Chapter 2 - Regional Partnerships Program
2.1
The Regional Partnerships (RP) program, which commenced
on 1 July 2003, is intended
to give effect to the government's policy set out in the publication, Stronger Regions, A Stronger Australia.
RP replaced eight precursor programs, the Regional Solutions, Regional
Assistance, Rural Transaction Centres, and Dairy Regional Assistance programs
and four regional structural adjustment programs.[26] As noted in Chapter 1, the funding of
a project under one of those programs, the Dairy Regional Assistance Program,
was the subject of a previous Finance and Public Administration References
Committee report.[27]
The RP program
2.2
Detailed information on the RP program may be found in DOTARS'
submission to the inquiry.[28] That
submission includes a number of attachments that describe all facets of the
program, including, among other things, the guidelines for determining
successful projects, the constitution and role of the 56 Area Consultative Committees
(ACCs) that act as advisory bodies in the regions, and the role of the minister.
Only some of these matters are discussed in this chapter. Issues related to the
ACCs are discussed in the next chapter. Information about the program may also
be accessed on the DOTARS Regional Partnerships website.[29]
2.3
In this chapter, the Committee outlines aspects of the
structure and operations of the RP program which are critical to understanding
how the program works and which are relevant to some of the case studies
examined later in the report. These aspects are:
-
Guidelines
-
Strategic Opportunities Notional Allocation
(SONA)
-
The minister's role
-
Expenditure, including election commitments
-
Distribution of grants
-
Administrative processes
-
Funding agreements
-
The TRAX system
-
Audit and evaluation.
The RP guidelines
2.4
The guidelines cover matters such as the aims of the
program, the involvement of the ACCs and local government, accountability
requirements and advice about how to apply for a grant. Other matters covered,
and those elements of the guidelines which proved to be of most relevance to
the inquiry, are assessment criteria and the eligibility of organisations and
projects.
2.5
The guidelines were first published on the DOTARS
website towards the end of June 2003, and have been revised since then.[30] It is not clear when the revision was
made, but it apparently involved a change to the eligibility criteria, in
particular to the need for a project to have the necessary approvals and
licences in place for it to be approved.[31]
This is discussed below in relation to eligibility for funding and is particularly
relevant to the Tumbi Creek project discussed in Chapter 5.
Assessment criteria
2.6
The guidelines provide that:
To ensure the most effective use of Regional Partnership funds,
priority will be given to those projects that demonstrate value for money by
achieving their outcomes through the most efficient and effective means,
securing appropriate funding from other sources and/or have exhausted other
funding options.
Value for money will be determined taking into account the total
request for Regional Partnerships funding and meeting the...assessment criteria.[32]
2.7
The RP guidelines set down several assessment criteria
under three headings, namely, outcomes,
partnerships and support and project and applicant viability.
2.8
Under outcomes
the guidelines specify that a successful project would demonstrate that it
would provide benefits to the community by, for example, meeting a demonstrated
need or community demand for the project's
outcomes. A successful project would also demonstrate that it would create or
enhance opportunities in the community by, for example, providing
infrastructure that enhances economic/social opportunities.[33]
2.9
Under partnerships
and support the guidelines state that establishing community support is
critical to the long-term success and ownership of a project. The guidelines
define the ways in which it may be demonstrated that a project is a partnership
and that it has community support. The guidelines read as follows:
Partnerships are a strong demonstration of support. Partnerships
are established where individuals, private sector businesses, community/not for
profit organisations, other organisations and any local, state and/or
Australian Government agencies make a financial and/or in-kind contribution to
your project.[34]
2.10
Under project and
applicant viability the guidelines set down several criteria, including the
demonstrated ability, or access to expertise, to manage the project both during
and after funding and demonstrated sustainability beyond the funding period.[35] The sustainability criterion is of
some significance in the Tumbi Creek case study included in Chapter 5.
Eligibility
2.11
With some specified exceptions, entities registered
under State or Commonwealth legislation, for example the Corporations Act 2001, can apply for Regional Partnerships funding.
The exceptions include Australian and state government departments, individuals,
and private enterprises and co-operatives that are considered commercial
enterprises that are requesting funding for planning, studies or research.
2.12
ACT Chief Minister Mr Jon Stanhope MLA submitted that
the RPP eligibility criteria disadvantage the ACT. All ACT government
departments are ineligible to apply for funding despite the fact that the ACT
government performs both state and local government functions:
This approach unfairly disadvantages the ACT. The ACT government
is unique in Australia
in that it delivers both State/Territory and local government functions. While
other local governments in Australia
can apply for RP program funds, the ACT cannot.[36]
2.13
The Committee considers that these concerns are valid
and that ACT government departments should be allowed to apply for funding for
projects that would otherwise be eligible under the RPP guidelines.
2.14
The guidelines identify a number of different types of
project that would not be eligible for funding. Ineligible projects include
those that compete directly with existing business, unless production
differentiation tests can be met,[37]
and those that could involve cost shifting or that duplicate funding from other
sources. The guidelines also specify that proposals that cannot obtain, or have
not yet obtained, the relevant approvals or licences to progress will not
generally be considered. They also specify that retrospective costs cannot be
funded.[38]
2.15
The guideline regarding the need for a project to
obtain relevant approvals or licences gave rise to some confusion during the
inquiry because the version of the guidelines on the DOTARS website contained
contradictory requirements. The current guideline is reproduced in the
paragraph above. The version of the guidelines on the website included that paragraph,
but also specified that projects that 'could
not obtain or were in the process of obtaining the relevant approvals or
licences to progress' were not eligible for funding.[39] This contradicts the above statement
that such projects will not generally be
considered.
2.16
The eligibility criteria are particularly significant
with regard to the Strategic Opportunities Notional Allocation procedures that
are discussed below.
Strategic Opportunities Notional Allocation (SONA)
2.17
Some funds within the RP program are 'available each
financial year for new projects that are seen as strategic opportunities'.[40] According to the RP Internal
Procedures Manual, SONA 'will allow the Government to respond quickly and
easily to a diverse range of situations which may fall outside the
administrative constraints of RP, but which are consistent with the purposes of
RP'.[41]
2.18
The SONA procedures provide that the projects and initiatives
that are administered under the procedures need to be consistent with the goals
and priorities of either Regional Partnerships or the Stronger Regions, A
Stronger Australia
statement, and that they must meet the majority of the RP program's
selection criteria. The DOTARS procedures identify three categories of project
that could be considered under SONA, as follows:
-
projects that are of national or cross-regional
significance;
-
projects that are a whole-of-government
response; or
-
projects that respond to a significant event,
such as a regional economic or social crisis, where relief is not available
from existing relief programs.[42]
2.19
The document also states that SONA procedures may
address program restraints of a more administrative nature, and the following
examples are given:
Where funding for a high priority project would significantly
exceed the relevant ACC's notional allocation and approval cannot be delayed
until sufficient RP funding becomes available; or
Where a decision not to support a project is reversed following
formal review and additional funding flexibility is required; or
Where a project or initiative would require the waiver of some
specific part of the guidelines or eligibility criteria in order to be funded
(eg the waiver that enabled normally ineligible proponents, Australia Post and
Centrelink, to participate in Rural Transaction Centres).[43]
2.20
The SONA procedures appear to have been applied to nine
projects in the 18 months to 31
December 2004. Six of those projects were approved for funding, as
follows:
-
Christmas Island Mobile Upgrade, Christmas Is. -
$2.750 million
-
Crocfest, Commonwealth Department of Health and
Ageing - $158,400
-
Primary Energy Pty Ltd, Gunnedah, NSW - $1.210
million
-
National Centre of Science, Information and
Communication Technology, and Mathematics for Rural and Regional Australia
(SiMERR), University of New England, Armidale, NSW - $4.950 million
-
Slim Dusty Foundation Ltd, Kempsey, NSW – 2
grants of $550,000
-
Sugar Industry Reform Package, national -
$12.734 million.
2.21
Three projects were rejected, namely, Regional Australia
on Board (West Melbourne), Wholesale Regional Banking Model Development (Kingaroy,
Qld) and the CISSES (Chain of Intermodal Shared Services on the Eastern
Seaboard) Consortium, that was proposed by the Wagga Wagga City Council. The
reason given for rejecting the West Melbourne proposal
was given as, 'Poor value for money for program funds. RP is not the most
appropriate funding source for this activity'.[44]
The reason for rejecting the regional banking proposal was, 'Suitable partner
funding and/or community support not demonstrated. Sustainability and/or wider
community benefit of outcomes not demonstrated'.[45] The CISSES proposal, which aimed to
create an efficient freight system across eastern Australia,
was rejected on the grounds that, 'Sustainability and/or wider community
benefit of outcomes not demonstrated'.[46]
2.22
DOTARS informed the Committee that in the 2003-04
financial year $20.872 million was committed to SONA. The major projects for
which funds were committed in that year were the sugar industry reform package,
SiMERR and the Christmas Island mobile upgrade. When the
SONA procedures were produced in September 2003, $3 million was allocated for
2003-04 for SONA,[47] suggesting that
the government did not expect that SONA would be used as extensively as it was.
The actual commitment of funds under SONA in 2003-04 suggests that the
allocation was indeed 'notional'.
2.23
One of the RP program's
predecessor programs, the Regional Assistance Program (RAP), also included
provisions for grants for projects of national significance. The Australian
National Audit Office (ANAO) conducted a performance audit on the administration
of the RAP, including the Projects of National Assistance elements of the
program, in 2002.[48] DOTARS informed the Committee that:
SONA was modelled to satisfy the principles set for the Regional
Assistance Program Projects of National Significance.
The Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) Report on the Regional Assistance Programme agreed to the concept
of the Projects of National Assistance elements of that programme and made a
number of observations regarding consistent decision making and public
accountability, in particular that 'the
assessment process should be sufficiently rigorous to provide reasonable
assurance that the projects selected are consistent with the guiding principles
of RAP'.[49]
2.24
DOTARS stated that the projects that had been administered
under the SONA procedures of RP did not meet the usual eligibility criteria. DOTARS
also stated that only three of the eligibility criteria had not been fully met.
The relevant criteria were the provision of funds to other government
departments, the use of a grant to produce a prospectus and the lack of
planning approval for a project.
2.25
Dr Gary
Dolman, Assistant Secretary of DOTARS
Regional Communities Branch, informed the Committee that the Slim Dusty project
in Kempsey, NSW, did not have full planning approval when it was approved, but
that the RP guidelines had been amended since then so that the project would
now be eligible for approval under the normal arrangements for RP projects.[50] The Committee finds this explanation
unsatisfactory. The fact that the guidelines were later amended does not excuse
the fact that this project was approved without meeting the guidelines.
Applications must be assessed against the guidelines in place at the time to
avoid making a mockery of established processes.
2.26
It is interesting that the two grants to the Slim Dusty
project that were administered under the SONA procedures were approved on 25 January 2004 and 21 June 2004. A project for the dredging
of Tumbi Creek in New South Wales
was approved on 24 June 2004,
having been administered under the normal RP arrangements, despite the lack of
the appropriate licences. The administration of the grants for the dredging of
Tumbi Creek is described in detail in Chapter 5.
2.27
Another RP grant that was processed under the SONA
procedures is a $1.2 million grant to Primary Energy Pty Ltd for the 'grains
to ethanol' project. That project also had to
be administered under SONA because it did not meet the RP eligibility guidelines.
The grant was in fact approved for planning purposes and for the production of
a prospectus, contrary to the guidelines.[51]
The Primary Energy grant is discussed in more detail in Chapter 7. A grant to
the University of New England for the SiMERR project also was administered
under SONA, not only because it was of national or cross-regional significance,
but also because it may have breached the partnership criteria in as much as
the hub centres in the other States and Territories (partners in the project) were
not confirmed at the time the grant was processed.[52] This grant is also discussed in
Chapter 8.
Publication of the SONA procedures
2.28
The SONA procedures were first produced in September
2003, some weeks after the RP program was established, and were revised in
March 2004.[53] Unlike the RP guidelines,
the procedures were not published widely but were included only in the Internal
Procedures Manual. In effect, until the SONA procedures were tabled in the
House of Representatives in early December 2004, in response to intense
scrutiny by the Opposition, the only persons with access to them were DOTARS
employees in the relevant area and (potentially) employees and members of the
Area Consultative Committees. The procedures apparently were not known to those
who might have made applications for grants and, more importantly, were not
known to parliamentarians whose role it is to scrutinise government expenditure.
The SONA procedures were provided to the Committee in DOTARS' submission
(attachment H).
2.29
It became evident during the course of the inquiry that
many ACC chairs and executive officers were still unaware of the existence of
the SONA procedures.[54] Four ACC
executive officers (EOs) told the Committee they were aware SONA existed
because Ms Riggs,
DOTARS Executive Director, Regional Services, had mentioned it at an ACC EO's
conference, but none of them had ever seen the procedures.[55]
Administration of SONA
2.30
DOTARS submitted that projects administered under the
SONA procedures are 'assessed in the normal way, including against the Regional
Partnerships' assessment criteria of clear outcome, partnership, benefit to the
community and sustainability'.[56]
2.31
Despite evidence from DOTARS to the contrary,[57] it is clear that ministers' offices
were involved in decisions to apply the SONA procedures to certain projects.
DOTARS' submission states that ministers have not directed or suggested to
departmental employees that the procedures be applied to an application.[58] However, as described in the Primary
Energy case study in Chapter 7 of this report, the department was subject to
pressure from Minister Anderson's
office and a strong request from another minister that the project be funded.
It is obvious that DOTARS had no option but to use the SONA procedures to give
effect to that request.
Role of the minister
2.32
The RP program is one of many discretionary grants
programs administered by the Commonwealth Government. A consequence of the
discretionary nature of the program is explained in the guidelines published by
DOTARS, as follows:
Regional Partnerships is a discretionary programme. The funding
of projects, through Regional Partnerships, is at the discretion of the Federal
Minister for Transport and Regional Services or the Federal Minister for
Regional Services, Territories and Local Government, therefore meeting the
assessment criteria does not guarantee funding.[59]
2.33
A corollary to this is that the ministers may approve
projects that do not necessarily meet the guidelines or that they may vary the
amount of the grant. DOTARS informed the Committee that in relation to 17 or
three per cent of the approximately 600 applications processed by the
department from 1 July 2003
to 31 December 2004, the minister
did not follow the department's recommendation.
Of the 17, the minister approved 11 projects that the department advised should
not be approved, rejected three that the department considered should be
approved and in three cases the minister varied the amount of the grant from
the department's advice.[60]
2.34
The Committee requested DOTARS to identify those
projects on which the minister's decision deviated from the department's
recommendation, but departmental witnesses refused to provide this information.[61]
2.35
The discretionary nature of RPP funding decisions,
combined with this refusal to disclose details of the minister's decisions,
leaves the RP program susceptible to perceptions of bias. Submissions to the
inquiry suggested that such perceptions could be overcome by appointing a board
or commission to undertake RPP funding decisions.
2.36
Mr Jon Stanhope MLA, ACT Chief Minister, submitted:
Given the accountability of Ministers, it is not unreasonable
for Ministers to make the final decisions on funding projects. However, the
Regional Partnerships program's broad guidelines allows it the flexibility to
support a wide range of projects under its banner. In this case, the rationale
for approving particular projects in particular locations may not be as clear
as in programs with more tightly defined objective and guidelines.
To overcome any perception of bias in supporting projects, the
Australian Government could consider moving the responsibility for approving or
rejecting projects to a government appointed board with members who had
relevant qualifications.[62]
2.37
Mr Stanhope
suggested that the approach used by the former Networking the Nation program
would provide a suitable model for RPP. Mr
Peter Andren MP
suggested that a grants commission process similar to that used to allocate
local government grants would be a suitable approach.[63]
Expenditure
2.38
The Commonwealth Government spent $86.922 million on
the RP program in 2004-05, and has appropriated $111.625 million for the
program in 2005-06. It is estimated that a further $250 million will be
allocated to the program from 2006-07 to 2008-09.[64] Including the $78.457 million expended
on RPP in 2003-04,[65] the total amount allocated
to the program exceeds $500 million.
2.39
In the period 1
July 2003 to 31 December
2004, the minister approved funding for 504 projects, to the value
of $123,656,940.[66] The minister also
rejected 150 applications for funding in that period.[67] The amount of grants approved for projects
ranged from $2,754 for replacement lighting for tennis courts at
Brushgrove, New South Wales, to $12.734 million for 'transitional support for
the sugar industry and consequently to sugar dependent communities'.[68]
Election commitments
2.40
Not all the funds allocated for the RP program in
2005-06 and future years will be expended on new RP projects or on projects now
in the process of assessment. A significant number of election promises were
made that will likely be met from the program funds. DOTARS submitted a list of
these promises and their expected cost. There are six 'icon' projects, for
which $27.5 million has been promised, and 50 other projects.[69] The cost of the election commitments
likely to be funded through RP amounted to approximately $66 million, ranging
from a grant of $5,000 for the Macedon Football Club to upgrade its change
rooms to $15 million for a Rural Medical Infrastructure Fund.
2.41
Proponents of some of the projects in the list may have
been in the process of applying for grants and may have met the guidelines for
receiving a grant. However, apparently there is no need for any of the projects
identified as election promises to address the RP guidelines in order to
receive a grant from the program. DOTARS informed the Committee that instead of
the normal application process, the department would seek information from each
of the proponents to enable it to make an assessment of risk to the
Commonwealth. Ms Riggs
stated that:
We will then formally put an advice to the minister or
parliamentary secretary in respect of each of these projects. That might, for
example, say that there might be some conditions on the funding, and only then
would we seek to enter into a funding agreement which would convert those
commitments into actual grants. [70]
This demonstrates that the process of funding election
commitments from RPP was neither transparent nor rigorous. Some effects of
election commitments bypassing the RP guidelines and assessment processes are
discussed below in relation to commitments made in Tasmania.
Effect of RP election commitments in
Tasmania
2.42
A total of $1.535 million in election commitments to be
funded under RPP were made in the electorate of Bass in Tasmania,
suggesting that the seat was targeted by the government at the 2004 election.
Projects included $600,000 for economic development initiatives in Launceston
and Northern Tasmania, $150,000 for a planning strategy
for the town of Bridport, $250,000
for bicycle tracks in Launceston and $250,000 to develop a complex in Georgetown
to house the Bass and Flinders replica ship, 'The
Norfolk'.[71]
A total of $2.765 million of election commitments to be funded by RPP in Tasmania
were made during the 2004 election period.[72]
2.43
In his submission to the inquiry, the Hon
Paul Lennon MHA,
Premier of Tasmania, raised a number of concerns about the effects of the federal
government's election commitments to be funded
from the RP program. The impacts included election commitment projects
duplicating state programs relating to recreational infrastructure and matched
funding requirements being placed on the state government.[73] The Premier commented as follows:
The funding will be provided on the proviso that the State
Government matches the funding. This raises a number of issues, in particular:
- The capacity to deliver additional projects;
- "Matched funding" requirements being imposed
on the State Government;
- Duplication between the program's projects, and those
that are State funded; and
- The consideration given to the local context when
deciding funding.[74]
2.44
The Premier's
submission also commented on the election promises bypassing the program's
established processes and undermining the consultation requirements integral to
RPP:
The projects promised during the election have involved minimal
consultation with TEAC [ACC Tasmania] and the State, and undermine the
systematic processes of the partnership program that was established by the
Commonwealth.[75]
2.45
The Committee received similar evidence from ACC
Tasmania that election commitments raised questions among proponents who had
followed the proper process:
The "election promises" where projects have received
funding, that were not known to the ACC, or where further development was
required, undermines the voluntary commitment of the ACC Regional Directors...The
Regional Directors are the face of the ACC in regional communities, therefore
they are approached by community members...[who ask] "why projects were
funded" when they were informed of the correct procedures and process
which had to be adhered to for funding under Regional Partnerships.[76]
2.46
The Committee considers that the government should take
existing state and local government programs and priorities into account and
consult with local ACCs before making election commitments.
Distribution of grants
2.47
DOTARS submitted data up until 31 December 2004 showing the distribution of
grants by political party and location of electorate.[77] The data show that overall there was
little difference in the proportion of applications approved among electorates
held by different parties. There were, however, significant differences in the
numbers of applications made from electorates held by Government, Opposition
and Independent members and in the funds provided.
2.48
In the 82 electorates then held by the Government, 795
applications were made resulting in $65.2 million of grants. In the 64
electorates held by the Opposition, 209 applications were made resulting in
$18.5 million of approved grants. In the 4 seats then held by
Independents/minor parties, 60 applications were made receiving $14.9 million
in approved grants.
2.49
Differences in the number of grants and funding
received were also apparent across the locations of electorates. In the 38
metropolitan electorates held by the Government parties 58 applications were
made. In the 50 metropolitan electorates held by the Opposition, 96
applications were made. The Government-held electorates received a total of
$6.9 million while the Opposition-held electorates received $4.5 million.[78]
2.50
In provincial electorates the Opposition held eight
seats, from which 67 applications were made, resulting in grants valued at $7.5
million. From the eight seats held by the Government parties there were 44
applications, which led to $3.2 million in grants.
2.51
In the rural electorates the differences were more
marked. In rural locations, 46 applications were made from the six seats held
by the Opposition, and those electorates received $6.5 million in grants. There
were 693 applications from the 36 electorates held by the Government parties,
and $55.2 million in grants. The three seats in this category that were held by
Independents received $14.6 million from 54 applications (this amount
presumably included the $5.5 million made to the Buchanan Park 'icon' project.)
2.52
While there is no 'average' electorate, and hence no
reason why there necessarily should be equity in the distribution of grants
among electorates, the average amount in grants provided to each electorate may
be instructive. When considering these figures, it should be remembered that
the RP program is intended to benefit the regions. It should also be remembered
that the figures are for grants approved, not for funds committed.
2.53
In the metropolitan areas, each electorate held by the
Government parties received an average of $180,614 while each electorate held
by the Opposition received $90,999. In provincial areas, Government-held
electorates received on average $395,278, while Opposition-held electorates
received $938,828.
2.54
For electorates in rural locations, the average amount
of RP funding approved for Government-held electorates was $1.5 million and was
$1.1 million for seats held by the Opposition. The three electorates held by
Independents received on average $4.9 million. These electorates include New
England which was described as a 'National Party target seat'.[79] Issues surrounding some significant
grants made to projects in that electorate are discussed in Chapter 8.
2.55
In summary, the overall number of grants approved for
Government-held seats was significantly higher than for Opposition-held seats.
The electorates that on average received most funding from the RP program were
seats held by Independent members.
Distribution of SONA grants
2.56
As noted above, six projects were approved using the
SONA procedures in the 18 months to 31
December 2004. One of these projects, the Christmas Island Mobile
Upgrade for $2.75 million, was located in an Opposition-held electorate. Two grants
totalling $1.76 million were for projects located in National Party electorates
—
the Slim Dusty Foundation and Primary Energy grants. The grant to the University
of New England SiMERR National Centre
for $4.95 million was to an Independent electorate. The remaining two projects
approved using SONA, Crocfest and the Sugar Industry Reform Package, were both
described as national projects and related to a number of electorates.
Timing of grant approvals
2.57
The number of project applications and quantity of
grants approved was not uniformly spread throughout the period to December
2004. As shown in Chart 1, there was a significant increase in grant approvals
in the months leading up to the 2004 federal election. In June,
July and August 2004, the three months preceding the announcement of the
election, $71.1 million worth of grants were approved. In other words, over half (58 per cent) of the total
funding approved for the entire period from the commencement of the program to
31 December 2004 was approved in the three months preceding the election
announcement. Of the funding approved in those three months, $22.1 million (31
per cent) was for projects in marginal electorates.
Chart
1: RPP grant approvals[80]
Administrative processes
2.58
Project proponents may lodge their applications with
DOTARS. Depending on the medium used, for example, electronic or paper, the
application will go either to the national office or a regional office. If an
application is lodged with DOTARS national office it is usually assigned to a
regional office for processing. The regional office refers the application to
the relevant Area Consultative Committee (ACC) for review.[81] The role of the ACCs is described in
more detail in Chapter 3.
2.59
Proponents are advised, for example on the RP website,
that before making an application they should contact the local ACC which can
assist them in developing their application, and with lodging it with DOTARS.
The ACC is required to consider the application, among other things, against
priorities in the relevant Strategic Regional Plan and against RPP's objectives
and criteria. The ACC is required to rate the project on a scale of 1 to 4,
with 4 being the highest rating.
2.60
However, the Committee received evidence, discussed in
later chapters, that in reality the processes described above are not always
followed. The Committee became aware of a number of applications that were not
forwarded to the ACCs for review, or where ACCs were given insufficient time to
consider and rate applications. Overall, the Committee is not in a position to
ascertain how often ACCs are excluded completely from the assessment process or
their role is minimised. This is unsatisfactory. The Committee was impressed by
the overwhelming majority of ACCs that it met and considers that the ACCs
provide an important reality check on project applications.
2.61
Applicants are contacted by the regional office to
provide them with preliminary advice, for example, to seek additional
information, or to inform them that their application is being assessed or if
it is ineligible.[82] If the project is
eligible for a grant and the application has been completed properly, it is
assessed in a regional office against a detailed checklist contained in the RP Internal
Procedures Manual. The application then goes through a 'quality assurance'
check at the national office, which is also responsible for the final
submission to the minister.
Announcement
2.62
After an application receives ministerial approval, the
grant is announced. The Internal Procedures Manual states that it is the
minister's preference for local (i.e. government) MPs or senators to have the
opportunity to advise successful applicants on behalf of the government. They
are also given the opportunity to make arrangements for the announcement. Two
or three days later the minister's office advises the successful applicant and
the relevant ACC. Non-government local members are also informed.[83]
2.63
A possible consequence of the early notification to government
parliamentarians is stated in DOTARS' procedural manual:
This means that DOTARS may find that applicants and ACCs are
aware that a project is successful before staff in either National Office or
Regional Office have been notified. This situation should be managed by DOTARS
staff tactfully.[84]
2.64
When DOTARS becomes aware of the announcement, summary
information about the recipient, the amount of the grant, the purpose of the
grant and the title of the relevant ACC are placed on the RP website.
2.65
For unsuccessful projects the relevant DOTARS regional
office notifies the applicant in writing within two weeks of the ministerial announcement.
Unsuccessful applicants may appeal to the department for a review of the
decision. Reviews are conducted by officers other than those who originally
assessed the application. A final decision on a review rests with the minister.[85]
2.66
The Committee wished to inquire into the timing of
grant announcements in comparison to the dates approvals were made. DOTARS,
however, declined to provide information about the date of announcements, despite
the Committee requesting this information in late 2004. As mentioned above, DOTARS
asserted that announcements are a matter for the minister, and DOTARS may not
necessarily know when announcements are made.[86]
Official openings
2.67
The RP Internal Procedures Manual includes advice about
official openings or launches. The decision maker or a representative of the
decision maker is invited. Representatives may be the local member (if a
government member), a 'patron'
senator or, if those persons are not able to attend, a representative from the
ACC or from DOTARS.[87] No mention is
made in the manual of invitations to non-government parliamentarians. This was
a matter of concern to the Independent Member for New England
in relation to his not being invited to the opening of an aged care facility in
his electorate. His concern is addressed in Chapter 8 of the report.
Due diligence
2.68
The due diligence that is conducted at least in
relation to an application for larger RP grants seems to take account of two
factors—the viability of the proponent and the viability of the project. Dr
Dolman, when commenting on the Tumbi Creek
project, defined due diligence as meaning whether or not the proponent is
likely to be facing financial difficulties and whether the project is viable.[88] This is a much weaker definition than
the statement in the RP guidelines that 'Applications
will be subject to substantially higher levels of scrutiny where it is
[sic]...seeking more than $250,000 from Regional Partnerships'.[89]
2.69
There was discussion during the inquiry regarding the
appropriate level of due diligence that is required, and also regarding when in
the assessment process due diligence should be undertaken. The executive officer
of the Far North Queensland Area Consultative Committee (FNQACC), when
commenting on investigations into the viability of the A2 Dairy Marketers
proposal, and responding to a question as to whose role it is to undertake due
diligence, stated that:
Let us be very clear about our understanding of what due
diligence is ... Our [FNQACC's] thing is to look
at it [a project] and make a balanced recommendation on what we believe. We
certainly do not have the resources..., with a staff of three, to be doing due
diligence...but it is within our scope to make some comment about what we see.[90]
This matter is further discussed in Chapter 6.
2.70
Despite some confusion about due diligence
responsibilities between ACCs and DOTARS, the RP Internal Procedures Manual
states that responsibility for due diligence rests with the department.[91] Due diligence seems to be conducted in
the main after the approval process, and for larger grants is usually
outsourced to external consultants. The RP Internal Procedures Manual advises
that a standard procedure before signing a funding agreement is the undertaking
of risk assessment processes. The amount of funding being sought, the project
type and applicant type determines the extent of the assessment. The following extract
is taken from the manual:
-
Pre-assessment – Basic check on an applicant (In
house)
-
Level 1 – Credentials check on an applicant
(Lawpoint website)
-
Level 2 – Assessment of applicant's financial
risk status (External consultant)
-
Level 3 – Assessment of project's commercial
risk/suitability (External consultant)
-
Private sector applicants are typically subject
to a higher level of risk assessment.[92]
2.71
The extent of due diligence then depends on the
proponent, and the size and nature of the project. The Committee was told by
DOTARS witnesses, for example, that local government councils as proponents are
generally assessed as being low risk.[93]
Ms Riggs
commented that:
Prima facie, for example, one might take the view that a council
is not going to be allowed to go broke by its state government, whereas that
would be unlikely be true of a private sector organisation. So you might allow
for a larger project or a larger amount of grant funding to go to a council
than you would allow to a private sector organisation without doing a very
intensive due diligence on the project that is in question.[94]
2.72
The Committee was hindered in its ability to examine due
diligence procedures because the thresholds for determining the level of due
diligence had been removed from the version of the RP Internal Procedures
Manual provided to the Committee by DOTARS. The following explanation for the
absence of the Assessing Risk and
Viability section was provided within the manual:
This section is currently under major review and therefore has
been removed. If advice is necessary contact the Applications, Approvals and
Contracts section.[95]
2.73
In contrast, the thresholds for the level of due
diligence required in relation to SRP projects were clearly specified in
DOTARS' submission:
-
A Lawpoint check for applicants seeking funding
of approx <$50,000
-
A company viability check for applicants seeking
funding of approx $50,000 - $500,000
-
A company and project viability check for
projects over $500,000.[96]
2.74
The Committee is disturbed that procedures fundamentally
important to determine the viability of projects and the risk to the
Commonwealth were left in abeyance without appropriate interim measures. The
Committee considers that guidance on due diligence checks should be finalised
as a matter of urgency.
Funding agreements
2.75
Grant recipients are
required to enter into a funding agreement with the Commonwealth.[97] The form of the agreement may be found
on the Regional Partnerships website.[98]
2.76
DOTARS, through its regional offices, negotiates with
the recipient regarding the budget, outcomes and milestones information that
are to be included in the agreement. The first grant payment is not made until
all the conditions that have been imposed on the approval of the grant have
been met, and further payments are not made until the recipient meets the
milestones specified in the agreement. As a result, the announced grant may not
be funded, as in the case of A2 Dairy Marketers, for example, which went into
receivership before the funding agreement was concluded.[99] In contrast, the first payment of
$426,800 to Primary Energy Pty Ltd was made conditional on merely signing the
funding agreement, and therefore no progress was required towards actual
project outcomes.[100]
2.77
In signing the agreement, recipients acknowledge that
the government may be obliged to disclose information contained in it.[101]
2.78
The Committee received copies of a number of agreements
relating to grants that it wished to consider in depth. The agreements were
detailed, and included, among other things, provisions for the management of
funds, record keeping and reporting. The Commonwealth's
agreement in relation to The Cove Caravan Park, for example, included among its
provisions 'activity/ milestone descriptions'
and 'expected reporting dates'
against those milestones. An example from the agreement reads as follows:
Activity/milestone
description |
Expected reporting date |
(iii) Kerbing/sealing roads and footpaths |
30
April 2005 |
2.79
The agreements state that recipients must provide
DOTARS with reports on progress at specified times. Post activity reports that
include audited statements of receipts and expenditure are also required.
2.80
An interesting inclusion in the agreements is a
standard provision, titled Acknowledgement
and Publicity, which requires the recipient to acknowledge the financial
and other support received. The agreement stipulates that any publicity should
use the words, 'This project is supported by funding from the Australian
Government under its Regional Partnerships programme'.[102] The provision also requires the
grant recipient to clear all publicity, announcements and media releases through
a departmental contact officer before they are released to the media.[103]
TRAX
2.81
A software system known as TRAX is integral to the administration
of the RP program. DOTARS submitted copies of diagrams from its TRAX training
manual that show that every step in the processing of a RP grant, from the
lodging of an application to the acquittal of funds, is recorded in the system.[104] DOTARS claimed that the use of TRAX addresses
a part of a recommendation made by this Committee in its report on a Dairy RAP
project, namely, that DOTARS 'adopt...an improved documentary record of
assessment procedures'.[105]
2.82
The department bought the basic TRAX product in
December 2002. It began operating in July 2003 and, by 30 June 2005, DOTARS had expended $3.8 million developing
and refining the system.[106] The costs
included two trips to Canada
by senior departmental staff to meet with the software providers to discuss
issues and problems associated with the development of TRAX.[107]
2.83
One witness, the executive officer of the Kimberley
ACC, claimed that TRAX is 'difficult,
time-consuming, customer unfriendly and it should not he released until all the
bugs have been removed'.[108] Ms
Riggs agreed that when DOTARS first released
the application 'front end'
of TRAX it was very user unfriendly, quite problematic and had some
limitations.[109] She informed the
Committee that because some people had difficulty with the front end of the
system DOTARS had implemented other means for the submission of applications,
for example hard copy, that ensured that DOTARS staff rather than ACC staff are
responsible for data entry. Ms Riggs
also observed that the 'front end'
is only part of TRAX, and that most of the system supports the internal processing
functions of staff of the department.[110]
Ms Riggs
claimed that the department had made substantial improvements to the system
since July 2003 and that it 'provides
appropriate elements of support'.[111]
2.84
Reports on RP grants which were generated from TRAX and
that were initially submitted to the Committee in January 2005 were wrong in
some important details. Incorrect information was provided to the Committee
about when some applications had been submitted and approved, hampering the
Committee's inquiry. DOTARS had then to
reconcile the data held in TRAX with paper records held in its regional
offices,[112] with the result that the
Committee did not receive reliable data on some important projects until May
2005.
2.85
The Committee is aware that mistakes can be made when people
are entering data into electronic databases and spreadsheets, but it was
particularly unfortunate that in this case those mistakes adversely affected
the conduct of the inquiry. Furthermore, it is not clear what internal quality
control mechanisms are in place to ensure the accuracy of TRAX data in the
future.
Audit and Review
Audit reports and reviews
2.86
In its submission DOTARS listed five external reviews
or audits of three precursor programs—Regional Assistance, Dairy Regional
Assistance and Telecommunications Grants (which included Rural Transaction
Centres) programs—and three internal reviews of the RP and SR programs. Copies
of the executive summaries of those reviews were submitted to the Committee.
The department stated that it had incorporated lessons from those reviews into
the RP program 'to ensure that it operates in line with best practice programme
administration'.[113] This Committee's
report, A funding matter under the Dairy
Regional Assistance Program, June 2003,
was included among the external reviews.
2.87
DOTARS also provided an attachment to its submission
which set out for the RP and SR programs the department's actions to meet the
recommendations of the ANAO's Better
Practice Guide for the Administration of Grants and the recommendations of
the reviews and reports mentioned above.[114]
2.88
As mentioned, DOTARS has conducted three internal
reviews of the RP and SR programs. These reviews were as follows:
-
KPMG (2004), Findings
and Recommendations on the Review of Regional Partnerships Programme;
-
KPMG (2004), Review
of Regional Office Delivery; and
-
KPMG (2004), Review
of the Sustainable Regions Programme Internal Audit.
2.89
The department relied on the first of these reviews for
its assessment that the RP program is delivering substantial benefits to
communities across Australia,
and for a measure of the effectiveness of expenditure under the program. The
department claims that at least $3 is contributed by state government, local
government and the private sector for every program dollar, and that three jobs
are generated for every $50,000, with this rising to four jobs in the longer
term.[115] The review also collected,
among other things, data on the nature of the activities generated by RP
funding and the allocation of funds by type of project.[116]
2.90
DOTARS informed the Committee that its evaluation strategy
for both programs sets up processes to gather performance data on the impact of
the programs against their stated objectives (and outcomes) and that the
strategy is in three stages, as follows:
-
Post-implementation review;
-
Impacts of projects; and
-
External evaluation.[117]
2.91
The first stage of the post-implementation review of
the SR program has been concluded and the second stage commenced. As part of
the first stage evaluation of the RP program, an internal review of a selection
of projects was conducted. The second part of stage one involved a client
survey. That survey had been completed, but the report had not been produced,
by 12 August 2005.[118] The second stage of the RP review is
scheduled for 2006.[119] The external
evaluation of the RP program is to begin in June 2006. The external review of
the SR program is scheduled to report in late 2005-06.[120]
2.92
While DOTARS provided evidence about the macro-level
assessment of the SRP and RPP, the Committee notes that there is little
evidence of evaluation of the outcomes of individual projects—evaluation of
which is fundamental to any measure of the success or otherwise of the
programs. The Committee also notes the absence of a clear link between RP or SR
funding and demonstrated regional development outcomes commensurate with the
quantum of funding.
ANAO Best Practice Guide
2.93
As reported in the previous section, DOTARS submitted
an attachment to its submission (Attachment J) in which the administrative
processes adopted for the RP and SR programs were listed against the principles
set down in the ANAO's Better Practice Guide for the Administration of Grants, May 2002
(the Better Practice Guide). In general, DOTARS has addressed the principles,
but there appear to be shortcomings, which are possibly outside the department's
control. Under 'Grant Announcements'
for example, the ANAO's recommendation is that
grant offers should be made and unsuccessful applicants advised as soon as
possible. DOTARS has asserted that announcements are made as soon as possible,
but the timing of the announcements is a matter for the minister, and DOTARS
may not necessarily know when announcements are made.[121] Additionally, although DOTARS has
produced and promulgated guidelines for applicants in line with the ANAO
principles, there is no mention of the SONA procedures in the guidelines or in
Attachment J to DOTARS' submission.
2.94
The Better Practice Guide also states that the
objectives of a program must be clearly documented and communicated to all
stakeholders, as follows:
Grant programs should operate under clearly defined and
documented operational objectives...Operational objectives for the program should
include quantitative, qualitative and milestone information or be phrased in
such a way that it is clear when these objectives have been achieved, Adequate
information will then be available on which to base future decisions for
continuing or concluding the program.[122]
2.95
However, the RP program has four extremely broad
objectives, which are as follows:
- Strengthening growth and opportunities
- Improving access to services
- Supporting planning
- Assisting in structural adjustment[123]
2.96
The Committee does not accept DOTARS'
claim that these objectives meet the ANAO Better Practice Guide's principle of
defining operational program objectives.[124]
The Committee considers it imperative that the RP program objectives be made
specific to enable the meaningful evaluation of the program.
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