CLARIFICATION: ... for awhile this morning it
seemed that in his clean-up of government-appointed boards, South Australian
Premier Jay Weatherill had axed the controversial Phylloxera Board.
This is most certainly NOT the case.
On Monday 22, his office made this statement:
Boards
and committees review says 105 should go
A new report proposes
105 State Government boards and committees should be abolished, with a further 194
to be reformed, merged or reclassified.
Releasing the results
of the whole-of-Government audit today, Premier Jay Weatherill said the process
is aimed at improving the community’s access to Government decision makers and reducing red tape.
“This is about
finding new ways of Government’s being informed on policy issues, as too often this
advice is confined to a select group of people,” Mr Weatherill said.
“I am interested
in finding new and innovative ways to develop this advice, ensuring it flows more
directly from citizens and businesses alike.
“While some boards,
such as the Economic Development Board and the Defence SA will be retained, it is clear that
many others no longer have relevance or they should be replaced.
“Some boards will
be merged to remove duplication and others will be subject to reform, for example
those recommended by the Expert Panel on Planning Reform.”
The report recommends
that of the 429 State Government boards and committees:
· 105 be
abolished
· 72 be retained
in their present form
· 18 be merged
· 59 be reformed
· 117 be
reclassified
· 58 be subject
to further investigation before a final decision is made
Boards that are
subject to reclassification will still function but will no longer be
considered Government
boards.
Mr Weatherill
said that it is presently difficult to quantify the savings that would be made
from the reform.
“The reforms
will assist agencies meet their savings targets and there will be some
instances where resources
are reinvested,” Mr Weatherill said.
The interim
report will help to inform the drafting of legislation that will remove the
legal requirements for
the existence of particular boards and committees.
The reform will
continue over the coming weeks before a final report and subsequent legislation will be
finalised later this year.
... DOCUMENT ENDS
This morning, in
response to Premier Weatherill's press secretary's tweet promoting the boards
purge, I asked what will
happen to the Phylloxera Board.
"abolished
to be replaced by direct sector engagement," came the secretary's response
at 1105.
This was
quickly contradicted by the Premier whose tweet said "stays."
When I asked
about this confusion, Weatherill tweeted (1228) "board stays selection
committee goes sorry about confusion."
And the
secretary followed up with "apologies - theres also a phylloxera and grape
industry board of SA selection committee which has been abolished."
DRINKSTER
awaits government's intelligence on precisely who will select the next board.
"Will check" was Premier Weatherill's last tweet, responding to my query about whether the selectors or the board would include vested-interest people who sell phylloxera-resistant rootstocks and stand to do very big business indeed when phylloxera spreads.
If his direct personal response to questions like these stays as open and brisk, then Premier Weatherill's pulled a perfect coup, removing all those layers of obfuscation and pettifoggery.
Not that phylloxera's a petty thing.
Or pretty.
So, from whence comes the board?
Looking, looking!
STOP PRESS: TWITTER: South Australia's Premier Weatherill's press office says new Phylloxera Board likely to be selected by the chief executive officer of the Department of Primary Industries and Resources.
"
@SA_Press_Sec
Arm's length? That's the width of the CEO's desk.
The arm is longer than the tongue.
Phylloxera in the Mitchelton Vineyard in the Goulburn Valley, Victoria, above.
Read Matthew VII v 16!
Now owned by Gerry and Andrew Ryan, this outfit was absorbed by Brian Croser's Petaluma from 1994 to 2001. Colin Ryan was an accountant on Petaluma's board. Croser was chair of the Winemakers Federation of Australia (WFA) from 1991-93. After Croser bought Mitchelton from Stephen Shelmerdine AM in 94, Shelmerdine became WFA chair. Croser then followed him back in again for 1997-99. Croser is now quietly le grande fromage at the Australian Grape and Wine Authority (AGWA).
AGWA is what became of the perfectly named Wine Australia when a few long-term schemers used Queensland bean-counting Senator Bananaby Joice to crash it into the major Australia grape-growers' representative body.
Lots and lots of taxpayers' money.
One of this new outfit's roles is "to advance the objects of the Act by helping to ensure the truth, and
the reputation for truthfulness, of statements made on wine labels, or
made for commercial purposes in other ways, about the vintage, variety
or geographical indication of wine manufactured in Australia."
I wrote about this in 2010. I feel sure that somehow one of these great brains will have a quiet lunch somewhere with the CEO of PIRSA, non?
2 comments:
Croser will select the board and the cuttings.
Biggles is the Minister of Agriculture. He's very quiet.
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