

- Title
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL PREVENTIVE HEALTH AGENCY BILL 2010
In Committee
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
17-11-2010
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
43
- Electorate
South Australia
- Interjector
Trood, Sen Russell (The TEMPORARY CHAIRMAN)
- Page
1418
- Party
IND
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Xenophon, Sen Nick
- Stage
In Committee
- Type
- Context
Bills
- System Id
chamber/hansards/2010-11-17/0031
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- STANDING ORDERS
-
AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL PREVENTIVE HEALTH AGENCY BILL 2010
-
In Committee
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- Division
- Procedural Text
- Xenophon, Sen Nick
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Xenophon, Sen Nick
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Xenophon, Sen Nick
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Xenophon, Sen Nick
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Xenophon, Sen Nick
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Fierravanti-Wells, Sen Concetta
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Third Reading
-
In Committee
- NATIONAL HEALTH AMENDMENT (PHARMACEUTICAL BENEFITS SCHEME) BILL 2010
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC INTEREST
- ROYAL ENGAGEMENT
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- ROYAL ENGAGEMENT
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Tourism
(Furner, Sen Mark, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Computers in Schools Program
(Mason, Sen Brett, Evans, Sen Chris) -
Indigenous Employment
(Siewert, Sen Rachel, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Forestry
(Colbeck, Sen Richard, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Research
(Pratt, Sen Louise, Carr, Sen Kim) -
National Security
(Trood, Sen Russell, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Television Sports Broadcasts
(Fielding, Sen Steve, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Marine Sanctuaries
(Boswell, Sen Ron, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Homelessness
(Polley, Sen Helen, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Troeth, Sen Judith, Conroy, Sen Stephen)
-
Tourism
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: ADDITIONAL ANSWERS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- STANDING ORDERS
- NOTICES
- COMMITTEES
- 1999 GST AGREEMENT
- COMMITTEES
- NON BIODEGRADABLE PLASTIC BAGS
- COMMITTEES
- DR ROBERTA ‘BOBBI’ SYKES
- MR LIU XIAOBO
- CREDIT CARD SURCHARGING
- BURMA AND DAW AUNG SAN SUU KYI
- BROADBAND
- COMMITTEES
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
-
COMMONWEALTH ELECTORAL AMENDMENT (POLITICAL DONATIONS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
TELECOMMUNICATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (COMPETITION AND CONSUMER SAFEGUARDS) BILL 2010
TERRITORIES LAW REFORM BILL 2010 - HIGHER EDUCATION SUPPORT AMENDMENT (FEE-HELP LOAN FEE) BILL 2010
- INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
-
COMMITTEES
- Cyber-Safety Committee
- Parliamentary Library Committee
- Legislation Committees
- Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Legislation Committee
- Report of Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee
- Environment and Communications Legislation Committee
- Environment and Communications Legislation Committee
- NATIONAL HEALTH AMENDMENT (PHARMACEUTICAL BENEFITS SCHEME) BILL 2010
- DOCUMENTS
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
- QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
Page: 1418
Senator XENOPHON (10:26 AM)
—I thank Senator McLucas for her response. This is a new agency. It is supposed to give robust and independent advice to government. I cannot see the downside for government if that advice is released after a period of 12 months on the basis that the government does not have to adopt that advice. I think it is important, given the resources being put into this agency and given the importance of preventative health, to actually allow a process whereby the public—the people of Australia; the taxpayers who are paying for this agency—can see what advice is being given. If we want to talk about the whole issue of robust and fearless advice, let’s look at an example of an entity that has been in the news lately—the Productivity Commission. Governments cannot tell the Productivity Commission what advice it should give. The commission regularly gives advice that is made public in its memoranda, its reports and its inquiries that is out there for all to see. I think that enhances the public policy debate. This agency also has a very important role in enhancing the public policy debate in relation to health, particularly preventative health. That is why I think it is important that this agency publishes its recommendations, its advice, after 12 months has elapsed. I do not think anyone would accuse the Productivity Commission of being timid or fettered or frustrated by virtue of its reports be made public, and I think the same argument ought to apply here.