Australian Capital Territory Bills Explanatory Statements
[Index]
[Search]
[Download]
[Bill]
[Help]
PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT AMENDMENT BILL 2005 (NO 2)
2005
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
PUBLIC
SECTOR MANAGEMENT AMENDMENT BILL 2005 (No 2)
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated
by authority of
Wayne Berry MLA
Overview of
Bill
Public Sector Management
Amendment Bill 2005 (the Bill) makes a
number of amendments to the Public
Sector Management Act (the Act) to
formally recognise the Legislative Assembly secretariat, improve
administrative efficiency in the process for appointment of an acting
clerk who is not the deputy clerk and relocate a number of powers currently
vested with the Executive in the Speaker. The Bill also amends the Act to
require the Public Service Commissioner to seek the approval of the Speaker to
conduct a review of the secretariat and widens the scope of interests that the
clerk is required to disclose and sets out the timing and regularity in relation
to such disclosures.
Financial
Implications
The Bill does not contain any financial
implications.
Details of the
Bill
Amendments 1, 2 and 3
are formal requirements that respectively
refer to the name of the Act, the commencement provisions and declare that it is
the Public
Sector
Management Act
that is being
amended.
Amendment 4 provides
for the new definitions of the clerk, Legislative Assembly secretariat and
secretariat respectively.
Amendment
5 introduces a requirement for the Public Service Commissioner to seek the
approval of the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly before a review may be
conducted in relation to the
secretariat.
Amendment 6 amends
the heading of division 3.8 to include a reference to the
secretariat.
Amendment 7
includes a definition for the
secretariat.
Amendment 8 amends
the appointment process in relation to the clerk, removing the power to appoint
the clerk from the Executive and instead locating it with the speaker on the
advice of the appropriate standing committee, in consultation with the Leader of
the Opposition and the Executive and in accordance with merit
principles.
Amendment 9 broadens
the scope of the interests that the clerk is required to disclose to include
‘personal and financial’ interests and sets out the timing and
regularity in which disclosures shall be
made.
Amendment 10 removes the
power of the Executive to suspend or end the appointment of the clerk and
confers these powers on the Speaker.
Amendment 11 removes the power
of the Executive to retire the clerk and instead vests this power with the
Speaker.
Amendment 12 provides
that the Speaker is able to appoint a member of the secretariat staff, not being
the deputy clerk, to act as the clerk where the deputy clerk is absent and
defines formally the Legislative Assembly secretariat as consisting of the clerk
and staff under section 54.
[Index]
[Search]
[Download]
[Bill]
[[Help]]