Regional Investment Corporation

16 August 2017

I rise to actually speak about the Regional Investment Corporation Bill 2017 and to

give some context about why we are debating this bill today. Listening to the member for Murray, he basically

went around the world—I would say more of a eulogy to the Deputy Prime Minister—and spoke about the

wondrous greatness of the man that is Barnaby Joyce. Listening to him very carefully and sitting through that

speech, I noticed one thing: he listed a great list of achievements, but the one achievement the people of Australia

and the people of New England would like to know about their member is: is he able to sit in this House? Is he

legitimate? Can he serve as the agriculture and water minister? Can he serve in the cabinet? Can he serve as a

local member? That's the question. He is so—

A government member interjecting—

Mr DICK: I'll get to you in a second. Listening to the member for Murray, he spoke about everything except

the sheer and utter incompetence of the Deputy Prime Minister—the potentially invalid Deputy Prime Minister.

The DEPUTY SPEAKER ( Mr Irons ): I direct the member for Oxley back to the legislation—the substance

of the legislation he's actually debating.

Mr DICK: Thank you, Deputy Speaker. I think it is important to note that the former speaker spoke on everything

other than this bill. You may have missed that—

The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Order! That doesn't give you the opportunity to stray from the substance of the

legislation.

Mr DICK: Indeed, we need consistent rules across both sides of the chamber. You're correct, Mr Deputy Speaker.

And if there was ever a case of pork-barrelling to the electorate, this bill is nothing more than a pork barrel. We

know that this government works from inept policy to inept policy. We know that the Deputy Prime Minister

can't think of anything better than wasting taxpayers' dollars in what can only be described as a senseless move

to set up the Regional Investment Corporation—we didn't hear about that from the member for Murray or any of

those opposite—at a cost to taxpayers of $81.4 million over the forward estimates. We know the Deputy Prime

Minister has a lot on his plate, but reading this bill and going through what it's going to mean, the purpose of this

bill is to establish an organisation to do something that the states and the Northern Territory are already doing. The

RIC will administer farm business loans, as we heard, and, on behalf of the Commonwealth, administer grants of

financial assistance to the states and the Northern Territory for water infrastructure projects, concessional loans,

from 1 July 2018. But the loans have already been delivered by the state and Northern Territory governments

and will continue to be administered by the states and the Northern Territory.

So this can hardly be true, when, as a result of all of this, taxpayers are going to be sent a bill of $81.4 million.

Further to this, the Regional Investment Corporation, put forward by the potentially invalid Deputy Prime

Minister and invalid government, has been developed with no cost-benefit analysis as to whether the corporation

will actually deliver on any of the claims—a great idea apparently by this Deputy Prime Minister, backed in by

members of the government more desperate to prop up the problems of the Deputy Prime Minister than actually

talk about the bill, but without any cost-benefit analysis put forward by the government.

We know they have some form in this area, because there's been no transparent or fair process undertaken by

the government in determining where to locate the Regional Investment Corporation. The bill was referred to

the Senate Standing Committee on Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport, and they tabled their findings only

a matter of days ago. The committee recommended the bill be passed in its current form, yet the government

has already made amendments to its own bill. We know there's a lot of confusion on that side of the parliament,

whether it be about legitimacy to serve in the parliament, about turning up to vote or about seconding and

moving the wrong motions. A Senate standing committee recommends passing the bill in its current form, yet

the government is making amendments.

The Deputy Prime Minister, we know, has been declared a New Zealand citizen, yet the Prime Minister says

he can stay, when we know the other senior minister responsible for this has had to stand down. It hasn't been

a great week or month for the National Party. Where's the consistency there? The government knows that the

corporation is going to be established in the member for Calare's electorate. We know this isn't a coincidence,

but we know that the government is claiming that the establishment of the RIC is 'the logical step in meeting

the government's commitment to agriculture, as set out in the landmark Agricultural Competitiveness White

Paper, in excess of $4 billion.'

This statement is exaggerated and gives the impression that somehow the government has provided meaningful

investment in agriculture. It has not. In fact the bulk of the $4 billion is made up of concessional loans that farmers

are currently not taking up. We know this is because of the design of the program, with the government failing to

properly consult or understand if their new drought loan scheme would be attractive to drought-affected farmers.

The RIC will face the same difficulties. Its role will be to provide loans to farm businesses subject to the applicant

meeting certain criteria which will be centred on the viability of the farm business. It's important to understand

that the RIC will be bank 'of last resort', but the farm businesses will need to be assessed as being viable. Whether

a farm business is determined as being viable has been a major issue for the states when developing the guidelines

for concessional loans, with no signs that this will be resolved under the new proposed RIC. On top of all of this,

the government has not taken any genuine consultation about the functions and responsibilities of the RIC, and

is establishing the RIC in Orange with no cost-benefit analysis about the outgoing costs either.

What's more, the government has chosen to establish the RIC in Orange using the same type of government

policy order that was used when the then Deputy Prime Minister announced the decision—and who can forget

this one—to move the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority from Canberra to the northern

New South Wales town of Armidale, in the Deputy Prime Minister's electorate of New England, by 2019. As

reported by the independent government news website, the APVMA relocation, which involved about 190 staff,

mostly highly specialised, failed a government-commissioned cost-benefit analysis.

We get lots of lectures from those opposite about reining in expenditure of taxpayers' dollars, and about

government efficiency, but when the rubber hits the road, time and time again they've just been found nothing

more than professional pork barrels. We know that that decision led to many staff walking out the door, including

the chief executive and some of our top regulatory scientists and lawyers. The government also conducted its

own $272,000 cost-benefit analysis, which found there were no material economic advantages to support the

relocation. Think about this: they are making decisions in their own interests, not making decisions in the national

interest.

Further to this, Ernst and Young established the move would cost at least $23.19 million. This includes

redundancies for 85 per cent of the APVMA staff the report identified as unwilling to move to Armidale. The

plan to move the agricultural chemicals regulator exposed the government, we know, to further ridicule after it

was revealed that the Canberra based public servants were working out of Armidale's McDonald's, using the free

wi-fi because they had nowhere else to work. That came out at a February Senate estimates hearing.

Mr Taylor: What's this got to do with the legislation?

Mr DICK: I'm speaking to the amendments. Perhaps you could help the assistant minister, Mr Deputy Speaker

Irons, just to keep up with the process of the parliament. It might be useful. He is in charge of something; I

would hope that he could understand how the parliament works. But, then again, he was one of the rogue 15 who

refused to turn up to vote yesterday, when the government again lost another—

The DEPUTY SPEAKER: I draw the member back to the substance of the amendment and the legislation.

Mr DICK: I will take the interjection each time they raise it, Mr Deputy Speaker. The member for Mallee of

the National Party defended that decision by saying:

I guess much public policy is constructed in coffee shops around Canberra by public departments.

It's good to know that the government is happy not only to slug the taxpayer with expensive and unneeded

relocation costs, much like in the bill that is before the House, but to leave public department workers with

nowhere to work.

Who could forget the government document that was leaked to Fairfax in April which gives the APVMA staff

suggested scripted replies to recite if they were asked about the relocation? Do you remember that one? They were

for use during 'barbecue conversations' and 'other social settings'. The guideline came from the chief operating

officer, under a section headed 'Script and Standard Words', a series of bullet points offering conversation

suggestions to use for 'all audiences'. One piece of barbecue banter included:

It's no secret the agency is changing—and that doesn't have to be a bad thing.

Employees unsure if they will make the move are advised to say:

I'm listening to what our executive have to say about the transition, but for the moment I'm getting on with the job.

What episode of Utopia did this government rip that out of? Talk about unwilling to listen, talk about unwilling

to govern—now they're just simply willing to pork barrel.

On top of that, we've seen a Senate committee report, The operation, effectiveness, and consequences of the

Public Governance, Performance and Accountability (Location of Corporate Commonwealth Entities) Order

  1. 2016. We note the terms of reference for this report noted the committee would focus on the policy of relocating

Commonwealth corporate entities with agriculture policies or regulatory responsibilities. In the report handed

down on 9 June, the recommendations included:

The committee recommends that the move of the APVMA be paused until the APVMA concludes its review

of its business model.

And it recommended that:

… the Finance Minister apply greater scrutiny to future requests or orders to be made under the Public

Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 with a specific focus on consideration being given to

the following:

the financial and governance implications on an agency from an order under the Public Governance, Performance

and Accountability Act 2013; and

a cost-benefit analysis.

They're a bit anti a cost-benefit analysis on the other side. They don't like the taxpayer getting value for money.

Mr Taylor: How did your cost-benefit go for the NBN?

Mr DICK: I will take the interjection from the genius at the despatch box, the member for Hume. We're now

getting lectures about how great the NBN is and how much the government is to be congratulated. I have heard it

all. I have heard the minister and future leader ranting and raving about how the regional communities which she

allegedly represents have never been so lucky as under the NBN and that they should be grateful for an inferior

service, delays and inferior delivery—

The DEPUTY SPEAKER: I remind the member to come back to the subject of the legislation or I will sit him

down.

Mr DICK: I was just taking the interjections from the minister at the table, but I'll continue. Thank you for your

protection. The committee recommended:

a cost-benefit analysis. In the event that a cost-benefit analysis does not identify a net benefit from the proposed

order, the Finance Minister should require the relevant minister to explain the grounds on which the order should

be made.

So I ask—through you, Mr Deputy Speaker—the assistant minister at the table: where's the cost-benefit analysis

for this bill? If he would like to jump up now and table it, I will yield the balance of my time to the government.

If he can jump up now and provide that, I will remain silent.

Mr Taylor: It's not a project. It's not a project; it's a policy.

Mr DICK: He's just yelling out now, 'It doesn't exist and we don't have to provide one. We don't have to answer

to regional Australia.' I say government should answer when legislation and proposals are put on the table. He

claims that the government knows best. Well, we on this side know from listening to our communities, from

listening to regional and remote Australia, that they are being badly let down by this government. They are being

badly neglected by a government and, let's face it, by a Deputy Prime Minister that we don't even know should

even be in this parliament.

Mr Taylor: The guardians of rural Australia!

Mr DICK: The assistant minister is still interjecting, Mr Deputy Speaker Irons—defying you, defying everyone

else. But, then, we know arrogance is a sign of this government. From listening to them today and listening to

them speaking about this bill—not providing evidence about what the benefits are, certainly not providing a costbenefit

analysis—we know that, when it comes to delivering for regional and rural Australians, they talk big,

they talk a big game, but they deliver very, very little.

We know, when it comes to delivering for those on the ground, including my own home state, this government

simply cannot be trusted—a bit like a Deputy Prime Minister unable to fill in basic forms, and no-one is able to

determine whether he should be the responsible minister. It will be interesting to note whether he comes into this

parliament and actually makes announcements. We know he's gone into some sort of witness protection program.

But we know that this bill is nothing more than the pork barrel that the government has been continuing on, and

we will continue to expose that every single time.