Greens win FOI concession on NBN Co

 

No longer exempt.

NBN Co will be subject to freedom of information laws under a deal negotiated by the Greens with the Federal Government.

Greens Communications spokesman Scott Ludlam said today that the minor party had "negotiated amendments to NBN Co's governance arrangements after raising concerns about the multi-billion dollar public company being exempt from the transparency rules.

"The NBN Co should be held to the same standards of transparency as any other government company," Ludlam said.

"We have negotiated with the Government and they have agreed NBN Co will be listed as a prescribed authority under the Freedom of Information Act."

The reversal came less than a month after a determination [rtf] by the Office of the Information Commissioner James Popple that NBN Co could not be considered a "prescribed authority" under FOI rules.

Popple had ruled that NBN Co was covered by an exception in the definition of "prescribed authority".

"NBN Co is not a prescribed authority and, therefore, is not an agency for the purposes of the FOI Act," Popple wrote.

"The FOI Act does not apply to NBN Co."

Popple's ruling on a request by the Australian Financial Review led to a challenge by the Opposition and other political parties.

Although Prime Minister Julia Gillard had initially backed the FOI exemption, that position appeared to have been reversed.

Ludlam said today that while activities carried out by the NBN Co on a commercial basis would be subject to FOI, "they could be exempted if the NBN Co successfully argued the material was commercial in confidence.

"Effectively this means NBN Co will be subject to the same level of transparency as Medibank and Australia Post and also provided the same level of protection for material that is genuinely commercially sensitive," he said.

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Greens win FOI concession on NBN Co
"[Mad1k5] "it makes less for those asking for a CBA less likely to have an arguement....." They haven't released any information which clears NBNCo, they only announced that such information will ..."
By MerariSchroeder
 
 
 
Comments: 3
Mordd
Feb 24, 2011 7:48 PM
Honestly this can only be a good thing. For all those critics of the NBN go out and dig up all the "dirt" you think there is to find in the NBN business plans and then tell the rest of Australia about how terrible NBN Co. is and now you might actually have something to base the claims off. As for those that support the NBN, I personally welcome the highest level of transparency, if NBN Co. is doing anything dodgy then its best for it to come out and be "fixed".
mad1k5
Feb 25, 2011 1:20 AM
Kinda funny this, the fact that Labor finally agrees with FOI Exemption with negotiations with the Greens....

Now that it's FOI, it makes less for those asking for a CBA less likely to have an arguement.....
MerariSchroeder
Feb 25, 2011 8:59 AM
[Mad1k5] "it makes less for those asking for a CBA less likely to have an arguement....."
They haven't released any information which clears NBNCo, they only announced that such information will be available. Or do you work for the company and already have some insight?

In actual fact, most information will just be confirmation, written proof of what we already know:
1. Wholesale Prices (Which will be higher - as announced by NBNCo/Conroy)
2. Subsidy of lower prices (NBNCo said they will subsidise subscriptions to harvest as many people as possible and then raise the prices)
3. How slim the margins will really be for the tax payer ( the implementation report quoted around 7%, of which after factoring in the bond coupon of around 6%, will leave little return or room for error [in build cost estimation and uptake assumptions])
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