to see the removal of Don Page as Minister for Local Government as part of the new Cabinet of Premier Mike Baird.
 
Far too many ministers for local government have come and gone over the years. Having presided over the current reviews into local government, it’s a pity Don Page couldn’t see the job through. All those outstanding recommendations demanded the continuity and commitment the previous Minister Don Page could provide. 
 
He also seemed a decent bloke, accessible and understanding of local government and its issues and with capable and accessible staff as well.
 
Sorry to see you go, Don.
 
But welcome to the new Minister Paul Toole, member for Bathurst and another member of the National party.
 
At least he’s had some local government experience - even if it was only as a councillor and Mayor.
 
We will try to see the new Minister when things settle down and when it’s clear who will be supporting him in his Parliamentary Office. My great-grandparents are from Bathurst, so that should help opens doors. Hey bro!
 

Barry Farooqs himself

You’ve dropped the Grange, Barry

You’ve dropped the Grange, Barry

The resignation of Premier Barry O’Farrell on 16 April took everyone by surprise. His resignation followed assurances to the ICAC the day before that he had not received a bottle of 1959 Grange from Liberal Party identity and Obeid connection, Nick Di Girolamo.
 
This, despite evidence presented to him that the wine had been bought, delivered to his house and shortly afterwards he had a short phone conversation on his private mobile phone with Mr Di Girolamo. He denied it, and he denied it strenuously and repeatedly. 
 
But, as often happens in the theatre which is the ICAC, up pops a thank you letter in the Premier’s own fine fountain-penned hand thanking “Nick and Jodie” and signed “Baz and Rosemary”. Uh oh …
 
At least he had nice manners. His Mum should be proud.
 
There are lessons in this for employees in local government. There are no longer any secrets. People have ways of finding everything you would rather not found and doing so at precisely the wrong time.
 
While some are trivialising the circumstances of the resignation by claiming it was all about forgetting to declare a bottle of wine, it was much, much more than that. 
 
Not just breaches of guidelines for ministers and politicians, not just the blurred line between what’s acceptable when you’re running for power and what’s acceptable when you’re in government, not just a failure to acknowledge phone calls nor the extent of relationships, and not just attempting to withhold information about meetings, their frequency and their purpose.
 
Then there was the unfortunate timeframe of the gift he can’t remember receiving with the Premier’s subsequent intervention over his Water Minister’s portfolio to look after a mate and benefactor and the subsequent revealing of his office taking steps to recommend Di Girolamo for a Government Board only two weeks after the gift was delivered and the thank you letter written. 
 
In the end, it’s hard to get away with anything that is anything less than appropriate and proper and satisfies guidelines for governance and propriety. Don’t try it. 

Farooq gets Farooqed

GM Farooq Portelli and Mayor Ned Mannoun in happier times

GM Farooq Portelli and Mayor Ned Mannoun in happier times

If you choose to live by the sword, you die by the sword. What a great biblical reference (Matthew 26:52, if you would like to check) and one where Wikipedia helpfully provides a non-literal interpretation, “if you use violence, or other harsh means, against other people, you can expect to have those same means used against you.”
 
So, true to those ancient words, no one should have been too surprised to see the Liverpool GM get Farooqed himself.
 
As a reminder, it was only in 2012/13 that the local government unions were brawling with Liverpool City Council over their plan to spill their director and manager jobs, make some people redundant and employ the new second and third levels of management as senior staff under the Local Government Act on the dreadful statutory senior staff contract. Easier to sack people that way.
 
During the course of the dispute, Liverpool Mayor Councillor Ned Mannoun confessed at a UDIA breakfast that they didn’t want to waste time performance managing duds out of the place, because “that can take up to 18 months”, so putting people on the term contract mandated by the DLG meant they could just get rid of people whenever they wanted, without even having to explain why and the payout to sack GMs not performing badly is only 38 weeks’ pay.
 
Regrettably, a timid Judge of the IRC rejected our request to require the Mayor to come and say those same things in the Commission as part of the proceedings in the dispute. After all, GM Portelli hadn’t been game enough to confess what we all knew to be true.
 
We last covered developments at Liverpool in our March 2013 issue (which included the picture of the GM and the Mayor above) but things didn’t really go too well for Farooq after that. Running battles with the councillors followed for the remainder of the year and the Mayor tried unsuccessfully to sack him in December.
 
Rumours were flying in early March and on 1 April the Sydney Morning Herald revealed all under the heading “Senior public servants sacked without explanation”. 
 
You almost have to feel sorry for Farooq. His venal and punitive approach to setting up people on employment contracts who can be removed with no checks or balances created a dangerous precedent that would make more people vulnerable to unfair treatment - and his sacking by Liverpool made him the ninth GM sacked because of politics after the local government elections two years ago.
 
Former Labor Mayor Wendy Waller criticised the way things had gone and said “the Mayor basically gave a testimonial in regards to the general manager’s performance, yet it’s his mayoral minute that basically cancels the contract”.
 
“So I think “hypocritical” is the only word I see as being appropriate.”
 
Karma is a more appropriate word. If you use harsh means against others, expect them to happen to you.

Ex HSU officials call for investigation into depa’s finances

Ex-President of HSU East Michael Williamson and ex Secretary Craig Thomson this morning called for an enquiry into the financial management of the Development and Environmental Professionals’ Association (depa). Both ex-union officials have been convicted of defrauding the union, in Williamson’s case by millions of dollars.

The HSU has membership fees of almost $600 a year, about 50% more than depa’s fee of $398 - a fee which has remained unchanged for 11 years.

“Members of depa are entitled to ask where the money comes from. We know it just can’t be membership fees as members of our union were paying $200 a year more and that was barely enough for us” Williamson said from the back of a police wagon.

“Officials of that union must live in abject poverty, no wonder I never see any of them at lunch.”

“How can a small union (even its friends sneer at the small number of members) have $1 million in the bank, own its own office and regularly report fully to members openly and transparently? And the membership fee never goes up.  Something has to be wrong.”

Thompson suggested that the absence of an official union credit card should be treated with suspicion. “Clearly porn and prostitutes are somehow being paid with cash,” Thompson said.

Meanwhile, members of depa anticipate their individual receipt of the auditor’s statement and the union’s financial statements, as usual, in April.
 

Bigot Brandis moves to protect the right to be a bigot

Attorney-General Senator Brandis is under attack from all sides of politics for his initiative to make changes to section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act so that it would no longer be illegal to offend, insult or humiliate on the basis of race and bigots and racists could use race to vilify and intimidate in “public debate”.

“Other Australians have the right to be bigots too”, said Senator Brandis last week. “I’m not going to sit around doing nothing while people are prevented from racially vilifying whomever they like. We’ve been too polite for too long and we have to restore rights to pompous fat white people. The pendulum has swung too far.”

But Senator Brandis has found opposition within his own ranks.

NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell last week announced “bigotry should never be sanctioned… vilification on the grounds of race or religion is always wrong and there is no place for inciting hatreds within our Australian society”, the Premier said, drawing a measured response from Senator Brandis.

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