Lisa Owen interviews Chief Ombudsman Dame Beverley Wakem
On The Nation:
Lisa Owen interviews Chief Ombudsman Dame Beverley Wakem
Prime Minister’s attitude
to the Official Information Act is “cavalier” and shows
“a disregard for the law”, says Ombudsman, though she
admits she hasn’t spoken to him about it Says she
does not think the OIA has become more politicised, but
acknowledges the growing influence of political advisers and
says it’s “naïve” to think those controlling the
release of information wouldn’t consider its impact on
government. Reveals she intends to introduce new set
of publicly audited annual standards covering OIA releases
that government agencies can benchmark themselves
against. Isn’t aware of 3D producer Eugene
Bingham’s complaint about release of information by police
into crime statistics. Withheld for two years, a police job
sheet later revealed then-deputy commissioner Mike Bush said
“to not respond to the Official Information Act
request”. Ombudsman says she “regrets” Bingham’s
complaint has been with her office for a year without
resolution and she will look into it. Asked about
concerns that the release of information is being delayed by
government agencies, she says delay complaints “don’t
form the bulk of my work” and “a lot of the fault”
lies with media going on a “fishing expedition” with
their requests. Caseloads in her office are 35 per
person, down from 50-60 but above the international norm of
25 cases at a time. Dame Beverley “we’re only
human. We do the best we can with the resources that we
have”, but her office is improving response times and
doesn’t need more money.
Doesn’t need more
powers to sanction government agencies; “moral suasion”
still enough to “focus the mind” of public
servants.
Lisa Owen: It was Abraham
Lincoln who said “let the people know the facts and the
country will be safe”, yet last year the Ombudsman’s
Office was concerned enough that people weren’t getting
the facts that it launched a review of the Official
Information Act, a review that’s almost done. Now, under
the Act, you and I can request information from government
agencies as soon as possible. They have to respond in no
more than 20 working days, yet often that legal requirement
is not met. We’ve had controversy around Dirty Politics
and releases to Cameron Slater, and Prime Minister John Key
added to concerns when he admitted that sometimes his office
waits 20 days to release information when it’s in his
political interests. So when I spoke to Chief Ombudsman
Beverley Wakem, I asked her if the Prime Minister’s
actions were acceptable and indicative of what the review
found.
Beverley Wakem: It’s not acceptable,
and it isn’t indicative of what we’re finding. I mean,
we haven’t… If people are expecting this report to come
out, name, shame and blame and hang somebody from the
yardarm at midday, it’s not going to do that. I
specifically said right at the start, what we’re doing
here is a health check on the central government agencies,
compliance with the OIA provisions, identifying where there
are gaps and working with the agencies to shore up those
gaps and help them in their response. I don’t think it has
become politicised, but I think there is that inherent
tension. You’ve got now, for some time now, but certainly
not so much in my day, political advisors in the
ministers’ offices. And somebody once wrote a book called
‘The Rise of the Unelected’ about these people. And
I’ve yet to talk to them, but I’m planning to, because
their role is, really, the preservation of the minister’s
reputation, and that’s got nothing to do with the OIA.
That’s not a withholding provision that you might
embarrass the minister by releasing something, and release,
anyway, at the end of the day, is the prerogative of the
chief executive, having first, of course, as the Act – I
think it’s section 15.5 – envisages consultation with
the minister. So that is an area, if you’ve got a
political advisor, not accountable to anybody but the
minister… and one or two executives did say, ‘Well, who
are they accountable to?’
I want to ask you—I
want to talk about that a bit more, Dame Beverley, but
before we do, if it’s unacceptable what the Prime Minister
has said, have you had a word to him about
that?
I haven’t. I didn’t hear what he had
to say at the time. I have had discussions on and off with
his chief of staff. I haven’t specifically indicated that,
but, I mean, it was an off-the-cuff remark; it was
ill-advised in my view and didn’t set the tone that I
would like to see from leadership at the highest level
to—
But it’s more than that, isn’t it?
Because that’s a disregard for the law.
It’s
cavalier.
It’s more than that. It’s a
disregard for the law.
Cavalier and a disregard
for the law.
So do you need to have a word with
him, then, directly?
Well, I think in the
outfall from the report, we’ll be having words with a few
people, I suspect.
Including the Prime
Minister?
Well, if I have to, I will,
yes.
All right. Now, in terms of these advisors,
critics would argue that that level of consultation with a
minister’s office leaves the door open for political
interference or the perception of political
interference.
Well, it could do if you’ve got
a very strong minister and a novice CEO, but CEOs have to
man and woman up and have the kind of relationship of trust
and integrity that I talked about before with their minister
where their voices are heard and their advice is taken. And
if we find that not to be the case, then we jump on
it.
But are they doing that? Are they standing up
to ministers? Because the thing is often the perception is
that when someone decides to release information or not,
that they’re considering whether this is good or bad
information for the government of the day, the impact of
that information.
Well, it’s naïve to think
that they’d operate in any other way, really, with respect
in terms of what they’d think about it. But that’s not
the issue. The issue is…
But that’s not the
law, is it, Dame Beverley?
That’s what I’m
saying, Lisa, if you’d let me finish. What I’m saying is
they have to operate within the law. An embarrassment for
the government or the minister is not a withholding
provision under the law, and if there are inordinate delays,
then people can come to us, and, of course, we will follow
that up. A lengthy delay is deemed by us to be a refusal,
and we are finding that. And the last time we had a blitz on
that, we got an immediate improvement in the response rates.
And I have to say that there are, as I said before, some
legitimate reasons why there might be a delay, just so
everybody understands that. But I have to say that I have
not got in this inquiry so far concrete evidence of that
sort of behaviour. There are robust debates. They have to
take place between, I ‘m sure, the minister and his
advisors and the chief executives. But at the end of the
day, the law is the law.
You say no concrete
evidence, but are you getting the impression…? Because
delay is a way of killing a story, delay is a way of
neutralising information. So while you might not be getting
concrete evidence of this, do you get the feeling that
delays are being used in that way?
Well, all of
those delayed deemed refusals pass over my desk, and they
don’t form the bulk of my work is all I can say to that.
So, you know, if people are trying to be expedient in the
way you’ve suggested, it’s not too long before I get a
formal complaint that I investigate and make a ruling on and
either recommend release or otherwise.
But a lot
of journalists or people seeking the information might have
given up by then. It’s such an arduous process in some
ways.
Well, you know, a lot of the fault, I
might say, lies with the way in which the requests are
posed. Oftentimes the media will go on a fishing expedition,
and they’ll ask for a request that’s yay miles wide.
Now, the Danks Committee never envisaged that government
would not be able to govern or department would be brought
to its knees by the width and breadth of these requests. So
there is a responsibility also on the part of the requester
to manage and to focus what it is they really want to know.
You know, there’s no use asking for 30,000 documents or
whatever it is, you know, everything that walked, flew and
run for the last year.
I would like to take some
time to just explain an example – one of the most
interesting ones I think I’ve seen in recent times –
which is a request from a 3D producer, Eugene Bingham,
asking for information about serious allegations that South
Auckland police were doctoring burglary statistics. Now, the
police delayed him for about two years before they responded
to him, and then a police job sheet surfaced, and I’ve got
the job sheet actually here, and in this, an inspector has
written down instructions that he says he received from the
then deputy commissioner, who’s Mike Bush, who’s now the
top cop. In this job sheet, that person states that he was
told to let the request sit, and then he goes on to say
that, ‘The direction to me was to not respond to the
Official Information Act request.’ Let it sit. Not
respond. That’s a really serious allegation, isn’t
it?
Well, it is a serious allegation. I wasn’t
aware of that. I haven’t had that particular
document.
Well, that has been with your office, I
think, for just about a year. A complaint was laid with your
office about that, and it’s been with your office for
about a year. And there’s been no outcome. Isn’t that
part of the problem?
Well, it is part of the
problem, and we’ve spoken about our need for more
resources. We have now been given the funding for more
resources, and the response times now, the numbers are going
in the right direction. So we should see, and we are seeing,
a significant improvement in turnaround times. But I regret
that. It is not right, and it is part of the problem. But
I’ll certainly take that up and look at that one when I
get back to the office.
Because in that sense,
that relates to a person who’s now in a very powerful
position. I should say that the commissioner, Mike Bush,
denies giving that advice to his staffer, but it relates to
a person who is very high up in the police force – the top
cop. Shouldn’t that get immediate
attention?
Well, we have a priority system, and
it’s in the queue. But everybody… everybody who comes to
the office, their complaint is urgent, necessary, must be
done in the next five minutes. We’re only human. We do the
best we can with the resources that we have. We’ve gotten
better resources now, and the times are improving. But
I’ll certainly, if that’s as urgent as you say it is, go
back and have a look.
Do you need more resources,
though? You said you have had some assistance, but do you
need more still?
Well, in an ideal world it
would be wonderful if we could get the caseload for each
investigator down to an international norm, which is 25
cases at each time. We have 35 cases at each time, and
that’s come down from about 50 to 60 cases for each person
each time, which is, you know, a hell of a load, really. But
however, we are getting there. We are getting there. I
don’t think we need more resources, but we are looking in
very many ways, and part of what I’ve done over the last
several years is re-engineer workflow and so on to
streamline the processes inside the place, but we can always
learn, and we can always do better. No question about
that.
Does your office need more powers, like
powers to punish, because… I mean, I’ve got a couple of
OIAs here. This one is one that was sent to the police;
again, they failed to log the request, and the response back
was, ‘Humblest apologies. That’s my bad.’ So that’s
their excuse or response. Another one from the Corrections
Department saying that they’re having an unprecedented
volume of requests, so they’re citing workload as a
reason, which I don’t think is actually a reason in the
Act. But the thing is what’s the worst that can happen to
them in terms of not obeying their obligations? What’s the
worst? There are no sanctions, are there?
No.
Well, the final… I mean, the sanction is in fact a report
publicly, which we’ve done in our annual report for some
of these cases or to make a special report to the Prime
Minister and lay it on the floor of the House, as it were.
And, I mean, nothing focuses the mind quite so much as doing
something like that, and we have done that in the past. And
that’s not the nature of the Ombudsman process – that
you actually fine people. Some offices do around the world,
but we are in the tradition that doesn’t, and my
experience over the years, my predecessor’s as well, is
that the moral suasion that the office still commands means
that when we make a firm recommendation and we have the
possibility of making a report to the house, that that is
enough to focus the mind and get people to have another
look.
Dame Beverley, I know you’re not a fan of
league tables, but I understand you might be interested in
introducing some kind of, is it, standards?
Yes,
coming out of this, we’re hoping that we might develop a
list of compliance requirements and good practice standards
than an agency can benchmark themselves against in the
future and also use as leverage for funding and resources
for themselves, because they’ve all been scraped back too.
They are trying to do the work of six men with two – six
people with two.
Would they be audited publicly
and be available?
Yes.
So a league
table by a different name, then?
Well, I don’t
like the idea of a… it’s just the idea. It will give
people an idea and confidence that there is movement, that
something is being done and that performance is improving,
and performance against the standards is
improving.
All right, thank you so much for
joining us this morning, Dame Beverley Wakem. We look
forward to your final report.
Thank you so
much.
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ends