

- Title
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
23-08-1999
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
39
- Electorate
WA
- Interjector
CARR
- Page
7496
- Party
LP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Eggleston, Sen Alan
- Stage
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
- Type
- Context
Questions Without Notice
- System Id
chamber/hansards/1999-08-23/0033
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- REGIONAL FOREST AGREEMENTS BILL 1998
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Department of Defence: Secretary
(Hogg, Sen John, Hill, Sen Robert) -
Economy: Business Surveys
(Coonan, Sen Helen, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Hill, Sen Robert) -
Economy: Howard Government Reforms
(Lightfoot, Sen Phillip, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
(Cook, Sen Peter, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Forestry: Protests in Western Australia
(Greig, Sen Brian, Hill, Sen Robert) -
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
(Faulkner, Sen John, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Tibet
(Brown, Sen Bob, Hill, Sen Robert) -
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
(Faulkner, Sen John, Alston, Sen Richard) -
National Emergency Services Memorial
(Watson, Sen John, Macdonald, Sen Ian) -
Federation Cultural and Heritage Projects Program
(Faulkner, Sen John, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Radiation and Health Safety Advisory Council
(Stott Despoja, Sen Natasha, Herron, Sen John)
-
Department of Defence: Secretary
- TEMPORARY CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES
- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- PETITIONS
- NOTICES
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- NOTICES
- COMMITTEES
- NOTICES
- DOCUMENTS
- COMMITTEES
- BUDGET 1999-2000
-
SOCIAL SECURITY (ADMINISTRATION) BILL 1999
SOCIAL SECURITY (ADMINISTRATION AND INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS) (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 1999
SOCIAL SECURITY (INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS) BILL 1999 - COMMITTEES
-
SUPERANNUATION (UNCLAIMED MONEY AND LOST MEMBERS) BILL 1999
SUPERANNUATION (UNCLAIMED MONEY AND LOST MEMBERS) CONSEQUENTIAL AND TRANSITIONAL BILL 1999
MINISTERS OF STATE AMENDMENT BILL 1999
AUSTRALIAN TOURIST COMMISSION AMENDMENT BILL 1999 - BILLS RETURNED FROM THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
-
A NEW TAX SYSTEM (COMMONWEALTH-STATE FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS) BILL 1999
-
Consideration of House of Representatives Message
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Mackay, Sen Sue
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Mackay, Sen Sue
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Mackay, Sen Sue
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Harris, Sen Len
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Harris, Sen Len
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Mackay, Sen Sue
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Mackay, Sen Sue
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Cook, Sen Peter
- Kemp, Sen Rod
- Third Reading
-
Consideration of House of Representatives Message
- CIVIL AVIATION SAFETY AUTHORITY: APPOINTMENT OF MR LAURIE FOLEY
- A NEW TAX SYSTEM (COMMONWEALTH-STATE FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS—CONSEQUENTIAL PROVISIONS) BILL 1999
- CIVIL AVIATION SAFETY AUTHORITY: APPOINTMENT OF MR LAURIE FOLEY
- CIVIL AVIATION REGULATIONS
- QUALIFICATION OF SENATORS
- NORFOLK ISLAND AMENDMENT BILL 1999
- REGIONAL FOREST AGREEMENTS BILL 1998
- ADJOURNMENT
- DOCUMENTS
-
QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
-
Department of Finance and Administration: Accrual Accounting
(Ray, Sen Robert, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry: Grants to the Electorate of Bass
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Drugs: National School Drug Education Strategy
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Minister for Family and Community Services: Staff Mobile Telephones
(Ray, Sen Robert, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Minister for Family and Community Services: Staff Lap Top Computers
(Ray, Sen Robert, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Department of Family and Community Services: Cost of Newspaper Clipping Service
(Ray, Sen Robert, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Department of Family and Community Services: Cost of Electronic Transcript Service
(Ray, Sen Robert, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Workplace Relations: Protests
(Murray, Sen Andrew, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Australian Maritime Defence Council
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Australian Maritime Defence Council
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Macdonald, Sen Ian) -
Pilchards: Importation
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Seafood: Importation
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Seafood: Human Consumption
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Food Production: Gene Technology
(O'Brien, Sen Kerry, Alston, Sen Richard)
-
Department of Finance and Administration: Accrual Accounting
Page: 7496
Senator EGGLESTON (3:18 PM)
—What we are seeing this afternoon is a trawling exercise carried out by a desperate opposition with no policies and no programs. They are trying to besmirch the names of two of the most successful ministers in the parliament. The poor old ALP over there have not got anything going for them, and so they have to sink down to these sorts of gutter tactics—trawling around looking for a bit of mud to throw. Senator Conroy is hanging his head in shame and leaving the chamber because he knows it is true.
The process which was gone through to fund the Federation and Cultural Heritage Projects Program was very open and transparent. Applications were called for on 30 June 1998. The task group's assessment began on 13 July and was completed on 13 August. The National Council for the Centenary of Federation provided its advice to the ministers on 7 August. The Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts sent a minute to the ministers on 14 August, along with copies of all applications and the task group's evaluations. The ministers forwarded a list of their recommended projects to the Prime Minister on 27 August. A letter dated 30 August was sent to the ministers, advising them of the PM's approval. That is all pretty straightforward.
Let us look at the criteria and process. There were 741 applications. The projects were evaluated by a task group made up of officers of DOCITA and the Department of the Environment and Heritage. The projects were judged against six criteria: significance, lasting nature, appropriateness for the Centenary of Federation, benefits to the broad community, good management capability, and partnerships in funding. The projects were scored. They were given four points for each of those six criteria, leading to a possible score of 24. Far from 16 projects not meeting the minimum criteria, in fact 60 projects were successful and eligible to be considered. The story which appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald on 11 August, under the by-line of Mike Seccombe, was very wrong and very misleading. Whoever leaked the information to him should have checked it out first, because it was wrong.
In making their final decisions, as well as taking into account the evaluations of the task group and the national council, the ministers took into account the need to fund a balance of cultural and heritage projects, a balance of projects in each state and territory, and a balance of projects in inner metropolitan, outer metropolitan and regional areas. Ministers were not provided with a list of recommended projects; rather, they were provided with all the information so they could select worthwhile projects, taking these objectives into account. That is what they did. It is true that some of the projects were announced during the election campaign, but that is not a breach of the caretaker conventions.
Senator Carr
—Of course it is!
Senator EGGLESTON
—Of course it is not. That is absolute nonsense, Senator Carr. You know it is not in breach. You are desperately picking up a little bit of mud and flinging it, but it is not going to stick because it is not a breach of the caretaker conventions which state that significant decisions should not be made during a campaign. These decisions were made before the caretaker period came into effect and were merely announced during the caretaker period.
What we have here is a trawling exercise by an opposition which, when in government, did almost nothing for the environment and nothing for natural heritage—it failed to reverse land and water degradation, it failed to do anything about the decline in biodiversity and it failed to prevent the spread of weeds and of feral animals such as foxes, goats, cats and cane toads. It basically neglected both the environment and natural heritage.
The money from the Building Better Cities program went to the cities because that is where the problems were. The money from the environmental programs has gone to the country areas and country electorates because that is where the problems are. I hope and pray that during the rest of this session the opposition will do a little bit better than it has done on this issue, trawling around, trying to make an issue out of nothing. (Time expired)