10-16-2015, 07:21 AM
From the ANAO & 'that man again'...
Finally from off the ANAO website:
Before we get to TMA's latest, courtesy the Oz, I need to issue a couple of WOFTAM NOTAMS related to the latest posts off the QOTM thread...
...Nah on 2nd thoughts just bring a bucket...
{Ps Gobbles on Dougy's insider intel.."There has been (and will no doubt continue to be) lots of talk behind the scenes at the AAA, but much of it is the kind that I can’t share in the public domain. Suffice to say, the interesting times look like continuing - and not just at and around airports". Perhaps this helps join the dots - }
Battlelines are drawn up, popcorn is ordered - BRING IT ON!
MTF..P2
Finally from off the ANAO website:
Quote:Airservices Australia's Procurement of the International Centre for Complex Project Management to Assist with the OneSKY Australia ProjectApparently we (the IOS) can even put in our 2 bobs worth:
Portfolio: Infrastructure and Regional Development
Agencies involved: Airservices Australia
Audit Objective: To examine whether Airservices Australia has effective procurement arrangements in place, with a particular emphasis on whether consultancy contracts entered into with ICCPM in association with the OneSKY Australia project were effectively administered.Due to Table:Autumn 2016
Quote:Contributions to the 'Airservices Australia's Procurement of the International Centre for Complex Project Management to Assist with the OneSKY Australia Project' audit in progress
The ANAO welcomes members of the public contributing information for consideration when conducting performance audits.
Performance audits involve the independent and objective assessment of the administration of an entity or body’s programs, policies, projects or activities. They also examine how well administrative support systems operate.
The ANAO does not have a role in commenting on the merits of government policy but focuses on assessing the efficient and effective implementation of government programs, including the achievement of their intended benefits.
The audit you have selected is currently collecting audit evidence and is seeking input from members of the public. We particularly value information that deals with significant matters or insights into the administration of the subject of this audit. We anticipate accepting contributions to this audit until 24 December 2015.
Information can either be submitted by uploading a file, or by entering your information into the comments box below.
The confidentiality of your contribution is protected by law. Information you provide can only be disclosed for defined purposes (see Sections 36 and 37 of the Auditor-General Act 1997). In addition, any personal information gathered by the ANAO is also subject to the provisions of the Privacy Act 1998 (see our website Privacy Statement and the ANAO Privacy Policy at: http://www.anao.gov.au/Privacy).
While your contribution will be considered, and handled with care, you will not automatically receive further feedback after the acknowledgement of your contribution. However, if you provide your contact details, you may be contacted regarding your contribution.
Before we get to TMA's latest, courtesy the Oz, I need to issue a couple of WOFTAM NOTAMS related to the latest posts off the QOTM thread...
Quote:P2 - ..don't tell "K" but this Quote from Dougy's weekly wrap had me ROFLMFAO...
Quote:"...Also new in a sense was Airservices Jason Harfield, who’s filling in as CEO right now while there’s a search underway for a replacement for Margaret Staib. He spoke with real authority and justified my belief that the organisation has a couple of serious contenders for the top job already within..."
P666 - ...Oh Lordy P2, the Ferryman is going to pop a foofer valve when he reads that love poem Dougy wrote about Half-inch! When does Dougy and Harfy get married?...
P9 - ...Nah, not at all. Confess when P2 read the ‘thing’ out to me over the blower; there was a mild reaction (mild?) but after mature consideration and a couple of ‘Genius’ (to loosen up the keyboard fingers) I’ve decided, I don’t give a rats.
If Dougy’s conscience can stand being part of one of the greatest atrocities ever foisted on an innocent travelling public and his soul can withstand the shame of selling snake oil to the natives; then why should I care. He is ‘editor’ of a once fine magazine which has done a deal with the devil; and we all know how that turns out...
...Nah on 2nd thoughts just bring a bucket...
{Ps Gobbles on Dougy's insider intel.."There has been (and will no doubt continue to be) lots of talk behind the scenes at the AAA, but much of it is the kind that I can’t share in the public domain. Suffice to say, the interesting times look like continuing - and not just at and around airports". Perhaps this helps join the dots - }
Quote:Airservices’ ‘dodgy dealings’ under watchdog probe
- by: EAN HIGGINS
- From: The Australian
- October 16, 2015 12:00AM
Reporter
Airservices Australia’s acting chief executive Jason Harfield. Source: News Limited
The government watchdog which investigates public spending has confirmed it has launched a special probe into Airservices Australia and says it will focus on what has been described as “dodgy” and “incestuous” dealings with an obscure “not-for-profit” organisation.
The move comes as speculation mounts in aviation circles that the Airservices board and Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss, whose portfolio covers aviation, are leaning towards appointing acting chief executive Jason Harfield to the position permanently.
As revealed last month, the Australian National Audit Office will investigate Airservices following reports in The Australian and Senate committee hearings, which raised serious questions about the organisation’s governance.
The ANAO has confirmed on its website that the investigation is under way. It will be specifically directed at Airservices’ dealings with the International Centre for Complex Project Management over the $1.5 billion OneSKY program which will integrate the nation’s civil and military air traffic control and navigation systems.
The ANAO website says the investigation’s objective is: “To examine whether Airservices Australia has effective procurement arrangements in place, with a particular emphasis on whether consultancy contracts entered into with ICCPM in association with the OneSKY Australia project were effectively administered.”
The move follows an urgent request from the Senate rural and regional affairs and transport legislation committee.
A Senate committee hearing in August heard that ICCPM managing director Deborah Hein is the wife of Steve Hein, who worked for ICCPM until hired by Airservices in a senior managerial role. One contract Airservices struck with ICCPM was processed by Mr Hein.
Senators also expressed incredulity that Airservices had hired an ICCPM consultant, Harry Bradford, to negotiate on its behalf with the prime contractor on the OneSKY project, aerospace group Thales Australia, when the managing director of Thales, Chris Jenkins, is also the chairman of ICCPM.
“The perception of conflict of interest is all over this,” Labor senator Joe Bullock told the hearing, while the committee chairman, Liberal Bill Heffernan, said the dealings were “incestuous” and would “not pass the public test … it sounds dodgy”.
Mr Bradford, who has been paid more than $1 million by Airservices thus far, is a former RAAF officer.
On its website, ICCPM describes itself as “an independent, international, not-for-profit organisation that would support both government and industry’s ability to better deliver complex projects”.
Ms Hein declined to speak over the telephone, but in an email said ICCPM “looks forward to the opportunity to engage in the ANAO audit”.
Sources told The Australian the ANAO regarded the matters raised about Airservices as serious, and would expedite the inquiry.
While former Airservices chief executive Margaret Staib resigned in late July citing health issues, aviation industry figures said they had not seen any advertising for the position.
Airservices spokeswoman Vicki Huggins and Mr Truss’s spokeswoman Kate Barwick would not answer questions about the process of appointing a new Airservices chief executive, including whether the position had been or would be advertised, with Ms Barwick only saying “the appointment will go through a recruitment process”.
Former Civil Aviation Authority chair, businessman and aviator Dick Smith said he had been contacted by “a number of people who would be really excellent for the job” but they had not seen the position advertised. “If they are thinking of doing an inside job that would be a disaster; they have a lot of problems and need a new person from outside,” Mr Smith said.
“This is a billion-dollar-a-year business; they should be advertising it around the world”. [b]{ Well said Dick.. }[/b]
Battlelines are drawn up, popcorn is ordered - BRING IT ON!
MTF..P2