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Darren Chester MP: Hansard Extract - Building the Education Revolution Program

18-June-2009

This is a HANSARD trancript from Tuesday, June 16, 2009.

Mr CHESTER (3.02 pm)—My question is to the

Minister for Education. Can the minister explain why a

Bairnsdale building firm has been offered the opportunity

to tender for so-called Building the Education

Revolution projects at Foster, San Remo and

Wonthaggi, up to three-hours drive way, but was excluded

from tendering for a local project less than three

minutes away? Why won’t the minister do the right

thing and refer the waste and mismanagement of this

program to the Auditor-General?

Ms GILLARD—I thank the member for his question.

I say to the member that I am very happy to look

into the specifics that he has raised with me. I will do

that, and I am happy to take any details from him that

he may have. The system in Victoria for the provision

of projects is that the Victorian government bundles

projects and they then have head contractors who contract

with local contractors to deliver the projects. I am

very happy to look at the circumstances the member

raises. Obviously I want to be very clear with members

in the House and people generally that this is an economic

stimulus program to build the infrastructure of

tomorrow and to invest in and support Australian jobs

today. Not every building company that wants to work

on Building the Education Revolution will end up with

work. Obviously, though, if Building the Education

Revolution were not there, the people who are working

on those projects would not have their jobs supported

by this program. So what I would ask the member to

reflect on is whether or not he thinks that this work

should be available to support jobs. If he thinks the

answer to that is yes then he might want to reflect on

why it is that he voted against the program. If we were

delivering nothing—as the member voted for and as

the Leader of the Opposition and the shadow minister

believe—then he and I would not be talking today

about whose jobs are being supported by the program;

there would be no jobs supported by the program. His

political party’s strategy is to support no jobs through

this program.

I also say to the member opposite—and I understand

he was not in the last parliament but he may want to

look at the Hansard of the last parliament—that, before

he makes calls about referring things to the Auditor-

General he may want to reflect on the regional rorts

scandal of the former government and the findings of

the Auditor-General about that. He may want to reflect

on the performance of the then Prime Minister in supporting

the ministers who were involved in the regional

rorts scandal, including National Party ministers. He

may want to ask himself the question: should he, when

he looks at the program of Building the Education

Revolution, be taking the view that this is a program

for all schools around the country? We have not paid

any regard as to whether or not the schools are in my

electorate, one of my colleagues’ electorates, a Liberal

electorate, a National Party electorate or an Independent

member’s electorate. We have said that every

school should benefit under Building the Education

Revolution.

I say this to the member opposite: the track record of

his political party and the former government was not

to benefit places around the country; it was to benefit

places they saw political advantage in. If he is under

any doubt about that then the Auditor-General can help

him with that conclusion, because the Auditor-General

dealt with it fulsomely. So, on the question of audit

reports, the one I would be recommending to members

opposite for reading tonight is the one about their conduct

in government.

Source: Darren Chester MP