Government departments filleted as budget looms

Updated

April 04, 2012 06:52:25


Tony Windsor (right) and Rob Oakeshott

Photo:

Jobs cut: The regional department was set up as part of a deal with Tony Windsor and Rob Oakeshott (Jeremy Thompson: ABC News)

A series of federal departments, including one that drives climate change reform and another demanded as part of the deal to form minority government, are preparing to axe jobs ahead of a budget Wayne Swan says will be his toughest yet.

The Department of Regional Australia, Local Government, Arts and Sport (DRALGAS) is today expected to announce it will downsize, just a day after the Climate Change Department detailed plans to slash a third of its workforce.

Independent MPs who hold the balance of power in the House of Representatives wanted the regional department set up as part of their deal to hand Labor minority government.

The department has indicated all regional offices will remain open, but Opposition Regional Development spokesman Barnaby Joyce says he is worried too many of the department’s staff are working in Canberra, and that the government is “overweighted with top-end bureaucrats”.

But key independent MP Tony Windsor says the announcement does not change the deal he and Rob Oakeshott struck with the Government, saying it was “never about the specifics of who was going to be in which town”.

The ABC has been shown an internal financial statement from February that shows the department was bracing for a blowout of more than $2.2 million, but the department argues that was a forecasting document and the budget will be balanced.

But the ABC understands while the workforce will be downsized, that is due to a number of key programs winding up.

Climate change jobs cut

The Climate Change Department issued a memo yesterday detailing its plan to shed 30 per cent of its staff over the coming year through voluntary redundancies, closing programs and natural attrition.

The department has already issued a staff notice calling for expressions of interest in those voluntary redundancies.

The department says its facing a tight budget, and needs to downsize from 900 employees to about 600.

The Public Sector Union says the cuts raise major concerns about the Government’s ability to deliver services and tackle climate change, and have shocked workers.

“Public service agencies simply have nothing left to cut other than jobs and frontline services,” said Nadine Flood, the union’s national secretary.

“What we are seeing is those cuts starting to occur and I think they raise serious concerns for the community about what government will be delivering to them.”

At the end of last week the Veterans Affairs Department announced 90 jobs would go, and Ms Flood says the squeeze is also on at Medicare and Centrelink, affecting staff safety.

“We are hearing increased reports of client aggression and violence in Centrelink offices and I think that raises serious concerns where we would expect any Australian can walk into a Centrelink office and safely access government services,” Ms Flood said.

“I think there’s a real question if there are further cuts in the May budget whether that will be the case.”

Topics:
budget,
federal-government,
regional,
australia

First posted

April 04, 2012 06:37:28

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