Greater Western Water debacle sums up the Allan government’s lack of transparency

Greater Western Water debacle sums up the Allan government’s lack of transparency

The timing of these revelations sums up the cynicism that permeates the conduct of government in this state. The public needs to be reassured that the sort of errors committed here won’t be allowed to happen again. Sending out this sort of information in the holiday season suggests the government and GWW are more interested in ensuring that we don’t notice.

Sadly, we have become accustomed to this contempt for public awareness on the part of officials. It has been most obvious in the state’s annual “Dump Day”, when hundreds of reports from government agencies and departments were tabled at once in a brazen bid to confound scrutiny.

Water Minister Gayle Tierney refused interview requests, with the government pointing us instead to the independent review it commissioned.

Water Minister Gayle Tierney refused interview requests, with the government pointing us instead to the independent review it commissioned.Credit: Eamon Gallagher

Thankfully, amendments to the Financial Management Act put forward by the Greens this year look set to end this terrible tradition. But the list of offences against transparency is a long one.

It is tempting to see the way in which the Suburban Rail Loop first came into being – outside normal planning channels and without an independent cost-benefit analysis – as the archetype. The wider regime of non-disclosure agreements surrounding its construction and that of other major infrastructure projects is an extension of the problem.

This year alone we witnessed an opaque and underhanded dismissal of Victoria Police chief Shane Patton, and CFMEU investigator Geoffrey Watson, SC, told us that the Allan government’s inquiry into corruption on the Big Build “needed actually to go inside the doors of the senior bureaucrats and actually into the ministerial offices in Spring Street. It didn’t do any of that”.

The year ends with a catalogue of the Allan government’s failure to provide crucial information to those seeking to understand our childcare crisis.

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So when details of GWW’s failures were emerging, it was hardly surprising but still highly unsatisfactory that the Allan government refused our repeated requests for an interview with Water Minister Gayle Tierney in the lead-up to this report on the debacle in October. Instead, the government pointed us to the independent review it had commissioned.

Such reviews and inquiries aren’t supposed to shield bureaucrats and ministers; their purpose is to give us the tools and an agreed set of facts to talk about when analysing what went wrong. They are meant to start a conversation and a process of accountability, not to end it.

Opposition Leader Jess Wilson described Symes’ letter promising financial support to GWW as a “de facto bailout”. One has to hope that in the new year – an election year – we are not confronted with the need for an actual bailout, with all the additional uncertainty that would result.

But should that end up being the case, we need a government that is prepared to front up and answer our questions, not to fob us off with talk of reviews and reports down the track. Whether that’s a choice we’ll have come November is far from clear.

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