Yesterday
Meet the doctors whose virtual ED is easing the load on hospitals
In outer Melbourne, a virtual emergency department has offered 250,000 patients treatment and created a model to help keep ageing Baby Boomers out of hospital.
- Tom Burton
This Month
APRA’s lavish $70,000 Christmas Party
Do you think all that time peering over the expenses of financial institutions has induced a spot of envy within the APRA social committee?
- Updated
- Myriam Robin
- Opinion
- Government Observed
The Senate’s mock outrage games shame all
Threatening corporate leaders with jail time over an accounting contrivance is part of a trend where the national parliament is becoming a theatre for showboating and mock outrage.
- Tom Burton
- Analysis
- Government Observed
Why government has an Excel problem
Swaths of the public service still have to use tools and manual procedures from the early 1980s, when desktop computing first arrived in government.
- Tom Burton
Finance’s ‘basic’ spreadsheet error triggers reform calls
The federal Finance department failed to remove hidden tabs in a master spreadsheet, exposing confidential pricing data, a review has found.
- Tom Burton
March
New system to track labour hire in government
A new Department of Finance database will provide the first-ever consolidated view of the use of labour hire throughout the federal government.
- Edmund Tadros
‘Legacy of fear’: government watchdog fires parting shot at Andrews
Victoria’s outgoing ombudsman Deborah Glass has warned about the ‘dangerous impact of creeping ‘politicisation’ on the state’s public service.
- Gus McCubbing
COVID-19 inquiry boss vows to find ‘missing piece’
Commonwealth review chief Robyn Kruk says the community should feel confident the nation can deal with the next pandemic.
- Tom Burton
- Analysis
- Inside Government
Health chief invokes ‘AFR test’ in proposal writing overhaul
Blair Comley has applied what he calls “the AFR test” as he pushes executives in his federal health department to write and think more clearly.
- Tom Burton
How ‘deliberate reflection’ and being a ‘list zealot’ help this leader
Competition expert Professor Caron Beaton-Wells runs up to eight lists on her phone and manages them ruthlessly. “That immediately makes me feel like it’s all manageable”.
- Tom Burton
- Analysis
- Government Observed
Could turning laws into code help fix the housing shortage?
Allowing computers to read and interpret laws based on sophisticated rules could revolutionise regulation and the way you interact with government.
- Tom Burton
Some jobs ‘you can’t do from your lounge room’, public servants told
Many jobs – such as those carried out by Border Force officers – would require staff to attend the workplace.
- Tom Burton
Finance begins training bureaucrats in procurement
The Department of Finance has begun training bureaucrats in how to buy complex goods and services and is also considering creating a specialist procurement career pathway for officials.
- Edmund Tadros
Australians unconvinced about AI safety: survey
There is a wide disparity in those who trust AI across different Australian regions, according to a new survey on trust in government services.
- Tom Burton
February
Battler for the underdog on being the department of last resort
South Australia has long been a leader in innovative social policy and services. After a series of leadership roles in Victoria and SA, Sandy Pitcher wants her staff to take pride in being the place the most vulnerable can turn to.
- Tom Burton
Bosses ‘nauseated’ as public servants gain unlimited WFH days
The four largest federal government agencies have voted overwhelmingly to end mandatory work-from-office rules as part of an 11.2 per cent pay deal.
- Tom Burton
Create consultant ‘name and shame’ register, government urged
The Business Council of Australia wants consulting contracts that have been terminated due to “material breaches” to be tracked and reported publicly.
- Edmund Tadros
Firms fume as Finance hits damage control in pricing email stuff-up
The Finance Department said the confidential pricing it accidentally emailed to 236 consulting firms was old and that bidders didn’t rely on these fees anyway.
- Edmund Tadros, Tom Burton and Ronald Mizen
Confidential big four billing rates accidentally released, again
The bidding prices of the cream of the professional advisory sector have been leaked again, and the federal finance department is in full damage control.
- Updated
- Tom Burton
The number of public servants working from home has doubled
Many new employees say flexible conditions contributed to their decision to take a job.
- Tom Burton