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[2016] NSWLEC 131
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Oberon Council v Minister for Local Government; Cabonne Shire Council v Minister for Local Government; McAlister and Graham v Minister for Local Government [2016] NSWLEC 131 (7 October 2016)
Last Updated: 7 October 2016
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Land and Environment Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Oberon Council v Minister for Local Government; Cabonne Shire Council v
Minister for Local Government; McAlister and Graham v Minister
for Local
Government
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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25, 26, 27, 31 May and 1, 3, 6 June 2016
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Date of Orders:
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7 October 2016
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Decision Date:
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7 October 2016
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Jurisdiction:
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Class 4
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Before:
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Preston CJ
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Decision:
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The Court orders in each of the
proceedings: (1) The proceedings are
dismissed. (2) The applicant is to pay the
respondents’ costs of the proceedings.
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Catchwords:
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JUDICIAL REVIEW – proposals for amalgamation of local government
areas – whether proposals made in accordance with Local Government Act
1993 – whether proposals made by Minister – whether decision to make
proposals manifestly unreasonable – referral of
proposals to Departmental
Chief Executive for examination and report – whether referral of proposals
manifestly unreasonable
– inquiries required to be held – whether
reasonable public notice given of the holding of inquiries – whether
inquiries held in accordance with Act – whether examination and report on
proposals in accordance with Act – whether
Departmental Chief Executive
had regard to relevant considerations in s 263(3) of Act – whether
affected councils denied procedural fairness by Departmental Chief Executive
– review and comment on
Departmental Chief Executive’s reports by
Boundaries Commission – whether review conducted in accordance with Act
–
whether affected councils denied procedural fairness by Boundaries
Commission – publicly accessible material in support of
proposals
represented that analysis and modelling of consultant was independent –
whether representations misleading –
whether allegedly misleading
representations invalidated statutory process of amalgamation – whether
Minister made decisions
under Act to recommend implementation of proposals to
Governor – whether Minister’s decision to recommend to Governor
that
a proposal be implemented was invalid
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Legislation Cited:
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Interpretation Act 1987 ss 31, 32Local Government Act 1993 ss 204, 213,
218A, 218B, 218C, 218CA, 218D, 218E, 218F, 218F(1), 218F(2), 218F(6), 218F(7),
218F(8), 260, 261, 262, 263, 263(2A), 263(2B), 263(3), 264, 265, 354B, 438U, Pts
1, 2 and 3 of Ch 9, Pt 8 of Ch 13, Sch 2
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Oberon Council v Minister for Local Government Oberon Council
(Applicant) Minister for Local Government (First Respondent) Chief
Executive, Office of Local Government (Second Respondent) Ms Renata Brooks
(Third Respondent) State of New South Wales (Fourth
Respondent) Cabonne Shire Council v Minister for Local
Government Cabonne Shire Council (Applicant) Minister for Local
Government (First Respondent) Chief Executive, Office of Local Government
(Second Respondent) Mr Richard Pearson (Third Respondent) State of New
South Wales (Fourth Respondent) McAlister and Graham v Minister for
Local Government Mr Albert McAlister (First Applicant) Mr David
Graham (Second Applicant) Minister for Local Government (First
Respondent) Chief Executive, Office of Local Government (Second
Respondent) Mr John Turner (Third Respondent) State of New South Wales
(Fourth Respondent) The Administrator, Gundagai Shire Council (Fifth
Respondent)
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Representation:
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Counsel: Mr P E King with Ms F A Sinclair (Applicants) Mr N J
Williams SC with Mr J J Hutton, Mr T E O’Brien and Ms B E M Anniwell
(Respondents) Solicitors: Patterson, Byfield & Bryen
(Applicants) Crown Solicitor’s Office (Respondents)
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File Number(s):
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2016/00161513, 2016/00161537, 2016/00161546
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Publication Restriction:
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No
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JUDGMENT
Three councils challenge proposals for amalgamation
- The
Minister for Local Government (‘the Minister’) on 6 January 2016
made proposals, under s 218E(1) of the Local Government Act 1993
(‘the Act’), for the amalgamation of various local government areas
in rural New South Wales. One proposal was the amalgamation
of the areas of
Oberon with Bathurst (‘the Oberon proposal’); a second was the
amalgamation of the areas of Cabonne with
Blayney and Orange City (‘the
Cabonne proposal’); and a third was the amalgamation of the areas of
Gundagai with Cootamundra
(‘the Gundagai proposal’).
- Also
on 6 January 2016, the Minister referred the proposals under s 218F(1) of the
Act to the Acting Chief Executive of the Office of Local Government (‘the
Departmental Chief Executive’) for examination
and report. The
Departmental Chief Executive delegated those functions to Ms Renata Brooks (for
the Oberon proposal), Mr Richard
Pearson (for the Cabonne proposal) and Mr John
Turner (for the Gundagai proposal). I will refer to each of these people as the
Delegate.
- The
Delegate was required, under s 263(2A) of the Act, to hold an inquiry for the
purpose of exercising the functions in relation to each proposal for
amalgamation. Each Delegate
gave notice of the holding of an inquiry, including
by placing advertisements in various State, regional and local newspapers. Each
Delegate held an inquiry. The inquiry was held, for the Oberon proposal, on 4
February 2016 at Oberon and Bathurst; for the Cabonne
proposal, on 4 February
2016 at Blayney and Orange and on 5 February 2016 at Molong; and for the
Gundagai proposal, on 4 February
2016 at Cootamundra and Gundagai.
- Between
mid-March and early April 2016, each Delegate completed her or his examination,
and provided a report to the Minister and
furnished a copy of the report to the
Local Government Boundaries Commission (‘Boundaries Commission’) for
review and
comment. Delegate Pearson provided his report on the Cabonne proposal
on 18 March 2016; Delegate Turner provided his report on the
Gundagai proposal
on 24 March 2016; and Delegate Brooks provided her report on the Oberon proposal
on 5 April 2016. In each case,
the Delegate recommended that the proposal for
the amalgamation of the areas concerned be implemented.
- The
Boundaries Commission was required, under s 218F(6) of the Act, to review each
Delegate’s report and send its comments to the Minister. The Boundaries
Commission sent to the Minister
its comments on the report on the Cabonne
proposal on 22 April 2016 and its comments on the reports on the Oberon proposal
and the
Gundagai proposal on 29 April 2016.
- The
Minister, under s 218F(7) of the Act, may recommend to the Governor that a
proposal be implemented, with or without modifications or, under s 218F(8),
may decline to recommend to the Governor that a proposal be implemented. On
3 May 2016, the Minister decided to recommend to the
Governor that the
Gundagai proposal be implemented and on 12 May 2016, by proclamation under
s 218A(1), the Governor amalgamated the areas of Gundagai and Cootamundra and
constituted a new area named Gundagai (Local Government (Council
Amalgamation)
Proclamation 2016, 12 May 2016).
- On
4 May 2016, the Minister decided that the Oberon proposal and the Cabonne
proposal be implemented, but subject to the outcome of
the current proceedings
in this Court affecting these proposals. However, the Minister has not yet made
a recommendation under s 218F(7) of the Act to the Governor that either the
Oberon proposal or the Cabonne proposal be implemented.
- Three
of the councils affected by the proposals for amalgamation oppose the proposal.
Oberon Council opposes the Oberon proposal but
Bathurst Regional Council
supports it. Cabonne Shire Council (‘Cabonne Council’) opposes the
Cabonne proposal but Blayney
Shire Council and Orange City Council support it.
Gundagai Shire Council opposed the Gundagai proposal but Cootamundra Shire
Council
supported it.
- On
18 April 2016, Oberon Council and Cabonne Council and on 12 May 2016, Gundagai
Shire Council commenced judicial review proceedings
challenging the legality of
various steps in the statutory process for the amalgamation of the areas
concerned. As Gundagai Shire
Council was dissolved once the Governor’s
proclamation took effect, the former Mayor and Deputy Mayor of Gundagai Shire
Council,
Mr McAlister and Mr Graham, were substituted as applicants in the
proceedings challenging the Gundagai proposal. For court administration
purposes, the proceedings were separated into three proceedings. Nevertheless,
the three proceedings were heard together. The grounds
of challenge
substantially overlap. The only different grounds concern the Gundagai proposal,
because there were two proposals for
amalgamation considered and the Governor
has actually made a proclamation which has had the effect of amalgamating the
Gundagai and
Cootamundra local government areas.
- The
grounds of challenge are:
- (a) The
Minister did not make a proposal under s 218E(1) of the Act
because:
- (i) there was
no decision to make the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal or the Gundagai
proposal at all;
- (ii) if there
was a decision to make the proposals, the decision was not made by the Minister
but rather by others, including Cabinet;
- (iii) if the
Minister did make a decision to make the proposals, his decision was
pre-determined; or
- (iv) any
decision of the Minister to make the proposals was manifestly
unreasonable.
- (b) The
Minister’s referral of the proposals under s 218F(1) of the Act for
examination and report was manifestly unreasonable.
- (c) Each
Delegate did not give reasonable public notice of the holding of the inquiry in
relation to each proposal, as required by
s 263(2B) of the Act in
that:
- (i) the content
of the notice was inadequate; and
- (ii) “reasonable”
public notice was not given.
- (d) Each
Delegate did not hold an inquiry into each proposal in accordance with
s 263(2A) of the Act in that:
- (i) there was
no informed and genuine inquiry into each proposal and each of the factors in s
263(3) of the Act concerning the proposal;
- (ii) the
conduct of the public meeting was not an “inquiry” in the sense of
the Delegate playing a proactive, inquiring
role but rather the Delegate played
a passive, listening role; and
- (iii) there
were restrictions on members of the public speaking.
- (e) Each
Delegate did not examine the proposal in accordance with s 218F(1) and s 263(1),
including failing to examine each of the factors in s 263(3) of the Act.
- (f) Each
Delegate did not accord procedural fairness to Oberon Council, Cabonne Council
and Gundagai Shire Council, and their ratepayers
and residents, in connection
with the inquiry or examination of each proposal.
- (g) The
Boundaries Commission did not conduct a proper and informed review of and
comment on each Delegate’s report, in accordance
with s 218F(6)(b).
- (h) The
Boundaries Commission did not accord procedural fairness to Oberon Council,
Cabonne Council and Gundagai Shire Council, and
their ratepayers and residents,
in connection with the Boundaries Commission’s review of and comment on
each Delegate’s
report.
- (i) Misleading
statements about the independence of KPMG affected various steps in the
statutory amalgamation process, including the
notices given of the holding of
the inquiries, the inquiries that were held, each Delegate’s examination
of the proposals and
the Boundaries Commission’s review and comments on
each Delegate’s report.
- (j) The
Minister did not make a recommendation to the Governor in accordance with s
218F(7) that each proposal be implemented because:
- (i) for the
Oberon and Cabonne proposals, the recommendation was subject to a qualification
(concerning the outcome in these proceedings)
and there was no power to make a
conditional recommendation; and
- (ii) for the
Gundagai proposal, the Minister did not have power to recommend that the
Gundagai proposal be implemented until the proposal
initiated by Harden Shire
Council for the amalgamation of Harden, Cootamundra and Gundagai areas had been
finally dealt with. Alternatively,
the Minister had no power to recommend the
implementation of the Gundagai proposal because it had been superseded by the
proposal
initiated by Harden Shire Council. Additionally, the proclamation of
the Governor impermissibly conferred power on the Minister to
determine
unresolved issues.
Overview of the statutory
process for amalgamation
- Division
1 of Pt 1 of Ch 9 of the Act provides for the constitution of land as a local
government area and Div 1 of Pt 2 of Ch 9 provides for the constitution of a
council to manage that area. The Governor may, by proclamation, constitute any
part of
New South Wales as an area: s 204(1) of the Act. The area is to have the
boundaries determined by the Governor in the proclamation constituting the area:
s 204(2) of the Act.
- Division
2A of Pt 1 of Ch 9 of the Act prescribes how areas are amalgamated. The Governor
may, by proclamation, amalgamate two or more areas into one
or more new areas: s
218A(1) of the Act. On the date specified in the new proclamation as the date on
which the areas are to be amalgamated, the areas are dissolved
and the new area
or areas are constituted: s 218A(2)(a) and (b) of the Act.
- The
proclamation of the Governor may include provisions of the kind referred to in s
213, as are necessary or convenient to give effect to the proclamation: s
218C(1). The provisions include those for or with respect to the transfer of
staff.
- Where
a new council is constituted as a result of the amalgamation of two or more
areas and the council of one of those areas employed
regular staff at a rural
centre in the area of the new council, the new council must ensure that the
number of regular staff of the
new council employed at the rural centre is, as
far as reasonably practicable, maintained at not less than the same level of
regular
staff as were employed by the previous council at the rural centre
immediately before the amalgamation took effect: s 218CA(1) and (2). A
“rural centre” means a centre of population of 5,000 people or
fewer: s 354B and s 218CA(4).
- Division
2B of Pt 1 of Ch 9 of the Act prescribes the process that must be followed
before the Governor can, by proclamation, amalgamate areas. A function
under s
218A to amalgamate areas may be exercised only after a proposal for the exercise
of the function is dealt with under Div 2B: s 218D of the
Act.
The making of a proposal
- The
first step in the process prescribed by Div 2B is the making of a proposal under
s 218E of the Act to amalgamate areas. A “proposal” that may be made
under s 218E is simply a proposal for the exercise of the function under s
218A(1) to amalgamate two or more areas into one or more new areas.
- Three
classes of persons may make a proposal under s 218E to amalgamate areas: the
Minister, a council affected by the proposal, or an appropriate minimum number
of electors: s 218E(1). Any one of these three classes of persons may initiate a
proposal for amalgamation. The third class of persons is defined in s 218E(2).
The appropriate minimum number of electors varies depending upon whether the
proposal applies to the whole of one or more areas or
only part of an area. In
the first case, the minimum number of electors is 250 of the enrolled electors
for each area or 10% of them,
whichever is the greater, and in the second case,
the minimum number of electors is 250 of the enrolled electors for the part of
the area or 10% of them, whichever is the lesser: s 218E(2).
- There
is no statutory restriction on any member of these classes of persons initiating
a proposal, including a person initiating a
proposal after another person has
initiated a proposal for the amalgamation of areas. Once initiated, each
proposal for amalgamation
must be dealt with under the process prescribed by Div
2B. There is no express statutory restriction on proposals being dealt with
concurrently; there is no express statutory requirement that they can only be
dealt with consecutively in a staged process.
The referral of the
proposal
- The
second step in the process prescribed by Div 2B is the referral of the proposal
for examination and report. On the Minister making
a proposal or receiving a
proposal from a council affected by the proposal or by an appropriate minimum
number of electors, the Minister
must refer the proposal for examination and
report to either the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental Chief Executive:
s 218F(1).
- The
“Boundaries Commission” means the Local Government Boundaries
Commission constituted under the Act: see the Dictionary
and Pt 3 of Ch 9 of the
Act. The Boundaries Commission is a body corporate: s 260. It consists of four
commissioners appointed by the Governor, of which one is to be a person
nominated by the Minister, one is to
be a person employed by the Department
(Office of Local Government) nominated by the Departmental Chief Executive and
two are to
be persons appointed from a panel constituted under s 262(1) of the
Act: s 261. This panel consists of eight persons who are councillors nominated
by the Local Government and Shires Association of NSW: s 262(1). Schedule 2 of
the Act contains further provisions on the membership of the Boundaries
Commission and the procedure at meetings of
the Boundaries Commission: s
261(5).
- There
are some similarities and some differences in the process of examination of and
reporting on a proposal by the Boundaries Commission
or the Departmental Chief
Executive. The similarities concern the process of examination of a proposal (s
218F(2)) and the principal difference concerns the need for review and comment
on a report of the examination of a proposal: s 218F(6).
The
examination and report
- The
third step in the process prescribed by Div 2B is the examination of and report
on the proposal by the person to whom the proposal
has been referred under s
218F(1). The duty to examine and report on the proposal is imposed by s
263(1):
The Boundaries Commission [or Departmental Chief Executive] is required to
examine and report on any matter with respect to the boundaries
of areas ...
which may be referred to it by the Minister.
- In
Botany Bay City Council v Minister for Local Government (2016) 214
LGERA 173; [2016] NSWCA 74 at [38], the Court of Appeal said of the phrase "any
matter with respect to" in s 263(1):
... The phrase 'any matter' is not defined and of itself may be taken to be of
wide import. Likewise, the phrase 'with respect to'
is of wide import. However,
there are two indications in subs (1) itself that its meaning is more confined.
First, and most importantly,
on the express words of the subsection, 'any
matter' is controlled by the phrase 'which may be referred to it by the
Minister'. Secondly,
any such matter must be 'with respect to the boundaries of
[councils]'. Accordingly, what falls within s 263 for examination and report is
any matter with respect to boundaries that is referred by the Minister. In this
case, that was the
Minister's proposal.
(See also at [43])
- So
too in this case, the matters with respect to the boundaries of local government
areas that were referred by the Minister were
the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne
proposal and the Gundagai proposal for the amalgamation of the respective local
government areas.
The Minister elected to refer these proposals to the
Departmental Chief Executive, who in turn delegated the functions of examining
and reporting on the proposals to the respective Delegate.
- Section
218F(2) of the Act provides that ss 263, 264 and 265 of the Act apply to the
examination of a proposal by the Departmental Chief Executive in the same way as
they apply to the examination
of a proposal by the Boundaries Commission.
- Section
263 specifies the functions of examining and reporting in relation to a proposal
for the amalgamation of areas that has been referred
under s 218F(1) and how
these functions are to be exercised.
- Subsection
(1) imposes the functions of examining and reporting: the Boundaries Commission
or Departmental Chief Executive “is
required to examine and report on any
matter with respect to the boundaries of areas ... which may be referred to it
by the Minister”:
s 263(1).
- In
exercising the functions of examining and reporting on a proposal referred by
the Minister, the Boundaries Commission or Departmental
Chief Executive may or
must do the following things.
- Where
the proposal referred by the Minister is a joint proposal made by two or more
councils for the amalgamation of two or more areas
under s 218A, the Boundaries
Commission or Departmental Chief Executive is required, for the purpose of
examining the joint proposal, to seek
the views of electors of each of those
areas by at least one of two means: first, by means of advertised public
meetings, invitations
for public submissions and postal surveys or opinion
polls, in which reply-paid questionnaires are distributed to all electors, or,
secondly, by means of formal polls: s 218F(3). This requirement to seek the
views of electors only applies where the initiators of the proposal for
amalgamation are two or more
councils; it does not apply where the Minister
initiates the proposal for amalgamation.
The holding of an
inquiry
- The
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive may be required to (if the
Minister so approves) or must (if the Minister
so directs or if the proposal is
for the amalgamation of two or more areas) hold an inquiry for the purpose of
exercising the functions
of examining and reporting on the proposal: s 263(2)
and (2A). Of relevance in this case is subs (2A): the Boundaries Commission or
Departmental Chief Executive “must hold an inquiry
for the purpose of
exercising its functions in relation to a proposal for the amalgamation of two
or more areas that has been referred
to it in accordance with section
218F”.
- Subsection
(2B) requires that “[r]easonable public notice must be given of the
holding of an inquiry under this section”.
Neither s 263 of the Act nor
the regulations made under the Act prescribe the form or the content of the
public notice required to be given or
where or how the public notice is to be
given. There is no express guidance given in the Act or the regulations made
under the Act
of what constitutes “[r]easonable public notice ... of the
holding of an inquiry”. In Woollahra Municipal Council v Minister for
Local Government [2016] NSWLEC 86 at [47]- [56], I held that a proper
construction of s 263 reveals the following requirements.
- First,
s 263(2B) imposes a duty to give reasonable public notice of the holding of an
inquiry under s 263. The subsection does not expressly identify the person on
whom this duty to give public notice is imposed. But the implication is
that the
person who is to hold the inquiry, the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental
Chief Executive, must give or cause to
be given the public notice of the holding
of that inquiry. The person need not give the public notice personally but
nevertheless
needs to arrange for the public notice to be given of the inquiry
that the person is to hold. A common way that the person may give
public notice
is to arrange for a notice to be published in newspapers circulating in the
areas concerned.
- Second,
the public notice that is to be given under s 263(2B) has three content
requirements. The first content requirement is to state when and where the
inquiry is to be held. The notice must
specify the date and time of day at which
the hearing of the inquiry will commence. The notice must specify the place at
which the
inquiry will be held. The degree of specificity of description of the
place that will be required will depend on the facts and circumstances
regarding
the proposal, the local government area in which the inquiry is to be held and
public knowledge of and familiarity with
the place concerned.
- The
second content requirement is to state what is the particular inquiry that is to
be held. Subsection (2B) refers to the holding
of “an inquiry under this
section”. An inquiry under s 263 may be held in certain circumstances
(under s 263(2)(a)) and must be held in other circumstances (under s 263(2)(b)
and s 263(2A)). However, irrespective of whether an inquiry may or must be held,
it is to be held in relation to “any matter with respect to
the boundaries
of areas and the areas of operation of county councils which may be
referred” to the Boundaries Commission or
Departmental Chief Executive by
the Minister for examination and report (see s 263(1) of the Act). The matters
with respect to the boundaries of areas that the Minister may refer for
examination and report are a proposal
for the amalgamation of two or more areas
(see ss 218A and 218D-218F) and a proposal for the alteration of the boundaries
of areas (see ss 218B and 218D-218F). The public notice that must be given under
s 263(2B) needs to specify the matter that the Minister has referred for
examination and report and in relation to which the inquiry is to
be held.
- In
this case, the matters in respect to the boundaries of areas which the Minister
had referred to the Departmental Chief Executive
for examination and report were
the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai proposal for the
amalgamation of the respective
local government areas that had been referred in
accordance with s 218F. The public notice required to be given under s 263(2B)
needed to specify that the inquiry was to be held in relation to each proposal
for the amalgamation of those areas.
- The
third content requirement is to state what is the purpose of holding the
inquiry. Both subsections (2) and (2A) of s 263, which permit or mandate the
holding of an inquiry, specify that the inquiry is to be held “for the
purpose of” the Boundaries
Commission or Departmental Chief Executive
“exercising its functions”. In the case of the proposal for the
amalgamation
of areas, the functions in relation to that proposal are the
functions under s 218F(1) and s 263(1) of examining and reporting on the
proposal.
- In
this case, the public notice that was required to be given under s 263(2B)
needed to state that the inquiry that was to be held was for the purpose of
exercising the functions of the Departmental Chief Executive
of examining and
reporting in relation to each of the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and
the Gundagai proposal for the amalgamation
of the respective local government
areas that have been referred by the Minister to the Departmental Chief
Executive in accordance
with s 218F.
- Third,
the public notice that must be given under s 263(2B) is to be
“reasonable”. The adjective “reasonable” qualifies both
the content and timing of the public notice.
The content and timing of the
public notice that is required to be given might vary considerably depending on
the nature and complexity
of the matter (or proposal) in relation to which the
inquiry is to be held: see Attorney-General for the State of Victoria v City
of Geelong [1989] VicRp 58; [1989] VR 641 at 649, Dunghutti Elders Council (Aboriginal
Corporation) RNTBC v Registrar of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Corporations (2011) 195 FCR 318; [2011] FCAFC 88 at [85]- [87] and Ogawa
v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2011) 199 FCR 51; [2011] FCA
1358 at [36], [37].
- A
minor adjustment of a boundary of a local government area might only require
that brief notice be given shortly before any inquiry
is held (an inquiry in
relation to the alteration of boundaries may be held if the Minister so approves
and must be held if the Minister
directs: s 263(2) of the Act). On the other
hand, a more complex proposal for the amalgamation of two or more areas might
require that more detailed
notice be given at a time significantly before the
inquiry is held (an inquiry in relation to a proposal for amalgamation of areas
must be held: s 263(2A) of the Act).
- A
person should know from reading the public notice what is the subject matter and
purpose of the inquiry to be held and the person
should be given sufficient time
to prepare and make a submission to the inquiry.
- The
reasonableness of the length of time between the giving of the notice and the
holding of the inquiry is to be assessed not only
by reference to the nature and
complexity of the proposal but also to the time of year at which the notice is
given. For example,
if the period of time between giving the notice and holding
the inquiry corresponds with the Christmas/New Year holiday break, reasonable
public notice might not be able to be given. The notice might not come to the
attention of people interested in making submissions
to the inquiry but, even if
it did, they may be unable to do so due to the difficulty of researching and
preparing a submission in
the holiday period, when resources and services are
likely to be less available.
- Fourth,
the form of public notice that is given should be appropriate to achieve the
purpose for which notice is to be given of notifying
the public of the holding
of the inquiry. The form of public notice should reach the audience for which it
is intended. Public notice
by newspaper advertisement in newspapers circulating
in the local government areas affected by the proposal is fair and reasonable
notice to the public: Waitemata County v Local Government Commission
[1964] NZLR 689 at 699.
- Section
263 of the Act distinguishes between the functions of examining and reporting on
any matter with respect to the boundaries of areas,
including a proposal for the
amalgamation of areas referred by the Minister under s 218F, and the holding of
an inquiry under s 263. An inquiry under s 263 is to be held for the purpose of
the Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive, to whom a matter with
respect to the
boundaries of areas, including a proposal for the amalgamation of
areas, has been referred, exercising its functions to examine and
report on the
matter.
- The
inquiry is not itself the examination of the matter or proposal that is required
to be undertaken; rather, it is held for the
purpose of exercising the function
of such an examination.
- The
importance of this distinction is that it means that the inquiry that is to be
held under s 263 is not itself required to be conducted as an examination of the
matter or proposal that has been referred by the Minister. The obligation
under
s 263 is to hold an inquiry, not to inquire in the sense of examine.
- Section
263 identifies that an inquiry under the section is to be conducted in public.
The obligation is to “hold” an inquiry: s 263(2) and (2A).
Reasonable public notice is to be given of the “holding” of the
inquiry: s 263(2B). Members of the public must be allowed “to attend any
inquiry held” under the section: s 263(5). This means that an inquiry
under the section is only that process that is held in public. The Boundaries
Commission or Departmental
Chief Executive holding an inquiry under the section
may make other inquiries and receive information and submissions other than
during the public hearing of the inquiry, as part of its examination of the
matter or proposal referred to it under s 218F. However, such examination is not
part of the inquiry held under s 263.
- Section
263 does not prescribe the practice or procedure by which an inquiry under the
section is to be held. This stands in contrast to public
inquiries held under Pt
8 of Ch 13 of the Act.
- Section
264 does prevent a person attending proceedings before the Boundaries Commission
from being represented by an Australian lawyer or any
other person acting for a
fee or reward (s 264(1)) except in certain circumstances (s 264(2)). A lawyer
may, however, prepare any documents or submissions or tender any legal advice in
connection with any proceedings before
the Boundaries Commission: s 264(2)(c).
The reference to “proceedings before the Boundaries Commission” may
include an inquiry under s 263 held by the Boundaries Commission or the
Departmental Chief Executive: see s 218F(2).
- These
restrictions on representation in proceedings (including an inquiry) before the
Boundaries Commission (or the Departmental Chief
Executive) do not prescribe
positively the procedure that must be followed in the hearing of the
proceedings, but rather proscribe
certain people from representing others in
proceedings.
Having regard to relevant considerations
- When
considering “any matter referred to it that relates to the boundaries of
areas ...”, the Boundaries Commission or
Departmental Chief Executive is
required “to have regard” to the factors in s 263(3) of the
Act.
- As
the Court of Appeal noted in Botany Bay City Council v Minister for Local
Government at [39]: “[t]he reference in subs (3) to any ‘matter
referred’ is a reference to that which was referred pursuant
to subs
(1)”. The role of the Departmental Chief Executive to whom a proposal has
been referred by the Minister is to examine
and report on that proposal:
Botany Bay City Council v The State of New South Wales [2016] NSWCA 243
at [92], [93]. In this case, the matters referred were the Oberon proposal, the
Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai proposal, which were made
by the Minister to
amalgamate the respective local government areas.
- The
factors prescribed by s 263(3) are:
(a) the financial advantages or
disadvantages (including the economies or diseconomies of scale) of any relevant
proposal to the
residents and ratepayers of the areas concerned,
(b) the community of interest and geographic cohesion in the
existing areas and in any proposed new area,
(c) the existing historical and traditional values in the
existing areas and the impact of change on them,
(d) the attitude of the residents and ratepayers of the areas
concerned,
(e) the requirements of the area concerned in relation to
elected representation for residents and ratepayers at the local level,
the
desirable and appropriate relationship between elected representatives and
ratepayers and residents and such other matters as
it considers relevant in
relation to the past and future patterns of elected representation for that
area,
(e1) the impact of any relevant proposal on the ability of the
councils of the areas concerned to provide adequate, equitable and
appropriate
services and facilities,
(e2) the impact of any relevant proposal on the employment of
the staff by the councils of the areas concerned,
(e3) the impact of any relevant proposal on rural communities
in the areas concerned,
(e4) in the case of a proposal for the amalgamation of two or
more areas, the desirability (or otherwise) of dividing the resulting
area or
areas into wards,
(e5) in the case of a proposal for the amalgamation of two or
more areas, the need to ensure that the opinions of each of the diverse
communities of the resulting area or areas are effectively represented,
(f) such other factors as it considers relevant to the
provision of efficient and effective local government in the existing and
proposed new areas.
- To
assist the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental Chief Executive in
determining the attitude of the residents and ratepayers
of an area or areas for
the purposes of s 263(3)(d) of the Act, it may conduct (in such manner as it
thinks appropriate) an opinion survey or poll of the residents and ratepayers: s
265(1).
- The
actions of holding an inquiry in relation to the proposal and having regard to
the factors in s 263(3) in considering a proposal are not themselves an
“examination” of the proposal; rather they are done by the
Boundaries
Commission or Departmental Chief Executive “for the purpose of
exercising its functions” of examining and reporting on
the proposal (in
the case of an inquiry) or “considering” the proposal (in the case
of having regard to the factors in
s 263(3)).
- This
distinction is important. It means that there is no statutory obligation under s
263 on the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental Chief Executive to hold the
inquiry or to have regard to the factors in s 263(3) by way of an
“examination”. This is particularly evident from the words used by
the legislature in s 263(3). The obligation is to “have regard to”
the factors when “considering” the matter referred, not to
“examine”
the factors when “examining” the matter
referred.
Undertaking the examination of the proposal
- Apart
from the holding of an inquiry and having regard to the factors in s 263(3), the
Act does not prescribe what is required by the examination of the proposal or
how the examination should be undertaken. These
matters are left to the judgment
of the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental Chief Executive to whom the
matter has been referred.
- The
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive may invite submissions
from affected councils and members of the public
on the proposal generally and
on the factors in s 263(3) in particular. This was done by each Delegate in this
case. The call for and consideration of written submissions was undertaken
for
the purpose of examining the proposal.
- The
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive may engage a consultant or
any other person to provide information or advice
on particular aspects of that
proposal or factors in s 263(3). This was done by the Boundaries Commission
in Minister for Local Government v South Sydney City Council (2002) 55
NSWLR 381; [2002] NSWCA 288.
- The
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive may assign “to an
agent the task of recording, collating, organising
and summarising a mass of
submissions covering a range of discordant issues”: Minister for Local
Government v South Sydney City Council at [211].
- These
are some of the ways in which the Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief
Executive may undertake the functions of examining
and reporting on the proposal
referred to it. But it is not obliged to do these things by the terms of s 263
of the Act or the nature of the functions of examining and reporting on the
proposal.
Furnishing the report of the examination
- The
fourth step in the process prescribed by Div 2B is that the Departmental Chief
Executive (to whom the Minister has referred a
proposal under s 218F) must
furnish the Departmental Chief Executive’s report of the examination of
the proposal to the Boundaries Commission for
review and comment: s
218F(6)(a).
Reviewing and commenting on the report
- The
fifth step in the process prescribed by Div 2B is that the Boundaries Commission
must review the report of the Departmental Chief
Executive and send its comments
to the Minister: s 218F(6)(b).
- This
function of the Boundaries Commission to review and comment on the Departmental
Chief Executive’s report is more confined
than the Departmental Chief
Executive’s function of examining and reporting on the proposal referred
by the Minister. As the
Court of Appeal has recently held in Botany Bay City
Council v The State of New South Wales at [93] and
[94]:
It follows from the reasoning of the Court in Botany Council, that the
functions of the Chief Executive on the referral of a proposal by the Minister
are not at large, but are constrained by
the purpose of the referral. The stark
contrast between the language of ss 218F(1) and 263(1) on the one hand, and s
218F(6) on the other, demonstrates that the functions of the Commission in
conducting a review of a report of the Chief Executive are substantially
more
confined than the functions of the Chief Executive in preparing a report on a
proposal by the Minister. Under s 218F(6) the Commission is not to examine
and report on the Minister’s proposal. Instead, the Commission is
directed to review the Chief Executive’s report and send its comments
to the Minister.
It is no doubt true, as Mr Robinson submitted, that the word
“review”, considered in isolation, is capable of describing
a
reconsideration of the merits of the decision or a proposal. But s 218F(6) must
be construed in context. The provision applies to an amalgamation proposal or a
proposal that is not supported by at least one
of the councils affected. It is
the Chief Executive’s report on the proposal, not the proposal itself,
that is to be furnished
to the Commission for “review and comment”.
The Commission is then required to “review the report and send its
comments to the Minister”. The “comments” are clearly intended
to be the views of the Commission arising from its
review of the Chief
Executive’s report.
- The
Boundaries Commission’s role in reviewing and commenting on the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report does not extend
to re-examining the
merits of the Minister’s proposal for amalgamation that has already been
examined by the Departmental Chief
Executive. The Court of Appeal dismissed an
argument to this effect in Botany Bay City Council v The State of New South
Wales at [95]-[98] for the following reasons. First, the Court held that the
Boundaries Commission’s expertise in local government
issues and
independence from the Minister does not demonstrate that the Boundaries
Commission’s role extends to re-examining
the merits of a proposal.
Rather, the Act is structured so that this expertise and independence is
utilised for the purpose of reviewing
and commenting on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report. Second, while the statutory language of ss 218F(6) and
(7) permits the Boundaries Commission to identify matters that may warrant
modification of a proposal in its comments to the
Minister, it does not require
the Boundaries Commission to “...undertake its own independent evaluation
of whether the proposal
should be recommended for implementation”. Third,
the Court held that if the Boundaries Commission were to be entitled to
re-examine
the merits of the Minister’s proposal under the Act, the
statutory procedures governing the Departmental Chief Executive’s
examination of the merits of the proposal would not apply. The result would be
that, contrary to the intention of the Act, the initial
examination of the
proposal would be set at nought and the public would not be entitled to
participate in the decision making process.
Deciding whether or
not to recommend implementation of the proposal
- The
sixth step under Div 2B is the Minister considering the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report and, if applicable, the Boundaries
Commission’s
comments on that report. The Minister may recommend to the Governor that the
proposal be implemented with such
modifications that arise out of the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report and, if applicable, the Boundaries
Commission’s
comments on that report and with such other modifications as
the Minister determines, but may not do so if the Minister is of the
opinion
that the modifications constitute a new proposal: s 218F(7). Alternatively, the
Minister may decline to recommend that the proposal be implemented: s
218F(8).
The proclamation
- If
the Minister recommends to the Governor that the proposal be implemented, the
process under Divs 2A and 2B culminates with the
Governor making the
proclamation amalgamating the areas. As I have noted earlier, a proclamation by
the Governor may include provisions
of the same kind as are referred to in s
213. The provisions include those “for or with respect to”: the
transfer or apportionment of assets, rights and liabilities;
the transfer of
staff; the alteration of ward boundaries; the holding of elections; the
termination, cessation, dissolution or abolition
of anything existing before the
proclamation takes effect; the preservation or continuance of anything existing
before the proclamation
takes effect, amongst other matters: s 213(1) of the
Act. The proclamation may also “authorise any matter or thing to be from
time to time determined, applied or regulated
by any specified person or
body”: s 213(2) of the Act.
The making of the
proposal
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants’ first grounds of challenge concern the making of each of the
Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai
proposal. The grounds of
challenge are expressed in the alternative:
- (a) there was
no decision to make the proposals at all;
- (b) if there
was a decision to make the proposals, the decision was made not by the Minister
but by others, including Cabinet;
- (c) if the
Minister did make a decision to make the proposals, his decision was
predetermined; or
- (d) any
decision of the Minister to make the proposals was manifestly
unreasonable.
I will elaborate on each of these
arguments.
- The
applicants firstly argued that “there was no decision by [the Minister]
under s 218E(1), because on the balance of probabilities [the Minister] was
after June [2015] and until April 2016 a bystander in the statutory process
of
forced Council amalgamations under sections 218F and 263” (par 5(a),
p 2, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016). The applicants noted that the
Minister did not produce, in response to various
notices to produce issued by
the applicants, “the usual Decision Memorandum or file or document
evidencing or referring such
a decision [under s 218E(1)] to him”. The
applicants noted that such documents do exist in respect of the Minister’s
decision in May 2016 under s 218F(7) to recommend to the Governor that the
proposals be implemented (par 5(e), p 3, submissions of applicants, 3 June
2016 and see also
par 4(f), p 2, outline submissions of applicants in closing,
31 May 2016).
- The
applicants referred to the absence of evidence from the Minister or any officer
of his staff or department to explain what happened
in relation to making the
proposals under s 218E(1), referring to Jones v Dunkel (1959) 101 CLR
298; [1959] HCA 8 (par 4(g), p 2, outline submissions of applicants in
closing, 31 May 2016 and T 26/5/16, p 181).
- The
applicants drew the inference from the absence of decision memoranda in respect
of a decision under s 218E(1) to make the proposals for amalgamation and the
absence of evidence of the Minister about making the decision that the Minister
did
not make any such decision at all (T 26/5/16, p 184).
- The
applicants secondly argued that the decision to make the proposals was made by
others, either Cabinet or by KPMG and the Department
of Premier and Cabinet
(‘DPC’) in an informal arrangement which they called a partnership.
The applicants submitted that
the decision to make the proposals was made by
Cabinet on 17 or 18 December 2015, as announced by the Premier on 18 December
2015
and evidenced in the press release of that date (par 4(a), p 2, outline
submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016; par 5(f),
p 3,
submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016 and T 26/5/16, p 176).
- Alternatively,
the applicants submitted that the decision was made by KPMG/DPC who were in
“a joint venture to amalgamate selected
NSW councils including the
Applicants”. The applicants argued that the Minister “was a mere
bystander, after June [2015],
as was his Department in the NSW Local Government
Reform Process. KPMG/DPC assumed their roles. For example, the Minister did not
place his signature on the Proposal Documents, nor even on the draft documents
which was simply used at will by KPMG/DPC for the
purposes of their
enterprise” (par 5(i), p 3, submissions of applicants, 3 June
2016). The applicants argued that the Minister
“had no role in the core
public process under sections 218F and 263 other than as an amanuensis as
directed by KMPG/DPC” (par 5(k), p 4, submissions of applicants, 3
June 2016).
- The
applicants thirdly argued that if the Minister did in fact make the decision to
make the proposals for amalgamation, his decision
was “illusory and
predetermined by others” (par 5(l), p 4, submissions of applicants, 3
June 2016 and par 4(h), p 2,
outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31
May 2016). Presumably, the “others” are either Cabinet or KPMG/DPC.
The applicants argued that the only decision the Minister made was “a
decision to progress amalgamations, not a decision to
propose them”
(T 26/5/16, pp 176, 180 and 182). The decision to make the proposals
was made by others and the Minister only
decided to progress the proposals for
amalgamation made by others.
- The
applicants fourthly argued that if the Minister did make a decision to make the
proposals for amalgamation, his decision was manifestly
unreasonable. The
applicants submitted that the grounds of manifest unreasonableness were
threefold.
- First,
it was manifestly unreasonable to make the decision based on a KPMG report or
KPMG material, which the Minister knew was not
publicly available and would not
be made available to the Delegate, the applicant councils or members of the
public to assist them
in undertaking the statutory processes of examination,
inquiry and review. The applicants argued that the undisclosed KPMG report
or
material explained and demonstrated the basis of the proposals. Without access
to the information in the undisclosed KPMG report
or material, the participants
could not perform their functions fully under the statutory processes. Further,
it was manifestly unreasonable
of the Minister to make and refer the proposals
but to frustrate the processes of examination, inquiry, report and review by
holding
back the undisclosed KPMG report or material which justified his
decision (pars 6(a)-(c), pp 3-4, outline submissions of applicants
in closing,
31 May 2016 and T 26/5/16, pp 186-187; T 31/5/16,
p 55).
- Second,
the applicants argued that it was manifestly unreasonable for the Minister to
make a decision based on the disclosed KPMG
documents, which allegedly proceeded
upon flawed modelling. The applicants referred in particular to the modelling
disclosed in the
KPMG “Outline of Financial Modelling Assumptions for
Local Government Merger Proposals Technical Paper” dated 19 January
2016
(‘KPMG Technical Paper’). The applicants argued that it was
illogical to construct a model which proceeds under
the misapprehension that
amalgamations only result in financial benefits but not to consider or make
provision for the possibilities
of diseconomies of scale and financial
disadvantages to the areas to be amalgamated (especially when these are
requirements under
s 263(3) of the Act) (pars 1(a) and (b), p 2,
applicants’ supplementary reply points, 6 June 2016).
- The
applicants also argued that it was illogical to construct a model that does not
consider the specific local circumstances of each
of the areas to be
amalgamated. The model inappropriately adopted as a reference point a generic
rural council, rather than focussing
on the particular local circumstances, and
used long term financial plan data rather than the most current audited accounts
of each
council. The applicants cited R (on the application of Forest Care
Home Ltd) v Pembrokeshire County Council (2011) 14 CCLR 103; [2010] EWHC
3514 (Admin) at [131] and [136] where the council, in making a decision based on
modelling that failed to consider local factors, was held to have erred
in law
(par 2, p 2, applicants’ supplementary reply points, 6 June 2016
and T 31/5/16, pp 42-44).
- Third,
the applicants argued that it was manifestly unreasonable to model the net
financial benefits of the proposals without having
regard to the “unique
status and circumstances of farming community rural centre based
councils”. The applicants submitted
that in the areas to be amalgamated
are rural centres as defined in s 354B of the Act. Under s 218CA, staff numbers
in these rural centres must, as far as is reasonably practicable, be maintained
after the amalgamation. The applicants
argued that the model failed to take into
account this requirement in calculating the wage benefits from the amalgamation.
The modelling
assumptions in the KPMG Technical Paper assumed wage benefits for
regional councils, which are different to rural centres (par 3,
pp 2-3, applicants’ supplementary reply points, 6 June 2016 and par
5(b), p 3, outline submissions of applicants in closing,
31 May
2016).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents rebutted the applicants’ arguments, put in the alternative,
that the Minister did not make any decision to make
the proposals for
amalgamation but that instead, the decision was made by others, whether Cabinet
or KPMG/DPC. The respondents submitted
that there was ample evidence on which
the Court can infer that the Minister decided to make the proposals under s
218E(1) of the Act.
- The
Minister’s letter dated 6 January 2016 referring the proposals under
s 218F(1) stated that “[a] list of proposals initiated by me pursuant
to section 218E(1) of the [Act] is attached and marked
Attachment A”. Attachment A included each of the Oberon
proposal, the Cabonne proposal
and the Gundagai proposal.
- The
Minister’s letter also attached, as Attachment B, the proposal
documents for each proposal being “Merger Proposal:
Bathurst Regional
Council, Oberon Council, January 2016”, “Merger Proposal: Blayney
Shire Council, Cabonne Council, Orange
City Council, January 2016” and
“Merger Proposal: Cootamundra Shire Council, Gundagai Shire Council,
January 2016”.
Each proposal document contained a foreword headed
“Minister’s Foreword” and bore the signature of the Minister
above his name. In the Minister’s Foreword to the proposal documents for
Cabonne and Gundagai, the Minister said “I am
putting forward the proposal
to merge the local government areas of [the named councils]”. The
Minister’s Foreword to
the proposal document for Oberon is expressed in
the passive voice, “... the proposal to merge the local government areas
of
Bathurst and Oberon is being put forward”, but there is no reason to
think that the Minister was not the person putting forward
the proposal as he
said he was doing for Cabonne and Gundagai (par 32, p 10,
respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that the applicants’ reliance on Jones v Dunkel
is misplaced. The documents referred to above provided ample evidence that a
decision to make the proposals under s 218E was made by the Minister. There was
no basis for an adverse inference (to the effect that the Minister made no
decision) that the
Minister needed to be called in order to displace:
Doppstadt Australia Pty Ltd v Lovick & Son Developments Pty Ltd
[2014] NSWCA 158
at
[14]
and [81]. The rule in Jones v Dunkel has no
operation (par 33, p 10, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ allegation of predetermination,
namely that the decision to implement the amalgamations
was predetermined by
Cabinet on or about 18 December 2015 or by KPMG/DPC and that the
Minister’s decision and referral of the
proposals on 6 January 2016 was
illusory or a charade. The respondents submitted that this ground of challenge
should be rejected
for at least three reasons.
- First,
no inference of predetermination can be drawn from the media release of 18
December 2015 of the Premier and the Minister. The
press release refers only to
“proposed mergers” in general terms not any specific proposal. The
media release stated
that “[t]he NSW Government is using the existing
process set out in the Local Government Act to consider council mergers”.
The Minister is quoted as stating that “[o]ur process will provide an
objective assessment
of the merger benefits and impacts, and give the community
a chance to have a say before a final decision is made”. The media
release
said that “[d]etailed merger proposals are now being finalised and will be
referred to the Chief Executive of the Office
of Local Government (OLG) for
examination and report under the existing process set out in the Local
Government Act”. No inference of “predetermination” can be
drawn from this document: it clearly states that the proposals will
be dealt
with under the existing process in the Act and that no final decision has been
made (par 34(a), p 11, respondents’
further submissions, 31 May
2016 and T 31/5/16, p 91).
- Second,
as a matter of fact, the Minister declined to recommend the implementation of
some proposals for amalgamation, including the
Walcha proposal (involving the
amalgamation of Walcha Council and Tamworth Regional Council). This evidences
that the Minister was
making the decisions and had not predetermined the outcome
(par 34(b), p 11, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016
and T 31/5/16, p 92).
- Third,
the letter sent by the Minister to the mayors and councillors of the councils
affected by the amalgamations seeking expressions
of interest to serve on any
new council expressly said that “no decision has been made on any merger
proposal” (an example
of the letter was attached to
Mr Wallace’s affidavit sworn 23 May 2016). This statement is
evidence against predetermination
and certainly is not supportive of it
(par 34(c), p 11, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ various arguments that the
Minister’s decision to make the proposals for amalgamations
was manifestly
unreasonable.
- At
the outset, the respondents submitted that the ground of manifest
unreasonableness is inapplicable to the making of a proposal
under
s 218E(1) of the Act. There is no requirement for the making of a
“valid” proposal, other than that it must be a proposal of a
kind
that falls within the terms of the Act (a proposal for amalgamation of two or
more areas referred to in s 218A or a proposal to alter the boundaries of
one or more areas referred to in s 218B) (T 31/5/16, p 82). The
applicants noted that a proposal may be made under s 218E(1) not only by
the Minister but also by a council affected by the proposal or by an appropriate
minimum number of electors. There is
no “minimum agenda” in respect
of making a proposal, such as relevant matters that must be considered
(T 31/5/16, pp
82 and 93). Persons of the three classes of persons who
may initiate a proposal may decide to make a proposal for diverse motives
and
after having regard to diverse considerations. There is no warrant in the
statutory step in s 218E(1) of making a proposal to judicially review the
matters taken into account in making a decision or the reasonableness or
unreasonableness
of a decision to make a proposal. This is equally true for the
Minister making a proposal. The Minister’s decision to make
a proposal
cannot be reviewed on the ground of manifest unreasonableness (T 31/5/16,
pp 92-93).
- However,
if the ground of manifest unreasonableness is available, the respondents
submitted that the applicants have not established
that the Minister’s
decision was manifestly unreasonable in any of the three ways argued.
- The
applicants’ first argument was that it was manifestly unreasonable to make
the decision without making the undisclosed KPMG
report or material available to
the Delegates, the affected councils and members of the public. The respondents
submitted that this
argument fails at multiple levels.
- First,
on a proper construction of the Act, the Minister, in making a proposal and
referring it for examination and report, was under
no obligation to disclose his
motivations or the basis for his motivations. The making of the proposal stands
outside the examination,
inquiry and reporting stage of the administrative
process, and can be made without evidence of the matters in s 263 of the
Act, or for a range of motives or purposes, including conflicting ones. So much
is clear from the fact that a proposal can
be made “by an appropriate
minimum number of electors”, some of whom for example might actively
oppose the proposal,
but want to see the matter put to rest by an examination
and inquiry (par 37, p 13, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
- Second,
the examination, inquiry and reporting stage of the administrative process, for
each proposal, demonstrated that a reasonable
opportunity was in fact given to
the Delegates, the affected councils and members of the public to participate in
the process. The
KPMG reports and material that were publicly disclosed
contained sufficient information to enable the participants to participate
meaningfully in the statutory process. The respondents, in their submissions to
the Court, analysed the KPMG Technical Paper, the
list of council data sources
used by KPMG (which set out the long-term financial plans from which data for
the modelling was taken),
a spreadsheet summarising outputs from KPMG’s
modelling and other documents. The respondents submitted that the information
disclosed in these documents was sufficient to enable a detailed critique of
KPMG’s analysis to be put forward. Each applicant
council made use of
experts on public financing to criticise KPMG’s work and the Delegates
addressed those criticisms. Oberon,
Cabonne and Gundagai Councils made
submissions to the Delegates relying on expert reports on public financing,
including reports
by Dr Drew and Professor Dollery (pars 38-49,
respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016).
- Third,
although KPMG’s actual modelling (that is the mathematical formulas KPMG
used and the application of those formulas to
the publicly available data) was
not made publicly available, it was not manifestly unreasonable to not make that
actual modelling
publicly available and it was not manifestly unreasonable for
the Minister to make a decision to make the proposals without making
the actual
modelling publicly available (par 50, p 16, respondents’ further
submissions, 31 May 2016).
- The
applicants’ second argument was that it was manifestly unreasonable to
decide to make the proposals based on the KPMG Technical
Paper in circumstances
where the modelling and assumptions in the KPMG Technical Paper were so flawed
that no reasonable decision
maker could have made use of them. The respondents
rejected this argument for two reasons.
- First,
it is well established that the ground of review of manifest unreasonableness
must be established on the material before the
decision maker (in this case the
Minister). There was nothing before the Minister when he made the proposals to
suggest that the
modelling and assumptions in the KPMG Technical Paper were so
flawed that they could not be relied upon (par 37, respondents’
summary of
argument, 23 May 2016). The criticisms of the KPMG modelling made by the experts
called by the applicants, Dr Drew and
Professor Dollery in their evidence before
the Court, was not before the Minister and he cannot have acted manifestly
unreasonably
by not considering criticisms of which he was unaware.
- Second,
the respondents noted that the criticisms made by Dr Drew and Professor Dollery
in their evidence before the Court were the
same criticisms that were made in
the submissions of the applicant councils and some members of the public to the
Delegates during
the examination and inquiry process. The submissions were
based, apparently, on the views of the same experts. The criticisms in
the
submissions were considered and addressed by the Delegates in their respective
reports (par 60, p 17, respondents’ further
submissions, 31 May 2016). The
respondents submitted that it was not manifestly unreasonable for the Minister
to make a decision
based on the KPMG Technical Paper that was publicly disclosed
and able to be, and was in fact, criticised by the applicant councils
and some
members of the public in the statutory process of examination and inquiry on the
proposals.
- The
applicants’ third argument of manifest unreasonableness was that the KPMG
Technical Paper was flawed because it failed to
take into account the special
measures for maintenance of staff numbers and rural centres under s 218CA
and s 354B of the Act. The problem with this argument, the respondents
submitted, is that the KPMG assumptions plainly did take those statutory
provisions into account. The KPMG Technical Paper stated (at p 3) that
“[n]o net staffing reductions were assumed for regional
councils”,
but “efficiencies are generated by a merger that allows a regional council
to re-allocate duplicated back-office,
administration and corporate support
roles to frontline service positions”. Hence, maintenance of staff in the
rural centres
in the areas of regional councils was assumed (par 62,
respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016 and T 31/5/16,
p 96).
The making of the proposal was not invalid
- The
applicants have not established any of their grounds of challenge to the
Minister’s decision to make the proposals under
s 218E(1) of the Act. My
reasons accord with the respondents’ submissions.
- The
applicants have not established that the Minister did not make the decision
under s 218E(1) to make the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the
Gundagai proposal. The Minister’s letter of 6 January 2016 referring
the
proposals for examination and report and the proposal documents are evidence
that the Minister did in fact make the decision.
The Minister referred to the
media release of 18 December 2015 where he announced “my intention to
prepare proposals to amalgamate
or change the boundaries of a number of local
government areas across the State”. The Minister then stated that
“[a]
list of the proposals initiated by me pursuant to
section 218E(1) of the Local Government Act 1993 ... is
attached”. The list included the Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and
the Gundagai proposal. The Minister said
to the Departmental Chief Executive:
“By this letter I am referring these proposals to you pursuant to
section 218F(1) of the Act for examination and report ...”. The
Minister signed the letter above his name. The proposal documents for the Oberon
proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai proposal (attached to the
Minister’s letter of 6 January 2016) contained a
Minister’s
Foreword stating that the Minister was putting forward the proposals.
- The
media release of 18 December 2015 of the Premier and the Minister does not prove
to the contrary. Cabinet may well have adopted
a range of proposed reforms to
the local government sector, including a policy in favour of amalgamations of
local government areas
as a matter of principle. The media release refers to
that policy in general and contingent terms. It says that 35 new councils are
being “proposed” in NSW, that the Government “is using the
existing process set out in the Local Government Act to consider council
mergers”, that the Minister had stated that “[o]ur process will
provide an objective assessment of
the merger benefits and impacts, and give the
community a chance to have a say before a final decision is made” and that
“[d]etailed
merger proposals are now being finalised and will be referred
to the Chief Executive ... for examination and report ...”.
- These
statements affirm that any proposal for amalgamations (once finalised) will
follow the process set out in the Act. This process
includes the Minister
deciding under s 218E(1) to make the proposals and referring the proposals under
s 218F(1) for examination and report, and the examination, inquiry and report on
the proposals under s 263, during which process the community would have a
chance to have their say on the proposals. The media release affirms that a
final
decision on any proposal for amalgamations has not been made and will not
be made until the process set out in the Act has been followed.
- No
inference can be drawn from these statements that the Minister had not made and
would not make a decision under s 218E(1) to make the proposals, or that instead
Cabinet had made or would make the decisions to make the proposals. No inference
can also
be drawn from these statements that any decision that the Minister did
make on 6 January 2016 to make the proposals was “predetermined”
by
Cabinet on or about 18 December 2015.
- The
alternative argument that KPMG and DPC were in some form of joint venture to
force amalgamations of local government areas and
that they made the decisions
under s 218E(1) to make the proposals is without foundation. No doubt KPMG as
the consultant employed by the NSW Government to assist in the design
and
implementation of local government reform, including amalgamations, and DPC as
one of the key government departments involved
in the implementation of that
policy, did provide material assistance. This assistance included preparing the
KPMG Technical Paper
and the proposal documents, both as to the substantive
content (such as the modelling assumptions and the model outcomes, including
financial benefits of amalgamations) and the form (such as typing, typesetting,
layout and application of the Minister’s signature
to printed copies of
the proposal documents). But provision of this assistance does not establish
that KPMG and/or DPC actually made
the decision under s 218E(1) to make the
proposals or that they actually referred the proposals under s 218F(1) for
examination and report or that the Minister did not actually make that decision
under s 218E(1) or refer the proposals under s 218F(1).
- The
applicants’ challenge to the Minister’s decision to make the
proposals on the ground of manifest unreasonableness
was misconceived. As the
respondents submitted, the Act does not set any decision making agenda on a
person, including the Minister,
making a proposal under s 218E(1). Persons
of one of the three classes of persons who may initiate a proposal under
s 218E(1) may make a proposal for diverse and potentially conflicting
motives and after having regard to diverse considerations, not all of
which may
be relevant to the Act. There is no warrant in the Act to evaluate the motives
of or matters considered by the persons
who make a proposal. Take for example
the class of a minimum number of electors. How could the motives of or the
matters considered
by the minimum number of electors (at least 250) sensibly be
evaluated? The Act only requires that one of the classes of persons
who may
initiate a proposal under s 218E(1) in fact makes a proposal that meets the
description of a proposal under ss 218A or 218B
of the Act. That is
sufficient to initiate the process under Div 2B. There is no scope to
judicially review the decision to make
the proposal on the grounds of failure to
consider relevant matters or consideration of irrelevant matters or manifest
unreasonableness.
This conclusion is sufficient to dispose of, at the threshold,
the applicants’ challenge to the Minister’s decision to
make the
proposals on the ground of manifest unreasonableness.
- In
any event, however, the applicants have not established that the
Minister’s decision under s 218E(1) to make the proposals
was manifestly
unreasonable in any of the ways argued by the applicants. It was not manifestly
unreasonable to make the decision
without releasing the undisclosed KPMG
material. Whilst there might be some limitations on the purpose for which a
decision under
s 218E(1) may be made and the considerations to which regard may
be had in making a decision under s 218E(1) flowing from the subject
matter,
scope and purpose of the Act, not making publicly available the undisclosed KPMG
material is not one such limitation.
- The
applicants also have not established that the contents of any undisclosed KPMG
material was of such a nature that not to disclose
publicly that material would
frustrate the statutory process of examination, inquiry, report and review of
the proposal. The Minister
did disclose publicly other material, including the
KPMG Technical Paper containing the modelling assumptions, the input sources
of
data used in the modelling, and the outputs of the modelling included in the
proposal documents. The applicants have not established
that, in circumstances
where this other material was proposed to be and was in fact made publicly
available by the Minister, it was
manifestly unreasonable for the Minister to
decide to make the proposals but not make the undisclosed KPMG material publicly
available.
- The
applicants have not established that it was manifestly unreasonable to decide to
make the proposals based on the publicly disclosed
KPMG material, including the
KPMG Technical Paper. Even if that material were to have contained factual
errors or be based on erroneous
assumptions or flawed methodologies, that would
not cause the Minister’s decision, which considered or was based on that
material,
necessarily to be manifestly unreasonable. It has long been
established that a decision is not manifestly unreasonable simply because
it
might be factually wrong. The validity of a decision does not depend on the
soundness of the decision: see, for example, Parramatta City Council v
Pestell (1972) 128 CLR 305; [1972] HCA 59 at 318, 323, 327 and the cases
cited in Walsh v Parramatta City Council (2007) 161 LGERA 118; [2007]
NSWLEC 255 at [62], [63].
- In
any event, however, the applicants have not established that the KPMG material
considered by the Minister was so flawed that no
reasonable Minister could have
made a decision under s 218E(1) after considering that material.
- Finally,
the applicants have not established that the publicly disclosed KPMG material,
including the KPMG Technical Paper, was factually
flawed in its assumptions
about the staff numbers to be maintained in the rural centres in the areas to be
amalgamated under the
Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal or the Gundagai
proposal. The KPMG Technical Paper stated that no net staffing reductions were
assumed. The reallocation of staff from duplicated back-office, administrative
and corporate support roles to frontline service positions
involves the
maintenance of staff numbers, not a reduction.
- Again,
however, even if the KPMG Technical Paper had made a mistake of fact about staff
numbers, this would not necessarily result
in the Minister’s decision
which considered that Technical Paper being manifestly unreasonable.
- I
reject the challenge to the Minister’s decision under s 218E(1) to make
the proposals.
The referral of the proposals
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants’ challenges to the Minister’s referral of the proposals
for amalgamation under s 218F(1) to the Departmental
Chief Executive for
examination and report were based on similar grounds to their challenge to the
decision under s 218E(1) to make
the proposal. The applicants argued that
“the referral was as a matter of probability a step on the predetermined
path to the
amalgamations”, citing Betfair Pty Ltd v Western Australia
(2008) 234 CLR 418; [2008] HCA 11 at [119] (par 4(h), p 2, outline
submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016).
- The
applicants argued that the Minister had no power under s 218F(1) to refer a
decision made by others, including Cabinet. Under
s 218F(1), the Minister
may only refer a proposal that the Minister made or that the Minister received
from one or other of the classes
of persons who can initiate a proposal under
s 218E(1), namely, a council affected by the proposal or an appropriate
minimum number
of electors. The applicants submitted that neither Cabinet nor
KPMG and DPC acting in a joint venture fall within these classes of
persons who
can initiate a proposal under s 218E(1). Hence, any proposal initiated by
them and received by the Minister could not
be referred by the Minister under
s 218F(1) for examination and report (T 26/5/16, p 176).
- The
applicants also relied on the ground of manifest unreasonableness. The
applicants argued that it was manifestly unreasonable to
refer the proposals
without making available the undisclosed KMPG material. It was manifestly
unreasonable to refer a proposal for
examination and report where such functions
were “impossible to undertake and futile” because all of the KPMG
material
which explained and demonstrated the basis of the proposal was withheld
(pars 6(a), (b) and (c), pp 3-4, outline submissions of applicants
in
closing, 31 May 2016 and par 7(a), p 5, submissions of applicants, 3 June
2016).
- The
applicants also argued that it was manifestly unreasonable to refer the
proposals for amalgamation of areas with rural centres
that were founded upon a
stated net financial benefit over 20 years which paid no regard to the
requirement to maintain staff numbers
in the rural centres under s 218CA and s
354B (par 6(d), p 4, outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May
2016).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ arguments for the same reasons they
gave in response to the applicants’ challenge
to the decision to make the
proposals. The applicants submitted that the evidence established that the
Minister decided under s 218E(1)
to make the proposals and he referred the
proposals under s 218F(1) for examination and report. There was no
predetermination.
- The
respondents submitted that the ground of manifest unreasonableness is
inapplicable to the referral of the proposals under s 218F(1).
The Minister does
not have a discretionary power under s 218F(1) but rather a mandatory duty to
refer a proposal that the Minister
has made or has received under s 218E(1).
Hence, the Minister was bound to refer the proposals he had made for examination
and report,
regardless of whether to do so was unreasonable in the circumstances
or not (T 31/5/16, p 95).
- The
respondents submitted that, in any event, there was no manifest unreasonableness
in referring the proposals without making available
the undisclosed KPMG
material or based on the KMPG Technical Paper’s and proposal
documents’ consideration of the net
financial of the proposals, for the
reasons they gave earlier.
- The
proposal that is referred is simply the “single sentence” proposing
that two or more areas are amalgamated into one
or more new areas. The proposal
is not the proposal document in which the statement of the proposal is included.
There is nothing
in the Act that requires the Minister to provide any
supplementary information when the Minister refers the proposal. There is no
statutory basis to review the reasonableness or unreasonableness of any
information provided that was not required to be disclosed
under the Act
(T 31/5/16, p 95).
The referral of the proposals was
valid
- The
applicants have not established any of their grounds of challenge to the
Minister’s referral of the proposals under s 218F(1).
I agree with the
respondents’ submissions.
- For
the reasons I have given in relation to the first challenge, the Minister made
the decision under s 218E(1) to make the proposals
and he referred the proposals
he had made, as he was bound to do under s 218F(1), for examination and report.
The applicants have
not established that other persons, including Cabinet or
KPMG and DPC acting in a joint venture, decided to make the proposals or
that
there was any predetermination.
- The
applicants also have not established manifest unreasonableness in the ways
argued, for the reasons I have explained in relation
to the applicants’
challenge to the Minister’s decision to make the proposals.
- In
any event, however, even if the referral of the proposals were to have been, to
use the applicants’ wording, “a step
on the predetermined path to
the amalgamations” or were to be unreasonable in any of the ways argued by
the applicants, this
would have no legal consequence. The Minister was under a
duty, imposed by s 218F(1), to refer the proposals that had been made;
he did
not have a discretion to refer or not refer the proposals or to refer them in
any particular way, such as with or without
making available certain material or
based on certain modelling or assumptions. The Minister had a duty to refer the
proposals that
had been made, regardless of such circumstances.
- I
reject the challenge to the referral of the proposal under s
218F(1).
The giving of reasonable public notice
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants challenged the public notice that was given by the Delegates of the
holding of the inquiries. The applicants argued
that “reasonable public
notice” was not given of the holding of each inquiry, in contravention of
s 263(2B) of the Act.
The applicants challenged both the content and the
reasonableness of the notices that were given by the Delegates.
- As
to the content of the notice, the applicants referred to the heading of the
notice: “Notification of public inquiry into
the proposal to amalgamate or
alter the boundaries of local government areas”. The notice then stated:
“Pursuant to section 218F of the Local Government Act 1993 the
Minister for Local Government has referred a proposal in relation to the
following local government areas [the applicable areas
were specified] to the
Acting Chief Executive of the Office of Local Government for examination and
report”. The applicants
argued that it was not possible from reading each
notice to know whether the proposal was for the amalgamation of the areas
specified
(under s 218A) or the alteration of the boundaries of the areas
specified (under s 218B). The applicants noted that each proposal had very
different consequences, both for the content of the proclamation and the
continued
existence of each council of the areas as an entity (referring to s
213). The applicants argued that the notice refers ambiguously to the inquiry to
be held and does not specify whether the inquiry is in
relation to a proposal
for amalgamation of areas under s 218A or alteration of the boundaries of areas
under s 218B. This omission is of substance and renders the notice invalid:
Scurr v Brisbane City Council (1973) 133 CLR 242; [1973] HCA 39;
Lindemans Wines Pty Ltd v Woodward (1981) 46 LGRA 14 and Bartzios v
Leichhardt Municipal Council [1978] 1 NSWLR 7 at 10-11 (the notice must
“draw the attention of the public ... to the council’s
proposal” – here the notice
did not.) (pp 6-7, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016 and T 31/5/16, pp 77-78).
- As
to the reasonableness of the notice, the applicants argued that the requirement
of s 263(2B) to give “reasonable public notice” of the holding of
the inquiry assumes that there will be a reasonable opportunity
for the public
to participate in the inquiry, by written submission or attendance. First, as to
making written submissions, the applicants
argued that the notice given did not
call for written submissions to be made to the inquiry. Accordingly, members of
the public were
unaware, should they follow the announcements of the inquiry
made in the notice, that it was possible to make a written submission
in the
alternative to attending the public inquiry. Second, the applicants argued that
the notice did not state that members of the
public who made a written
submission would be given the opportunity to attend and participate in the oral
inquiry. Section 263(5) requires (“must allow”) that members of the
public be given the opportunity to attend any inquiry held. This means that
even
those who made written submissions must be given the opportunity to attend and
participate in the oral inquiry (pp 7-8, submissions
of applicants, 3 June
2016).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents submitted that the public notice given by each Delegate of the
holding of the inquiry did satisfy the requirements
of s 263(2B) of the
Act.
- The
respondents submitted that s 263(2B) does not prescribe that notice must be
given of anything more than the fact of the holding of the inquiry under the
section; it does
not require advice to be given of the documents in which the
proposal was contained or the documents relied upon in making the proposal.
The
notices that were given did provide further information, such as inviting
submissions from members of the public and referring
to the Council Boundary
Review website, but this further information was not required by s 263(2B) (par
81, respondents’ summary of argument, 23 May 2016).
- In
relation to the content of the notices given, the respondents submitted that the
notice advised of the holding of an inquiry, at
the specified times and venues,
and sufficiently identified the subject matter of the inquiry. True the notice
said that the proposal
involved the amalgamation or alteration of the boundaries
of the areas but that was enough to alert anyone who was concerned to become
better informed about the proposal by looking, for example, at the Council
Boundary Review website identified in the notice or by
asking for information by
telephoning the free call number given in the notice (T 31/5/16,
pp 108-109 and T 6/6/16, p 213). Information
was available on the
website identified. For example, the proposal documents describing the proposals
were published on the website
from 6 January 2016 (T 31/5/16,
p 109).
- In
further answer to the issue of the notice stating that the inquiry is into the
proposal to amalgamate or alter the boundaries of
areas, the respondents
submitted that a description in those terms is adequate because “it
defines the entirety of the possibilities
that might be under
consideration”. The notice gives notice to “anyone who might be
interested in any proposal of that
kind, be it complete amalgamation,
amalgamation of some areas only or alteration. Anyone who’s interested in
any of those subjects
has, by that notice, with a clear identification of the
two local government areas, and the inquiry and the referral of the proposal,
been put on notice that this is something that they should pursue
further.” (T 6/6/16, p 209).
- The
respondents submitted that, if the inclusion of reference to alteration of
boundaries of the areas went beyond what the notice
should have included,
“it was no more than surplusage, which did not ... mislead anyone”
(T 6/6/16, p 210). Anyone concerned
about amalgamation but unconcerned
about alteration would have attended the inquiry or made further inquiries as to
the details of
the proposal. They would not have been misled into doing nothing
(T 6/6/16, p 211).
- In
relation to the reasonableness of the public notice given, the respondents
submitted that what is required is “a holistic
analysis of all of the
forms of public notice that were provided” (T 6/6/16, p 207).
The respondents referred to the various
ways in which public notice of the
holding of the inquiry was given, including by placing notices in various
newspapers, placing
notices on the Council Boundary Review website and writing
to each of the affected councils notifying them of the inquiry to be held
and
requesting their assistance in promoting details of the inquiry, including by
bringing the attached public notice to the attention
of as many people in the
council’s area as possible. The councils acceded to the Delegate’s
request in various ways,
including by mailing pamphlets to their residents and
placing the notice provided by the Delegates on their websites and Facebook
pages (pars 84-97, pp 29-32, respondents’ summary of argument).
- The
respondents pointed out that the reason the notice did not expressly call for
written submissions to be made to the inquiry is
that the notice was directed to
the narrower purpose of giving notice of the holding of the inquiry. The inquiry
is an adjunct to
the examination of the proposal. Written submissions might be
invited to assist in that examination, but they are not made to the
inquiry
itself (T 31/5/16, pp 110-111).
Reasonable public
notice was given
- The
applicants have not established that reasonable public notice was not given in
any of the ways that they argued.
- As
to the content of the notice, the first criticism was that the notice was
ambiguous as to whether the proposal the subject of the
inquiry was for the
amalgamation of the areas specified in the notice or the alteration of the
boundaries of those areas. This ambiguity
arose from the heading and the first
paragraph of the notice.
- I
find that each notice did give sufficient information or warning to readers of
the inquiry to be held. Each notice was expressed
in very similar terms. An
example is the notice for the Oberon proposal which
stated:
Notification of public inquiry into the proposal to amalgamate or alter the
boundaries of local government areas
Pursuant to section 218F of the Local Government Act 1993 the Minister
for Local Government has referred a proposal in relation to the following local
government areas:
Bathurst Regional and Oberon
to the Acting Chief Executive of the Office of Local Government for examination
and report.
Pursuant to section 745 of the Local Government Act 1993 the Acting Chief
Executive of the Office of Local Government has delegated to me the examination
and reporting functions under section 218F of the Local Government Act.
The examination into the proposal has now commenced and submissions are invited
from members of the public. The closing date for
submissions is 5pm EST, Sunday
28 February 2016.
Submissions can be made online at
www.councilboundaryreview.nsw.gov.au
or by mail to:
GPO Box 5341
Sydney NSW 2001
A public inquiry in relation to the proposal will be held under section 263 of
the Local Government Act 1993 at the following time(s) and venue(s):
Oberon Showground:
Thursday, 4 February 2016
1:00pm – 4:00pm
Panthers Bathurst:
Thursday, 4 February 2016
7:00pm – 10:00pm
Members of the public who would like to attend are requested to register at
www.councilboundaryreview.nsw.gov.au or by contacting 1300 813 020.
Members of the public who would like to speak at the public inquiry are
requested to indicate that they wish to do so when they register
to attend.
For more information contact 1300 813 020 or visit
www.councilboundaryreview.nsw.gov.au
Renata Brooks
Delegate
- Persons
reading the notice were alerted that:
- (a) a public
inquiry was to be held under s 263 of the Act at the times and venues specified
in the notice;
- (b) the subject
matter of the inquiry was a proposal, which had been referred by the Minister
pursuant to s 218F of the Act to the Acting Chief Executive of the Office of
Local Government for examination and report;
- (c) the Acting
Chief Executive of the Office of Local Government had delegated to the Delegate
named in the notice the examination
and reporting functions under s 218F of the
Act;
- (d) the
proposal was to amalgamate or alter the boundaries of local government
areas;
- (e) the local
government areas affected by the proposal were those specified in the notice;
and
- (f) members of
the public who would like to attend the inquiry were requested to register to
attend and to indicate, when they registered
to attend, that they wished to
speak at the inquiry.
- The
content of a notice in these terms satisfies the three content requirements for
a public notice arising from s 263(1), (2A) and (2B) of the Act.
- First,
notice was given of when and where the inquiry was to be held. The notice
specified the date and time of the inquiry and the
venue in which the inquiry
was to be held.
- Second,
the notice sufficiently specified the proposal in relation to which the inquiry
was to be held. The proposals that the Minister
had referred under s 218F to the
Departmental Chief Executive for examination and report were the Oberon
proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai proposal
for the amalgamation of
the local government areas identified in those proposals. As I have noted, the
notice alerted the reader
that an inquiry was to be held, the subject matter of
the inquiry was a proposal, which had been referred by the Minister pursuant
to
s 218F for examination and report, and the proposal was to amalgamate or alter
the boundaries of the local government areas specified.
- The
only mistake in this description of the proposal was the addition of the words
“or alter the boundaries of” in the
heading of the notice. The
proposals that the Minister had in fact referred under s 218F were only for the
amalgamation of the local government areas specified in the notice (the function
under s 218A); there was no proposal to alter the boundaries of those areas (the
function under s 218B). The notice described the proposal as being either the
amalgamation of the areas identified (which was the proposal that the Minister
had referred for examination and report) or the alteration of boundaries of the
areas (which was not part of the Minister’s
proposal).
- I
do not consider that this surplus reference to a matter that was not part of the
Minister’s proposal meant that the notice
did not alert the reader to the
proposal in relation to which the inquiry was to be held and in respect of which
members of the public
wishing to speak at the inquiry were to address.
Notwithstanding the surplus reference to alteration of boundaries, the notice
still
identified that the Minister may have referred a proposal to amalgamate
the local government areas specified in the notice, which
was to be the subject
of the inquiry that was to be held.
- Persons
who were concerned about the amalgamation of these areas would have been alerted
to this fact and the opportunity for them
to attend and speak at the inquiry in
relation to this proposal to amalgamate these areas. Persons would not be
dissuaded from doing
so because the notice also referred to a proposal to alter
the boundaries of those areas.
- Third,
the notice specified the purpose of holding the inquiry. The notice stated that,
pursuant to s 218F of the Act, the Minister had referred the proposal in
relation to the local government areas specified to the Acting Departmental
Chief Executive for examination and report and that the Departmental Chief
Executive had delegated to the Delegate the examination
and reporting functions
under s 218F. The notice stated that a public inquiry in relation to the
proposal would be held under s 263 of the Act at the times and venues specified
in the notice. Together, these statements alerted the reader that the Delegate
was holding
the inquiry for the purpose of exercising the functions of examining
and reporting on the proposal that had been referred by the
Minister in
accordance with s 218F.
- As
to the reasonableness of the notice given, I do not consider that either of the
matters raised by the applicants caused the notice
not to be reasonable public
notice. The invitation to make a written submission and the invitation to attend
and speak at the inquiry
were separate, notwithstanding that they were contained
in the one notice. Any written submission made was not a submission to the
inquiry itself, but rather a submission to assist the Delegate in the
examination of the proposal. This is evident from the terms
of the notice:
“The examination into the proposal has now commenced and submissions are
invited from members of the public”.
In contrast, the notice referred to
the holding of a public inquiry at the times and venues stated and invited
members of the public
to attend the inquiry and indicate whether they wished to
speak at the public inquiry. Members of the public were not invited to
make
written submissions to the inquiry itself. It is also evident from the closing
date for lodging written submissions which was
three weeks or so after the date
on which the inquiry was to be held. The consequence of these matters is that
there was no error
in the notice by it not calling for written submissions to be
made to the inquiry.
- The
applicants were also incorrect in arguing that the notice did not state that
members of that public who had made a written submission
could also attend and
speak at the inquiry. The notice clearly made both invitations, one to make a
written submission to assist
in the examination of the proposal and another to
attend and speak at the inquiry. The invitations were not mutually exclusive. It
was evident that persons could take up both invitations so as to make a written
submission as well as attend and speak at the inquiry.
- I
reject the challenge to the giving of reasonable public notice under s
263(2B).
The holding of the inquiry
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants argued that the inquiry held by each Delegate was not an inquiry
under s 263(2A) of the Act on two grounds.
- The
first ground of challenge was that the process adopted was not an informed or
genuine inquiry, citing Sutherland Shire Council v Finch (1970) 123 CLR
657; [1970] HCA 49 at 662 (par 10, p 7, outline submissions of applicants in
closing, 31 May 2016). The applicants put this ground in a number of ways.
- The
applicants firstly submitted that the concept of an inquiry is “an
investigation as into a matter; the act of inquiring,
or seeking information by
questioning; interrogation”: Macquarie Dictionary (4th ed, 2005).
In the inquiries held by the Delegates, the applicants submitted that the
evidence established that “there
was no seeking of information or
questioning or any act of inquiring, but merely the provision of a restricted
opportunity for some
member of the public to speak, on conditions such as
registration and finishing within 3 hours, and not speaking for more than 3
or 2
minutes etc. Many who intended or who wished to speak did not, or could not. No
provision was made for those who were away,
or at work, or with other
commitments in the narrow window allowed” (pp 12-13, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016 and T
31/5/16, p 74).
- The
applicants secondly submitted that the Delegates were obliged to find out what
the response of those affected by the proposals
(including the affected
councils) was to the proposals and to the reasons and basis of the proposals
considered by the Minister.
The Delegates had to make their own inquiries and
form their own views upon the Minister’s proposals, citing amongst other
decisions, Applicant VEAL of 2002 v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs (2005) 225 CLR 88; [2005] HCA 72 at
[26] (par 10(a) and (c), pp 7-8, outline submissions of applicants in closing,
31 May 2016).
- The
applicants thirdly submitted that it is impossible to inquire into a proposal
unless the reasons for and the evidentiary basis
of it is at least disclosed to
the persons affected, so as to give such persons an opportunity to comment on
the proposal (p 13,
submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016). The applicants
submitted that the Minister did not provide the affected councils or members
of
the public with the undisclosed KPMG material, which explained and demonstrated
the basis of the proposal.
- The
applicants fourthly submitted that the Delegates were prevented from making
informed inquiry by the Minister failing to make available
to the Delegates the
undisclosed KPMG material (par 10(a), p 7, outline submissions of applicants in
closing, 31 May 2016).
- The
second ground of challenge was that each meeting convened by each Delegate was
not an inquiry at all but a restricted meeting
with those members of the public
who were able to register and allowed to speak. A restricted opportunity to
speak at which many
people were unable to speak or were limited from speaking or
were excluded is not an “inquiry” according to law (par
10, p 7,
outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016). The applicants
summarised the evidence of the arrangements for
registration of speakers before
the inquiries and the arrangements for speaking at the inquiries held by the
Delegates (pp 13-15,
submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- In
relation to Oberon, the only inquiry meeting was held at Oberon Showground on 4
February 2016 from 1.00pm to 4.00pm. The Delegate
said “this inquiry is
going to be very structured”. There was a schedule of registered speakers,
with time limits and
warning bells after 2 minutes. They were told that they
could speak for 3 to 5 minutes and then the time was reduced to 3 minutes
to
maximise the opportunity to speak. There were 84 registered speakers who were
told that “[t]he process requires that we
complete by the advertised
time”. Intending speakers were encouraged not to speak if someone else had
said what they were going
to say. If an intending speaker had written material
but was unable to “cover” the topic in a speech, the person was
asked to submit it online or by post. Throughout the meeting the facilitator
interrupted speakers urging them to finish, to give
up their spot or not to take
up valuable time. The inquiry ended peremptorily at 4.00pm “for that
process reason” even
though at least two more speakers intended to speak,
and these were dealt with by “alternative” means. The Delegate
acknowledged
that everyone “has done the hard job of cutting back their
speeches” and thanked those who “decided not to speak”.
- In
relation to Cabonne, the only inquiry meeting was held in Molong on 5 February
2016 at 9.00am until 12 noon. The facilitator of
the inquiry stated
“[w]e’ve got an official 3 hour window”. There were 106
speakers registered to speak, with 3
minutes each. Registration was by the
website or by the 1300 telephone number. The allocated time was substantially
less than 3 minutes
and many missed out at the “request” of the
facilitator or were asked to withdraw. The Council Boundary Review website
under
the heading “public inquiry registration for Cabonne” stated that as
at 1 February 2016 “registrations to
speak ... have now closed”.
Further, halfway through the inquiry at the Molong RSL Club at 10.30am, the
intending speakers
were told “for legislative reasons we have to finish
this meeting officially at the advertised time [12 noon]”. It also
apparent that others who sought registration were prevented from doing so as
registration was cut off. The Delegate at the end apologised
for not allowing
all persons wishing to speak to do so.
- In
relation to Gundagai, the only inquiry meeting was held in Gundagai District
Services Club on 4 February 2016 between 2.00pm and
5.00pm. Government officials
at Gundagai required intending speakers to register again. The Delegate said
that “your community
... [has] topped the State as far as registered
speakers”. There were over 140 registered speakers. The applicants
submitted
that many would have missed out. The Delegate said, “on legal
advice”, that the minimum time to speak is 3 minutes. He
acknowledged that
some would be “disappointed”. Gundagai registrations to speak closed
on 1 February 2016. The Council
Boundary Review website stated that
“registrations to speak ... have now closed ...”. The applicants
submitted that many
who chose to register in the last three days before the
meeting would have missed out. Part way through the program the Delegate
said
“I’m also mindful that I’m under legal obligation ... I cannot
extend over five o’clock”. At least
four registered speakers missed
out on speaking. The Delegate then said that they could speak with him if they
wished “but
it would not be part of the public inquiry” but only
“a conversation with me”. The Delegate then stated the names
and
said “I’m sorry”.
- The
applicants submitted that these limitations on members of the public speaking at
the inquiry caused each inquiry not to be an
inquiry under s 263(2A) at
all.
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondent rejected both grounds on which the applicants submitted that there
were no inquiries held under s 263(2B) of the Act.
- As
to the first ground, that the process adopted was not an informed or genuine
inquiry into the proposal, the respondents submitted
that the nature of the
“inquiry” to be held by the Delegate is not prescribed by the Act
(in contrast to a “public
inquiry” in Pt 8 of Ch 13 of the Act). In
Bushell v Secretary of State for the Environment [1980] UKHL 1; [1981] AC 75, the House
of Lords held that, in the absence of statutory rules as to the conduct of a
“local inquiry” to be held in
accordance with a statute, in relation
to a proposed motorway, the procedure to be followed was a matter of discretion
for the executive
officer empowered to hold that inquiry. In that case, Lord
Diplock warned against “over-judicialising” such inquiries
by
insisting on the observance of the procedures of a court of justice (at 95, 97)
and suggested that such inquiries ought to be
as informal as was consistent with
achieving the objects of the inquiry (cited with approval in Kioa v West
(1985) 159 CLR 550; [1985] HCA 81 at 629).
- The
respondents submitted that various features of the Act make clear that the
inquiry required by ss 218F(2) and 263(2A) is not a formal inquiry in the nature
of a coronial inquiry or royal commission, involving summonsing of witnesses,
compulsory
productions of documents, cross-examination, admission or rejection
of evidence and so forth. First, the Boundaries Commission and
Departmental
Chief Executive do not have the powers needed to conduct a formal inquiry of
that kind. Secondly, the Act does confer
such powers on commissioners charged
with undertaking what the Act describes as “public inquiries” (see s
438U and generally
Pt 8 of Ch 13 of the Act). The distinction must be taken to
be a conscious one by the drafters. Thirdly, s 264 provides that a person is not
to be represented by an Australian lawyer or a person acting for a reward in
proceedings before the
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive.
The procedures typically engaged in a coronial inquiry or royal commission
would
be completely inappropriate, and in many cases unjust, in those circumstances.
The present statutory context is one where Lord
Diplock’s observations in
Bushell v Secretary of State for the Environment are apposite. The manner
in which the Delegates went about their task did not fall short of meeting the
statutory description of “inquiry”
(pars 67-69, pp 24-25,
respondents’ summary of argument, 23 May 2016).
- The
respondents next submitted that the inquiries were conducted by the Delegates in
a genuine and appropriate manner. The respondents
also summarised how each
inquiry was conducted (pars 70-80, pp 25-28, respondents’ summary of
argument, 23 May 2016).
- In
relation to Oberon, two public meetings were held on 4 February 2016: one at
Oberon Showground from 1.00pm to 4.00pm and another
at Panthers Bathurst, from
7.00pm to 10.00pm. Eighty four people registered to speak and 313 registered to
attend at the Oberon meeting.
Of those, 54 spoke and 242 attended. The Delegate
noted various reasons why a person registered to speak or attend might not speak
or attend. The organisations who spoke at the meeting included Oberon
Council.
- Twenty
one people spoke and 59 people attended the Bathurst meeting. A large number of
Oberon residents, as well as the Oberon Mayor
attended the Bathurst meeting. The
Oberon Anti-Amalgamation Committee spoke at the Bathurst meeting.
- The
transcript of the Oberon meeting establishes that:
- (a) at the
beginning of the meeting the Delegate stressed that her role was an
“impartial one”, that she was at the meeting
“to gather
facts” and that “[t]he main purpose of this public inquiry is to
provide members of the public with
an opportunity to provide their views on the
proposal directly to me”;
- (b) the
Delegate informed members of the public that a 3 minute time limit would be
imposed. However, the Delegate also noted that
“[t]he public inquiry is
one step in the process”, that written submissions had been invited, and
that “in addition
to having the opportunity to speak at this public
inquiry, members of the public may provide their views on the merger proposal by
making a written submission”; and
- (c) consistently
with the general statements made at the outset, the Delegate allowed members of
the public to speak for the allotted
time uninterrupted between the start of the
meeting and 4.00pm. The facilitator explained to attendees at the meeting that
it was
important for the meeting to conclude at 4.00pm. The Delegate observed at
the end of the meeting that she had listened carefully
and had taken notes and
that a transcript would be prepared.
- In
relation to the Cabonne proposal, two public meetings were held on 4 February
2016: one at Blayney Bowling Club from 9.00am until
12 noon and another at
Orange Ex-Services Club from 4.00pm until 7.00pm. A third meeting was held on 5
February 2016 at Molong RSL
Club from 9.00am until 12 noon (the Cabonne
meeting).
- At
the Cabonne meeting, 62 people spoke and the Delegate observed that the speakers
almost unanimously opposed the merger proposals.
In addition to the Mayor of
Cabonne Council, the organisations who spoke at the meeting included the Cabonne
Anti-Amalgamation Committee.
- At
the beginning of the Cabonne meeting, the Delegate explained the nature and
purpose of the meeting as follows:
The main purpose of today is for you to provide your views to me on the merger
proposal. I’d very much like that to be done
based on the facts and the
evidence that you want to bring to the table. It’s not a question and
answer session. It is your
opportunity today to give me the views of your
community regarding the proposal ...
So what’s my role? My role is to examine and report on the proposal and it
is an impartial one. I am not an advocate for the
proposal. It’s been put
forward by the Minister for Local Government. I’m not against it.
I’m not for it. I’m
here to hear your views. Ultimately I need to
prepare a report. I need to make recommendations on the proposal but right now
I’m
in inquiry mode. I’m finding out what people think about it.
I’m finding out what the facts and the evidence are.
- The
transcript of the Cabonne meeting also establishes that:
- (a) the
facilitator informed members of the public that a 3 minute time limit would be
imposed. However, the Delegate explained to
the attendees that residents and
ratepayers had until 28 February 2016 to lodge a written submission and that he
was “very
keen” to receive those submissions;
- (b) consistently
with the general statements made at the outset, the Delegate allowed members of
the public to speak for the allotted
time uninterrupted between the start and 12
noon;
- (c) the
Delegate spoke to individuals at the close of the meeting who had not been
reached during the allocated period; and
- (d) the
Delegate observed at the end of the meeting that he had listened carefully to
the submissions, including the concerns over
the KPMG analysis and that he would
consider the submissions when preparing his report.
- In
relation to the Gundagai proposal, two public meetings were held on 4 February
2016. One at the Coota Club, from 9.00am to 12 noon
and another at Gundagai
District Services Club from 2.00pm to 5.00pm (‘the Gundagai
meeting’).
- At
the Gundagai meeting, 147 people registered to speak and 244 registered to
attend. On the day, the total attendance was 281 people
and 71 speakers
addressed the Delegate. The organisations who spoke at the meeting included
various Gundagai community organisations.
- The
transcript of the Gundagai meeting establishes that:
- (a) at the
beginning of the meeting the Delegate stressed that he was “not an
advocate for the proposal”, he was judging
the Gundagai proposal “in
an impartial way in accordance with s 263 of [the Act]” and that
“the main purpose of this inquiry is to provide members of the public with
an opportunity to provide
their views on the proposal directly to me which I
will consider, as I said, in an impartial manner”;
- (b) the
Delegate informed members of the public that a 3 minute time limit would be
imposed “to allow as many people as possible
to speak” and also
informed members of the public that “submissions made in writing will have
equal value to me”;
- (c) the
Delegate “appeared engaged and appeared to be listening”;
- (d) consistently
with the general statements made at the outset, the Delegate allowed members of
the public to speak for the allotted
time uninterrupted between the start of the
meeting and 5.00pm. The Delegate explained to attendees at the meeting that it
was important
for the meeting to close at 5.00pm. The Delegate made himself
available after 5.00pm at the venue of the Gundagai meeting to speak
with four
people individually whose allocated speaking time was not reached;
- (e) at the end
of the meeting, the Delegate repeated his observation that any submissions made
in writing “carry equal weight”
to those made orally.
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ argument that any limitations on
speaking at each inquiry caused the inquiry not to
be an inquiry under s 263(2A)
of the Act. There is nothing in the concept of an inquiry that requires persons
be given an unlimited opportunity to make oral submissions.
Limiting the time
available to persons to make submissions did not deprive what would otherwise be
an “inquiry” of that
character. The evidence established that the
attendees at the inquiries were treated fairly, notwithstanding the imposition
of time
limits, because it was made clear that written submissions could also be
submitted and would be considered by the Delegates in their
examination of the
proposals (par 88, p 25, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
Valid inquiries were held
- The
applicants have not established that the inquiry held by each Delegate did not
meet the statutory description or the requirements
of the inquiry required to be
held under s 263(2A) of the Act on either of the two grounds argued by the
applicants.
- I
do not agree with the applicants’ interpretation that an inquiry under s
263(2A) demands the investigation and interrogation by the Delegates contended
for by the applicants. As I held in Woollahra Municipal Council v Minister
for Local Government at [99]-[102], the inquiry required to be held under s
263(2A) is not itself the examination of the proposal that is required to be
undertaken under s 263(1); rather, the inquiry is held for the purpose of
exercising the function of such an examination. This means that the inquiry that
is held under s 263(2A) is not itself required to be conducted as an examination
of the proposal that has been referred. The obligation under s 263(2A) is to
hold an inquiry, not to inquire in the sense of examine.
- Section
263 does not prescribe the procedure by which an inquiry under s 263(2A) is to
be held. Where the section is silent as to the procedure to be followed at the
inquiry, that procedure, within such limits
that are necessarily imposed by its
qualifying for the description “inquiry”, is left to the discretion
of the person
holding the inquiry: Bushell v Secretary of State for the
Environment at 94-95.
- The
Delegates exercised that discretion to adopt a procedure for the orderly and
efficient conduct of the inquires that they held,
including requesting persons
wishing to speak at the inquiry to register beforehand, imposing time limits on
each speaker, allowing
speakers to speak without interruption, and listening to
rather than questioning the speakers. The adoption of such a procedure for
the
conduct of each inquiry did not cause the inquiry to not qualify as an inquiry
under s 263. Furthermore, I do not accept that the restrictions actually imposed
by each Delegate at the inquiries were so great an impingement
on peoples’
ability to speak at the inquiry as to cause the inquiry not to be an inquiry
under s 263(2A).
- I
do not accept that the Delegates were obliged by s 263 to find out what the
responses of all persons affected by the proposals were to the proposals. No
doubt, the Delegates did find out
what were the responses to the proposals by
those persons who chose to speak at the inquiry. However, the Delegates did not
fail
to hold an inquiry under s 263(2A) by not finding out what were the
responses to the proposals of those persons who did not attend or did not speak
at each inquiry.
- I
also reject the applicants’ argument that the inquiries held by the
Delegates could not meet the description of an inquiry
under s 263(2A) because
the Minister had failed to make available his reasons or evidentiary basis for
each proposal he made, including making available
certain KPMG materials.
- Sections
218F and 263 of the Act do not require the Minister to provide reasons or the
evidentiary basis for the Minister’s decision to make a proposal
under s
218E(1) or to refer a proposal under s 218F(1) for examination and report. The
Minister’s only obligation is to refer the proposal, on the making or
receiving of the proposal,
to the Boundaries Commission or the Departmental
Chief Executive for examination and report. The Boundaries Commission or
Departmental
Chief Executive is obliged, in the circumstances stated in s
263(2A), to hold an inquiry in relation to the proposal referred by the
Minister. There is no obligation on the Minister to direct or to
cause an
inquiry to be held. There is no obligation on the Minister to provide the
reasons for or the evidentiary basis of the making
of the proposal to the
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive who is to hold the
inquiry.
- Section
263 did not require that all key material relied on by the Minister in making
the proposals that were referred for examination and report
be made available to
the Delegates holding the inquiries or to persons attending or speaking at the
inquiries.
- Hence,
any non-provision by the Minister of his reasons or evidentiary basis for making
the proposals or any other material, including
KPMG material, cannot cause the
inquiry held by the Delegates not to be an inquiry under s 263(2A).
- I
reject the challenge to the holding of the inquiry under s 263(2A) of the
Act.
The examination of the proposals
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants argued that there was no examination of the proposals in accordance
with s 263(1) of the Act because the Delegates did not “examine”
each of the 11 factors specified in s 263(3) with regard to each proposal.
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegates were required to examine and report on
each proposal “rigorously, fairly and in
a manner which indicates that
they understand and have evaluated each factor and have weighed up arguments
presented to them”
(par 9, p 5, outline submissions in closing, 31 May
2016).
- The
applicants argued that the Act, and s 263(3) in particular, imposes a
requirement to examine each and every factor in s 263(3); it is not sufficient
to consider one or several (T 27/5/16, pp 11 and 14). The Act
“unusually imposes a requirement to make
a finding on every question of
fact after examining and reporting on each such factor and which the Parliament
has stipulated is
material” (p 3, applicants’ supplementary reply
points, 6 June 2016). The applicants cited Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323; [2001] HCA 30 at 330-331,
346.
- The
applicants argued that, notwithstanding the language used in s 263(3) that the
Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive
is to “have regard
to” the factors when “considering” the matter referred (the
proposal), the obligation
is to “examine” each of the factors. The
applicants submitted that the opening words of s 263(3) (“[w]hen
considering
any matter referred to it ...”) refers back to the matter
referred for examination and report under s 263(1). Hence, what is
required is
not consideration but examination (T 27/5/16, pp 13-14).
- The
applicants submitted that the obligation in s 263(3) requires all factors in s
263(3) to be given “heightened consideration
sufficient to be an adequate
examination”. The applicants cited Insurance Australia Ltd v Motor
Accidents Authority (NSW) [2007] NSWCA 314 at [40]; Elias v Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (2002) 123 FCR 499; [2002] FCA 845 at 512;
Parramatta City Council v Hale (1982) 47 LGRA 319 at 339; Zhang v
Canterbury City Council (2001) 51 NSWLR 589; [2001] NSWCA 167 at 601 (par
9(a), p 5, outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegates were required to treat each factor as a
fundamental element in or focal point of the examination
process, invoking the
language in Zhang v Canterbury City Council at [75]. (The
applicants did, however, also cite Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
v Khadgi (2010) 190 FCR 248; [2010] FCAFC 145 at [61] where a full Federal
Court agreed with Sackville J in Singh v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs (2001) 109 FCR 152; [2001] FCA 389 at [54] that the
expression “have regard to” is capable of different meanings
depending on the context: it may require the decision
maker merely to consider
specified matters rather than treat them as fundamental elements in the decision
making process) (par 9(d),
p 6, outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31
May 2016).
- The
applicants argued that examination of each factor as a fundamental element or
focal point requires a “proper, genuine and
realistic” evaluation of
the merits, including the reasons and evidence supporting each factor with
respect to the proposal.
The examination cannot be “a tick a box exercise
of consideration” (par 9(c), pp 5-6, outline submissions of applicants
in
closing, 31 May 2016 and T 27/5/16, pp 18 and 20).
- The
applicants noted that, in relation to the Oberon proposal, the Boundaries
Commission identified at least one factor that was not
adequately examined by
the Delegate (namely factor (e5): the “need to ensure that the opinions of
each of the diverse communities
of the resulting area or areas are effectively
represented”).
- Because
on the applicants’ argument there must be examination of each factor in s
263(3), the applicants submitted that this
failure to examine one factor in s
263(3) meant that there was no examination according to law of the Oberon
proposal (par 9(f),
p 6, outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May
2016 and T 31/5/16, p 62).
- The
applicants submitted that other factors in s 263(3) were not examined adequately
by the Delegates in their reports:
- (a) for the
Oberon proposal: the factors in s 263(3)(a), (b), (d), (e), (e1) to (e5) and
(f);
- (b) for the
Cabonne proposal: the factors in s 263(3)(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (e1) to (e5)
and (f); and
- (c) for the
Gundagai proposal: the factors in s 263(3)(a), (b), (d), (e), (e1) to (e5) and
(f) (par 9(g), p 6, outline submissions
of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016; p
17, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- In
elaboration, the applicants provided with their written submissions three tables
commenting on each Delegate’s examination
of the s 263(3) factors for the
Oberon proposal, the Cabonne proposal and the Gundagai
proposal.
The particular challenges to the examination of the
Oberon proposal
- In
relation to the Oberon proposal, the applicants argued that the Delegate failed
to examine the factors in s 263(3) in the following
respects.
- For
s 263(3)(a), the applicants submitted that the Delegate “did not conduct
an adequate examination” in three ways. First,
the Delegate did not
examine either the financial disadvantages or the diseconomies of scale. The
applicants referred to the Delegate’s
discussion in her report of
economies and diseconomies of scale at pp 19-20:
‘Economies of scale’ is an economic term proposing that there is a
linear correlation (relationship) between increasing
scale and decreasing unit
costs of production up to a point where costs start to increase and diseconomies
of scale arise.
Efficiencies from economies of scale are one potential source of financial
benefit arising from a merger scenario. Because of the
diversity of functions
undertaken by local government, economies of scale are best considered in
relation to specific functions rather
than across the whole organisation. An
example might be governance, where economies of scale might apply on the basis
that a large
council servicing many ratepayers is likely to have lower costs per
ratepayer than a small council servicing fewer ratepayers.
Conversely, diseconomies of scale may arise if a geographically large merged
council with an extensive road network centralises road
maintenance and the
maintenance cost per kilometre of road becomes higher because of the time and
fuel costs of transporting equipment
and personnel from a central location.
In general, lower population densities and a large geographical area may impede
economies of scale but may not create diseconomies
of scale.
- The
applicants argued that this discussion showed that the Delegate misunderstood
and misdirected herself as to the question she was
examining in relation to
diseconomies of scale. The applicants argued that the Delegate wrongly conflated
“economies of density
with economies of scale and ... geographical scale
with economic scale” (pp 2-3, applicants’ table of Oberon
Delegate’s
consideration of s 263(3) factors (‘Oberon table’)
and T 31/5/16, p 63).
- Second,
the applicants argued that the Delegate did not adequately consider the factor
in s 263(3)(a) because she made numerous wrong
findings of fact. The applicants
submitted that the Delegate erroneously found that savings in materials and
contracts might exist
through an amalgamated council procuring through the
Central Region Organisation of Councils (‘CENTROC’) despite
acknowledging
that Oberon Council already procured through CENTROC. The Delegate
ought to have found, therefore, that there were no savings in
materials and
contracts arising from the Oberon proposal (p 3, Oberon table and T 31/5/16, p
63). (This submission does not adequately
summarise what the Delegate found. In
fact, the Delegate found that direct potential merger benefits may arise from
“[e]fficiencies
in procurement from increased scale in procuring goods and
services may allow a more favourable unit cost to be negotiated”
(p 17,
Oberon Delegate’s report). The Delegate responded to submitters’
comments on KPMG’s financial modelling
by stating that “[t]he
assumption in relation to modelling efficiencies from materials and contracts
expenditure appears conservative,
notwithstanding statements that Council
efficiency already benefits from bulk procurement through [CENTROC]. Even if no
efficiencies
were to be achieved through this route (which is unlikely) this
represents a relatively minor component of overall savings”
(Attachment G,
p 1, Oberon Delegate’s report)).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegate factually erred in accepting “KPMG
modelled efficiencies of 5% for staff redeployment”
as a saving. The
Delegate considered that this represented “an opportunity for resources to
be used for another purpose rather
than translating to a reduction in staff
numbers” (Attachment G, p 1, Oberon Delegate’s report). The
applicants argued
that “efficiencies redeployed (spent) are not savings at
all” (p 3, Oberon table).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegate was factually incorrect in dismissing the
data envelopment analysis in Oberon Council’s
submission to the Delegate
on the basis that “[i]nsufficient background information on methodology or
assumptions was provided
on the Data Envelopment Analysis” (Attachment G,
p 2, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants argued that Oberon Council
had referred the Delegate to “evidence based analysis” and
literature on Data Envelopment Analysis (p 3, Oberon table).
- The
applicants were critical of the Delegate’s comment that “[a] merged
council with a larger revenue base and more financial
flexibility should be
financially sustainable within its current rate base” (p 22, Oberon
Delegate’s report). The applicants
argued that this was factually wrong
because “in fact, a larger revenue base is likely to reduce the financial
sustainability
of a merged council if it: (i) came with responsibilities greater
than the increase in revenue; or (ii) had a higher concentration
of revenue thus
making the council more susceptible to economic shock. There was no such
examination.” (p 4, Oberon table).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegate was factually in error in stating that
“[g]iven the financial positions of both Councils,
there should be no
financial disadvantage to residents and ratepayers from combining balance
sheets” (p 23, Oberon Delegate’s
report). However, the applicants
argued that the analysis contained in Oberon Council’s submission to the
Delegate showed that
the Oberon proposal would result in a transfer of wealth
which would see Bathurst residents better off and Oberon residents worse
off (p
4, Oberon table and T 31/5/16, pp 66-67).
- The
applicants argued that, notwithstanding the Delegate acknowledging that
submitters had criticised aspects of KPMG’s financial
modelling that
underpinned the estimates of benefits of the Oberon proposal (see Attachment G,
p 1, Oberon Delegate’s report),
the Delegate erroneously relied on and
referred to the merger benefits set out in the proposal document as the basis
for her analysis
of this factor (p 5, Oberon table).
- Third,
the applicants argued that the Delegate failed to undertake inquiries or
analysis of certain matters. The applicants were critical
of the
Delegate’s comment that “it is considered reasonable to rely on the
KPMG analysis of a net benefit over 20 years.
It is likely that costs have been
somewhat underestimated and benefits somewhat overestimated as a result of the
use of assumptions
(p 22, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants argue
that an “adequate examination would have quantified the amounts
in
doubt” (p 4, Oberon table).
- The
applicants referred to the Delegate’s comment that “Oberon
Council’s special rate variation further complicates
comparisons and may
create inequities towards the end of the rate path freeze period, however this
cannot be predicted without undertaking
a detailed ‘like with like’
comparison” (p 22, Oberon Delegate’s report) and submitted that the
Delegate
should have undertaken that detailed ‘like with like’
comparison (p 4, Oberon table).
- For
s 263(3)(b), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in four ways. First,
despite the Delegate noting
that “[t]here are clearly demographic and geographic differences between
the two local government
areas driven by the predominately urban focus of
Bathurst and the predominately rural focus of Oberon”, the Delegate stated
that “these differences need to be considered in the context of
differences within existing LGAs and with the rest of NSW”
(p 29, Oberon
Delegate’s report). The applicants submitted that the latter statement was
not a correct reading of the legislation,
adding to what the legislation states
(p 5, Oberon table; T 31/5/16, p 67).
- Second,
the applicants referred to the Delegate’s comment that “[i]n the
absence of detailed information for each LGA,
it is not possible to determine
whether the differences between the two LGAs are comparable to differences which
already exist within
each LGA” (pp 29-30, Oberon Delegate’s report).
The applicants submitted that if there was inadequate information, the
Delegate
should have sought out adequate information, such as statistical area data
available from the Australian Bureau of Statistics
(pp 5-6, Oberon table; T
31/5/16, p 67).
- Third,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s explanation that “[t]he
different key drivers of education and health
care in Bathurst LGA and the
agriculture/forestry and transport/warehousing in Oberon LGA reflect the
difference in service centre
size” (p 30, Oberon Delegate’s report).
The applicants argued that this was not an adequate examination “because
the legislation simply asks the [Delegate] to assess the cohesion in the
communities not to attempt to explain differences away”
(p 6, Oberon
table). The applicants also criticised the Delegate’s conclusion that,
although both local government areas “have
settlements with unique
characteristics and a sense of identity”, “[t]his is not necessarily
an impediment to shared
communities of interest in a merged council and may
enhance the opportunity to build social capital across the region by increasing
exposure of residents to new ideas and partnership opportunities” (p 31,
Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants submitted
that “[t]his is
a trivialisation of the differences not an adequate investigation or conclusion
– in effect, it is submitted
that what the [Delegate] is attempting to
argue is that differences, should they exist, will always be of no account as
they present
new opportunities. This arguably is a perverse interpretation of s
263(3)(b)” (p 6, Oberon table).
- Fourth,
the applicants submitted that the Delegate made a factual error in stating that
Bathurst would be the transport and service
hub with key arterial roads,
including the Tablelands Way (p 26, Oberon Delegate’s report), when the
Tablelands Way does not
in fact travel through Bathurst (p 6, Oberon table; T
31/5/16, p 67).
- For
s 263(3)(d), the applicants submitted that the Delegate “did not conduct
an adequate examination” because of various
factually erroneous findings
and conclusions. First, the applicants criticised the Delegate’s statement
that “[i]n the
presence of widespread publicity for the opportunity to
comment, the fact that a significant majority of the population of both areas
chose not to comment may reflect indifference to the proposed merger” (p
35, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants
argued that this was
factually erroneous because Oberon Council had provided in its submission to the
Delegate “a scientific
randomised survey citing 85.8% of [Oberon]
residents wished to continue as a stand-alone council”. The applicants
also submitted
that the Delegate’s conclusions about the number of people
who had made submissions was misleading – Oberon LGA had a
higher
proportion of its population providing submissions than Bathurst LGA had (p 7,
Oberon table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s conclusion that “[t]he
strong opposition to a merger demonstrated in
submissions primarily by residents
of Oberon LGA should not be seen as a threshold impediment to a merger, but is
important to consider
in the context of a decision on whether or not to proceed
with a merger” (p 36, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants
argued that “[t]his is arguably a perverse interpretation of s 263(3)(d)
given that the [Delegate] in attempting to argue that
should differences exist,
then they do not need to be taken into account, which defeats the entire purpose
of the examination of
this factor” (p 7, Oberon table).
- Third,
the applicants argued that the Delegate’s statement that
“[a]ttitudes of residents and ratepayers to the proposed
merger are
polarised” (p 36, Oberon Delegate’s report) was factually incorrect
given that only a small number of submitters
from Oberon (i.e. 2%) supported the
merger (p 8, Oberon table).
- Fourth,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s evaluation of the results of a
telephone poll of Oberon residents commissioned
by Oberon Council and included
in its submission to the Delegate. The Delegate referred in her report to one of
the questions asked
and the responses given to that question, but did not refer
to other questions and responses (see p 35, Oberon Delegate’s report).
The
applicants criticised the Delegate’s selectivity and downplaying of the
integrity of the telephone poll. The applicants
argued that the Delegate should
have included in her report the other questions and responses (p 8, Oberon
table).
- Fifth,
the applicants criticised the failure of the Delegate to consider in her report
the fact raised by Oberon Council in its submission
to the Delegate that an
overwhelming majority of the 600 people who attended a public meeting in Oberon
on 9 November 2015 opposed
any forced merger (p 8, Oberon table).
- For
s 263(3)(e), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in four ways. First,
the applicant submitted that
the Delegate’s conclusions that “it would be up to the community to
ensure that appropriate
representatives are elected” and “[i]t would
be important for a merged council to implement supporting mechanisms to
ensure
that all communities are able to have their views heard, particularly to address
the concerns of smaller and more isolated
communities” (p 40, Oberon
Delegate’s report), revealed an inadequate examination of this factor. The
applicants argued
that this was “arguably a perverse reading of the
legislation which seeks to explain away any differences noted, which defeats
the
whole purpose of examining the factor” (p 9, Oberon table; T 31/5/16, p
69).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s conclusion that: “It would
be important for a merged council to implement
supporting mechanisms to ensure
that all communities are able to have their views heard, particularly to address
the concerns of
smaller and more isolated communities. These could include
delegation to properly resourced and supported s 355 committees and the
rotation
of council meetings around the area”. (p 40, Oberon Delegate’s
report). The applicants argued that this was
not an adequate examination because
“the legislation clearly asks the Delegate to assess ‘the elected
representation’
not delegated committees of unelected
representatives” (p 9, Oberon table).
- Third,
the applicants noted that the Delegate recommended that “9 councillors
could be considered appropriate in a merged council”
(p 40, Oberon
Delegate’s report) but the Delegate did not identify how many of these
should represent the former Oberon local
government area (p 9, Oberon table).
The applicants argued that the Delegate also did not consider if, on the basis
of the enrolled
voters in the last local government elections, only one
councillor will represent the whole Oberon local government area, how the
Oberon
residents and ratepayers could be adequately represented (p 9, Oberon
table).
- Fourth,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s finding that “[t]he ratio
of representation in a merged council would
be comparable to other local
government areas of similar population size and geographic spread such as
Clarence Valley Council (p
40, Oberon Delegate’s report) despite being
provided with a critique by Oberon Council in its submission to the Delegate
that
such a comparison was inappropriate (pp 9-10, Oberon table).
- For
s 263(3)(e1), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in three ways. First,
the applicants referred to the
Delegate’s summary of Oberon Council’s submission that there was
“[i]nconsistency
of planning controls between the two councils” (p
43, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants submitted that the Delegate
failed to consider “the consequences and difficulties for the merged
councils with alternate codes in operation for different
parts of the new
LGA”. The applicants submitted that “there will be no regulatory
efficiency for the [Oberon-Bathurst]
merged council where two contrasting
planning codes are in operation and where [Bathurst Council] is unlikely to
agree to relinquish
its current development controls” (p 10, Oberon table;
T 31/5/16, p 70).
- Second,
the applicants submitted that the Delegate “failed to refer to the
participation of [Oberon Council] in regional groups
(such as the Central
Western Planners Group) which work proactively in developing consistency with
regard to regional planning guidelines”
(pp 10-11, Oberon table).
- Third,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s failure to give reasons for her
conclusion. The Delegate concluded that “[a]
merger is likely to have a
positive impact on the ability to provide adequate, equitable and appropriate
services and facilities,
provided that there are effective mechanisms for
community input to prioritisation which address the needs of small communities
...”
(p 44, Oberon Delegate’s report) but, the applicants submitted,
the Delegate gave no indication as to how this could be provided
(p 11, Oberon
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e2), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in four respects.
First, the applicants submitted
that the Delegate’s comment that “[d]ecisions on the new
organisational structure and
approach to change would be a matter for a new
council ...” (p 46, Oberon Delegate’s report) revealed an inadequate
examination.
The applicants submitted that the Delegate was required to have
regard to the factors in s 263(3), “not to simply fob the decision
off to
the new council entity” (p 11, Oberon table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s conclusion that “[s]hould a
merger proceed, statutory protections are
likely to ameliorate short term
negative impacts, as would a well-designed and managed organisational and change
strategy”
(p 47, Oberon Delegate’s report). The applicants submitted
that such a strategy may or may not be forthcoming. The onus was
on the Delegate
“to articulate the practices which she felt would mitigate the impact on
the employment of the staff”
(p 11, Oberon table; T 31/5/16, p 70).
- Third,
the applicants argued that the Delegate failed to address in her report the
“major error” that Oberon Council had
identified in its submission
to the Delegate regarding the use by the NSW Government and KPMG of the
incorrect staff award for staff
redundancies i.e. the model used the Federal
award and not the State award. The Delegate did not address this error in her
report
and did not bring it to the attention of the Boundaries Commission (p 11,
Oberon table).
- Fourth,
the applicants repeated their earlier argument that the monetary benefits
relating to savings derived from staff change is
a false saving as in rural
centres there can be no reduction in staff numbers (p 12, Oberon table; T
31/5/16, p 71).
- For
s 263(3)(e3), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in two ways. First,
the Delegate’s conclusion
that “[r]isks of decreased representation and servicing of Oberon
LGA’s rural areas in
a merged council are balanced by opportunities for
improved representation and services in rural parts of Bathurst LGA” (p
48, Oberon Delegate’s report) revealed an inadequate examination. The
applicants submitted that “[t]his weighing up of
benefits for one rural
community against losses of another rural community is not what the legislation
directs the Delegate to have
regard to. Rather the [Delegate] is adding
to the text of s 263(3)(e3) in carrying out her examination thus” (p 12,
Oberon table).
- Second,
the applicants argued that the Delegate failed to acknowledge in her report that
“the rural hub of [Oberon] will be
subsumed by a city centric council
which is 40 km away and geographically isolated from it” (p 12, Oberon
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e4), the applicants argued that the Delegate “did not conduct an
adequate examination” in two ways. First,
the Delegate failed to address
in her report the point made by Oberon Council in its submission to the Delegate
that “ward
structures only make sense when geographically defined areas of
similar voter population can be identified and where there is proposed
to be a
merged council of 9 councillors [and] in the case of [Oberon] this will probably
mean on the basis of enrolled voters in
the last [local government] elections
that only one councillor will represent the whole [Oberon] LGA” (p 12,
Oberon table;
T 31/5/16, p 71).
- Second,
the applicants submitted that the Delegate “merely hypothesises”
that “[w]ard boundaries could be drawn
in such a way that there are two
predominately urban wards and one predominately rural, with three Councillors
elected from each
ward” (p 50, Oberon Delegate’s report). The
applicants submitted that, first, “it is not at all obvious that the
suggested boundaries could be drawn up in such a manner”; second,
“the suggestion shows a clear ignorance of s 211(2)
and s 224A(1) of the
Act” and third, the Delegate’s “proposal would give rural
voters just half of the representation
afforded to the urban residents and this
disenfranchisement could in no way be considered ‘desirable’”
(p 13, Oberon
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e5), the applicants submitted that the Delegate failed to adequately
consider this factor, as the Boundaries Commission
had found in its review of
the Delegate’s report (p 13, Oberon table; T 31/5/16, p 73).
- For
s 263(3)(f), the applicants referred to the Delegate’s statement that
“[c]omments were received on a variety of matters
which were considered
not to be relevant to examination and reporting on the Proposal” (p 56,
Oberon Delegate’s report).
The applicants submitted, however, that there
were two matters, being “(i) the potential for subsequent de-amalgamation
and
(ii) absence of a determination by IPART on exactly how the government might
be able to keep its promise of a four year rate freeze”,
that “were,
in fact, most salient to the Delegate’s deliberations” (pp 13-14,
Oberon table). As to de-amalgamation,
the applicants referred to Oberon
Council’s submission to the Delegate arguing that the Oberon proposal
carried a high risk
of subsequent de-amalgamation, in which event none of the
proposed benefits of the merger would eventuate. As to the second matter,
the
applicants argued that “without being in possession of at least the
interim IPART report it was not possible for the Delegate
to adequately
investigate the matters [to] which she was ‘required to have
regard’” (p 15, Oberon table).
- The
applicants also submitted that the Delegate failed to examine or refer to in her
report the UTS Business Case for Oberon Council,
which was attached to Oberon
Council’s submission to the Delegate.
The particular
challenges to the examination of the Cabonne proposal
- In
relation to the Cabonne proposal, the applicants argued that the Delegate failed
to examine the factors in s 263(3) in the following
respects.
- For
s 263(3)(a), the applicants made similar submissions to those made with respect
to the Oberon Delegate’s examination of
this factor. There was no adequate
examination because the Delegate did not examine the financial disadvantages or
the diseconomies
of scale, in the respects previously submitted (p 3,
applicants’ table of Cabonne Delegate’s consideration of s 263(3)
factors (‘the Cabonne table’)).
- The
applicants also argued that the Delegate focussed on the financial benefits of
the new council and did not examine the financial
disadvantages to the
transferor council area (in this case, the Cabonne local government area) (p 3,
Cabonne table).
- The
applicants argued that the Delegate did not address in his report a number of
matters. The first matter was the opportunities
for improved services and
infrastructure. The proposal document had given as an example of local
infrastructure that could be funded
by merger-generated savings, the upgrading
of water and sewerage systems. However, Cabonne Council had noted in its
submission to
the Delegate that it had already completed two sewerage systems
for two towns and had secured funding to provide potable water to
those towns.
The applicant argued that “this is not a credible opportunity” for
improved infrastructure and “was
not considered by the [Delegate] at all
even though it was raised in the [Cabonne submission]” (p 3, Cabonne
table).
- The
second matter that the applicants argued that the Delegate did not address in
his report was that the proposal document had used
“incorrect revenues and
incorrect asset valuations as identified in the [Cabonne submission]” (p
3, Cabonne table).
- The
third matter that the applicants argued had not been addressed by the Delegate
in his report was that the asset value identified
for Cabonne Council in the
proposal document was $211m less than the amount identified in Cabonne
Council’s financial reports
(p 4, Cabonne table).
- The
fourth matter that the applicants argued was not addressed by the Delegate in
his report was an issue raised by Cabonne Council
in its submission to the
Delegate that there was “confusion around the assumptions of the dollar
values of potential savings
or benefits and the composition of the future
operating revenue and surpluses of the new council” (p 4, Cabonne
table).
- The
fifth matter that the applicants argued was not addressed by the Delegate in his
report was the issue raised by Cabonne Council
in its submission to the Delegate
that the proposal document did not make provision for a facility to house the
new council. The
applicant submitted that efficiencies can only be gained by
creating a single organisation in one place but none of the current office
facilities are capable of housing the new council (p 6, Cabonne table).
- The
sixth matter that the applicants argued that had not been addressed by the
Delegate in his report was the issue raised by Cabonne
Council in its submission
to the Delegate of compensation for travel for staff whose place of work is
changed (p 6, Cabonne table).
- The
applicants also argued that the Delegate failed to examine the claim made in the
proposal document that there would be gross savings
over 20 years of over $19
million in respect of redeployment of back office and administrative functions.
A limited list of assumptions
had been made available to the Delegate, including
in the KPMG Technical Paper, for this claim. “However, there is no
empirical
justification, data or evidence upon which these assumptions are
based. Even though details about these claimed savings were provided
to the
[Delegate] in the [Cabonne submission], the [Delegate] failed to adequately
examine them” (p 5, Cabonne table). The
applicants argued that the
Delegate also failed to examine the issue of the cost of wage harmonisation,
even though it was raised
by Cabonne Council in its submission to the Delegate
(p 6, Cabonne table).
- The
applicants argued that the Delegate failed to consider in his report the
potential impact upon rates for residents and ratepayers
in the Cabonne local
government area beyond the four year NSW Government freeze on rate increases.
Each council had a different rating
structure but the Delegate failed to examine
the impact and detriment to the Cabonne local government area of bringing the
rates
on par. Cabonne Council in its submission to the Delegate had addressed
the potential impacts upon rate changes (pp 6-7, Cabonne
table).
- For
s 263(3)(b), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an adequate
examination because he did not examine “the
rural centre focus of the
[Cabonne] LGA”, in particular, that the “community of interest for
the residents of [Cabonne]
is the rural/agricultural focus of the shire and its
extensions into surrounding shires” (pp 7-8, Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(c), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an adequate
examination because he failed to consider Cabonne
Council’s submission to
the Delegate that the growth of regional centres attracts businesses away from
smaller villages and
that many of the villages within the Cabonne local
government area have an engaged community which is supported and partially
funded
by Cabonne Council (p 8, Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(d), the applicant submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in four ways. First, the applicants
argued that the
Delegate “discounts opposition to a merger in a way that demonstrates
[that] the community attitudes of the
[Cabonne] LGA at the time of the proposal
were disregarded even though the [Delegate] acknowledges [at p 27 of the Cabonne
Delegate’s
report] that resident and ratepayer attitudes are an important
factor” (p 8, Cabonne table).
- Second,
the applicants noted that the Delegate referred to the survey conducted by
Cabonne Council of its residents, 80% of whom voted
to remain as Cabonne Shire,
but the Delegate noted that “70% of households in the Cabonne survey did
not return surveys –
indicating perhaps that they do not hold strong views
one way or the other on the matter” (p 26, Cabonne Delegate’s
report).
The applicants submitted that, notwithstanding that the Delegate
“disparages” the Cabonne survey, he “does not
conduct his own
survey” (p 8, Cabonne table).
- Third,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s view that he did not consider
“it necessary to conduct a plebiscite or
poll on the merged proposal
myself, as allowed by section 265 of the Local Government Act, as I consider
that I have become sufficiently informed of resident and ratepayer views as a
result of this public inquiry and its
processes. I am also concerned that
conducting any such poll would be seen as determinative, when in fact it is
not” (p 27,
Cabonne Delegate’s report).
- Fourth,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s failure to mention in his report
the results of the snap poll conducted by
the Central Western Daily
newspaper on 29 December 2015 in which, of the 500 votes received in 24 hours,
74% voted for Cabonne Council to stay alone (p 9,
Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(e), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an adequate
examination in two ways. First, although the Delegate referred
to the inevitable
consequence of the merger proposal that there would be less councillors per
residents and ratepayers across the
bigger area (p 27, Cabonne Delegate’s
report), the applicants argued that “[t]he suggestions and recommendations
of the
[Delegate] under “Consideration” on pp 28-29 do not provide
an adequate or legislatively enforceable mechanism whereby
this loss of
representation can be addressed” (p 9, Cabonne table).
- Second,
although the Delegate conceded that there was a risk that community committees
and their activities will be “de-funded”
and the services that they
provide will “fold” once the council gets bigger and more remote (p
28, Cabonne Delegate’s
report), the Delegate did not address in his report
the impact of this de-funding and closure of services (pp 9-10, Cabonne
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e1), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in four respects. First, the Delegate’s discussion
in
his report “displays an ignorance of the uniqueness of each of the village
areas in Cabonne and even miss spells [sic] Yeoval
as ‘Yeovil’ (p
10, Cabonne table). Second, the Delegate failed to address in his report the
view put by Cabonne Council
in its submission to the Delegate that “the
business of running the city component of a merged council would dominate the
attention
of the Council”. Third, the Delegate failed to examine in his
report, “the planning regime which governs key services”.
Fourth,
the Delegate failed to address in his report the concern raised in submissions
that many of the community facilities in the
Cabonne local government area,
which are run by volunteer groups and community organisations, may under a
merged council require
administration by paid staff or cease to operate
altogether. The applicants argued that the Delegate failed to examine the impact
the additional costs or closure of these facilities will have on the residents
and ratepayers of Cabonne local government area (p
10, Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(e2), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination because the Delegate failed to examine the number
of staff
employed in each rural centre that would need to be maintained (under s 218CA)
and the impact their ongoing employment would have on the ability to manage a
new council with four separate permanent office bases
and depot locations (p 11,
Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(e3), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination because he failed to adequately address the impact
the
proposal would have in reducing representation and disenfranchising rural
communities and on the current social and volunteer
network in the rural
centres, especially if they close down (pp 12-13, Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(e4), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination for the reasons they gave with respect to s 263(3)(e) and
because the Delegate did not adequately consider “the impact of the
representation issue for [Cabonne] LGA in a merged
council pursuant to the
Proposal other than to conclude that the new council area not be divided into
wards” (p 14, Cabonne
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e5), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination of this factor “but made some motherhood statements
dismissing it by saying ‘it is considered that there is nothing in the
merger proposal that is inimical to representation of
diverse communities and
that in fact the opportunity to create a regional scale council has considerable
potential to be of benefit’”
[p 37, Cabonne Delegate’s
report]. Other than disparaging this statement as a “motherhood
statement”, the applicants
did not say why it was it was in error (p 14,
Cabonne table). The applicants criticised the Delegate’s finding that:
“This
was not a significant issue raised in the submissions, with only
about 4% of written submissions raising the issue ... There was
little
discussion of diversity of culture or ethnicity, perhaps reflecting the
comparatively limited non-English speaking background
in the area (Cabonne
Council submission, p 20)” (p 37, Cabonne Delegate’s report). The
basis of the applicants’
criticism of this finding was not given (p 14,
Cabonne table).
- For
s 263(3)(f), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in three ways. First, the applicants referred
to the
Delegate’s statement that: “As the new council will represent a
regionally significant population of 62,616 people,
with an asset base of $1.2bn
(Merger Proposal, p 7), it is only logical that state and federal governments
will be more receptive
to the role a merged council can play in determining
regional priorities. In my view, it is therefore unquestionably the case that
a
merger will be of immense benefit to the residents of Blayney, Cabonne and
Orange from a strategic capacity viewpoint” (p
37, Cabonne
Delegate’s report). The applicants disagreed with this finding. They said
that it “disregards the actual
interests of Cabonne in a merged council.
It also assumes that Cabonne cannot have strategic capacity or is not currently
a strategically
capable council whereas there is no evidence to support that
assumption. On the contrary, [Cabonne Council] in its submission [to
the
Delegate] provides empirical evidence of its current strategic capability and
capacity” (p 15, Cabonne Council).
- Second,
the applicants referred to the recommendation of the Delegate that “the
new council carefully consider the existing
cash holdings brought to the new
council by the constituent councils and seek equity in expenditure of those
holdings” (p 39,
Cabonne Delegate’s report). The applicants
submitted that the Delegate failed to outline in his report what those cash
holdings
were and clarify what the disadvantages will be to Cabonne residents
and ratepayers if this does not happen (p 15, Cabonne table).
- Third,
the applicants referred to the Delegate’s recommendation that “the
new council ensure some geographic equity in
the expenditure of the Stronger
Communities funding of $15m to be provided by the NSW Government, possibly
proportionate to the relative
population share of the constituent
councils” (p 39, Cabonne Delegate’s report). The applicants argued
that the Delegate
failed to address in his report the minimal benefit to
ratepayers and residents of Cabonne local government area if this occurs since
its population is rural and much smaller than the population of the Orange local
government area (p 16, Cabonne table).
The particular challenges
to the examination of the Gundagai proposal
- In
relation to the Gundagai proposal, the applicants argued that the Delegate
failed to examine the factors in s 263(3) in the following respects.
- For
s 263(3)(a), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an adequate
examination of this factor for similar reasons to those given
in relation to the
Oberon Delegate’s examination of this factor. In particular, the
applicants argued that the Delegate failed
to properly analyse the economies of
scale and diseconomies of scale of the proposal. The applicants gave examples of
where they
said the Delegate had failed to examine economies of scale and
diseconomies of scale.
- One
example of a failure to examine economies of scale was that the Delegate stated
that there would be “[n]et financial savings
of $3 million to the new
council over 20 years (approx. $150,000 per annum)” (p 9, Gundagai
Delegate’s report), but,
the applicants argued, the Delegate failed to
address Gundagai Shire Council’s 10 year strategic plan which showed that
infrastructure improvements and cash reserves will deliver $2.05m annually (p 3,
applicants’
table of Gundagai Delegate’s consideration of s 263(3)
factors (‘Gundagai table’)).
- A
second example given by the applicants was the Delegate’s failure to
address Gundagai Shire Council’s submission to
the Delegate questioning
“the spurious alleged financial benefits of the [Gundagai proposal]”
(p 3, Gundagai table).
- A
third example given by the applicants was that the Delegate mentioned the term
“economies of scale” only once in his
consideration of the factor in
s 263(3)(a) (on p 18 of the Gundagai Delegate’s report) and this was only
in the context of allowing “economies of scale in service
delivery”.
The applicants argued that the Delegate’s “use of the term is not
made in any sense which might suggest
the [Delegate] was aware of what the term
meant or, had in any sense, engaged with the term” (p 13, Gundagai
table).
- With
respect to diseconomies of scale, the applicants submitted that the Delegate did
not make “a single mention of ‘diseconomies
of scale’ in his
entire report outside of direct citations from s 263(3)(a) of [the Act]. It can
only be concluded that the [Delegate] did not know what diseconomies of scale
were and therefore disregarded
this factor, an essential part of (3)(a)”
(p 3, Gundagai table).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegate’s inadequate examination of the
factor in s 263(3)(a) was also evidenced by the alleged failure of the Delegate
to refer to or examine various matters in his report. First, the applicants
argued that the Delegate failed to refer to “the empirical analysis of
financial benefits” or employ “data envelopment
analysis” in
his report. The applicants asserted that “[i]t is not rational conduct to
ignore robust empirical analysis
in favour of mere untested assertion” (pp
3-4, Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants referred to the Delegate’s statement that
“Cootamundra Shire and Gundagai Shire have both questioned
the validity of
the assumptions and noted that the savings alone do not provide a strong case
for merging. Gundagai Shire states
that the information in the merger proposal
relating to their financial situation is incorrect” (p 16, Gundagai
Delegate’s
report). The applicants submitted that “[d]espite making
this note the Delegate makes no effort to investigate the financial
benefits
further or to examine the evidence put in the [Gundagai Shire Council’s
submission to the Delegate] on this point
but relies on the modelling and
assumptions of KPMG, IPART & TCorp” (p 14, Gundagai table).
- Third,
the applicant submitted that the Delegate failed to address in his report
“the financial disadvantage to [Gundagai] LGA
which will be burdened by
the [Cootamundra] annual deficit which is much higher than [Gundagai] balanced
position” (p 5, Gundagai
table).
- Fourth,
the applicant submitted that the Delegate failed to acknowledge that “5
natural disasters in [Gundagai] LGA put a significant
strain on [Gundagai]
financial resources and results of [Cootamundra]” (p 5, Gundagai
table).
- Fifth,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s failure to acknowledge in his
report the nature and purpose of one of the KPMG
data source documents used by
the Delegate (pp 5-6, Gundagai table).
- The
applicants submitted that the Delegate’s examination of the factor in s
263(3)(a) also was inadequate because it was based on factually incorrect
findings of fact and incorrect, out of date or unreliable information
and data.
First, the applicant submitted that the Delegate did not base his decision on
the most relevant and up to date financial
data for Gundagai Shire Council. The
applicant submitted the Delegate’s statement on p 16 of his report that
the data in the
table was “current financial status and outlook” was
factually incorrect, as there was more recent data, specifically
the audited
financial statements dated 30 June 2015 (p 4, Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants argued that the Delegate erred factually in saying that
“[d]ata obtained from the Office of Local Government
shows only minor
differences between the average rates of Cootamundra Shire and Gundagai Shire
for farming and residential, but significant
difference in business rates”
(p 18, Gundagai Delegate’s report) when, the applicants argued, “the
actual rate
differentials show major differences” (p 5, Gundagai
table).
- Third,
the applicants argued that the Delegate erred factually by mentioning a comment
from TCorp that Gundagai expected operating
deficits every year until 2022 (p
14, Gundagai Delegate’s report) but failed to examine the actual 2015
results which showed
a surplus (p 5, Gundagai table).
- Fourth,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s reliance on earlier work by KPMG,
TCorp and IPART “in view [of] ... the
criticisms of these organisations
found in academic literature, the General Purpose Standing Committee No 6 (Upper
House) Report
and the popular press as raised in the [Gundagai Shire
Council’s submission]” and “the caveats made in the TCorp
report dated 28/3/13, pp 66-67, Auditor General Report (2012) and various
scholarly works going back to at least 2002 as raised in
the [Gundagai
submission] (p 6, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(b), the applicants argued that the Delegate did not conduct an adequate
examination because the Delegate’s analysis was based
on incorrect or out
of date data. First, the applicants argued that “[m]uch of the data cited
on this matter was based on 2011
census data. For instance, the SEIFA data is at
2011 as is much of the other data. A rational Delegate would not form a judgment
on the basis of almost five year old out-of-date data when other data was freely
available and had been provided to him by [Gundagai
Shire Council]” (p 6,
Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s use of raw SEIFA scores
“which do not give an adequate assessment for
the relative difference in
socio-economic conditions in the constituent councils. The state rankings were
provided in the Gundagai
Council submissions. The relative position in these
SEIFA ratings (32 for Cootamundra and 64 for Gundagai) clearly show great
differences
between the communities as at 2011. Therefore it is not reasonable
to cite SEIFA raw index numbers in support of the assertion ‘a
number of
similarities in the demographic and economic profiles of Cootamundra Shire and
Gundagai Shire’ as the Delegate attempts
to do” (pp 6-7, Gundagai
table).
- For
s 263(3)(d), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in three ways. First, the applicants criticised
the
Delegate’s use of the written submissions made to the Delegate and the
views expressed at the public meetings to assess
the attitudes of the residents
and ratepayers of the areas concerned to the proposal. The applicants submitted
that the Delegate
should have used “a scientific randomised survey”
which was put to him at Appendix 5.8 of Gundagai Shire Council’s
submission: “To put greater weight on a strata of the submissions made to
the [Delegate] rather than to the clear attitude
indicated in the randomised
statistical survey cited above is not an adequate examination” (p 7,
Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants referred to the Delegate’s statement that “there
could be some uncertainty regarding whether these
sentiments [expressed at
public meetings and in written submissions] truly represent the views of the
broader community” (p
31, Gundagai Delegate’s report). The
applicants submitted that the Delegate ought to have used the power available
under s 265 of the Act to conduct an opinion survey or poll of the residents and
ratepayers to deal with such uncertainty (pp 7-8, Gundagai table).
- Third,
the applicants submitted that the Delegate made a wrong finding of fact when he
concluded that:
Although the attitude of most residents who made submissions from Gundagai Shire
was against the merger proposal, and those from
Cootamundra Shire expressed
concerns about its potential success, they represented only a small percentage
of the overall population.
Whilst it cannot be said that by not making a
submission the larger sector of the population is in favour of the merger, the
fact
that given ample opportunity to make a submission, and submissions were not
made one way or the other, the majority of the population
did not have a strong
attitude one way or the other concerning the merger proposal. (p 32, Gundagai
Delegate’s report).
The applicants did not say why that
conclusion was factually erroneous (p 8, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(e), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in three respects. First, the applicants argued
that the
Delegate erred factually in finding that the representation ratio that might
result with a merged council “is not
excessive, especially in sparsely
populated regional areas” (p 34, Gundagai Delegate’s report). The
applicants submitted
that the Delegate was presented with evidence in Gundagai
Shire Council’s submission on representation ratios “in direct
contradiction to the claim made by the [Delegate]” (p 8, Gundagai
table).
- Second,
the applicants referred to the Delegate’s statement that “the merger
proposal does not dictate the overall structure
and make-up of any new entity
and so such claims [by Gundagai Shire Council and residents] cannot be ratified
at this stage”
(p 33, Gundagai Delegate’s report). The applicants
argued that the Delegate “then proceeded to make judgments on the
structure and make-up of the new entity”. The applicants argued that
“it is not rational to make judgments on something
which the Delegate said
is not known” (p 8, Gundagai table).
- Third,
the applicants criticised what they said the Delegate did which was “to
state that the number of representatives arising
from each of the former council
areas is irrelevant in view of the Council Charter which states that Councillors
must represent the
interests of all constituents” (p 8, Gundagai table).
(In fact, the Delegate never stated that the number of representatives
was
“irrelevant”, although he did note that “a new council will
represent the whole of the new local government
area and councillors elected to
the new council have the responsibility under the Council Charter as outlined in
section 8 of the Act ...” (p 33, Gundagai Delegate’s report)).
Nevertheless, the applicants argued that the Delegate was incorrect
because, in
practice, the councillors voted according to their geographic fragment of
origin, which the operation of a ward structure
encourages (pp 8-9, Gundagai
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e1), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in three respects. First, the applicants noted
that the
Delegate had acknowledged the submissions of Gundagai residents about the
potential for a merger to impact negatively on
Council’s services and
support for community groups and activities (p 37, Gundagai Delegate’s
report). The applicants
submitted, however, that the Delegate failed to
“examine the effect of the type of volunteer support disappearing which is
expected with the merger” (p 9, Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate for referring to only one of three items
of service harmonisation cited in Gundagai
Shire Council’s submission to
the Delegate, being that of waste services (pp 36-37, Gundagai Delegate’s
report). The
applicants submitted that “[i]t is irrational and inadequate
to give no comment on other service harmonisation requirements
after having
acknowledged one item. In point of fact, the three exemplars of service
harmonisation cited in the Gundagai submission
eliminate almost all of the
proposed financial benefits” (pp 9-10, Gundagai table).
- Third,
the applicants submitted that the Delegate should have used the information
about the item of service harmonisation of waste
services that the Delegate did
discuss to adjust the proposed financial advantages of the amalgamation:
“[i]t is irrational
and inadequate to admit to a service harmonisation
cost and not use it to adjust the supposed financial benefits” (p 9,
Gundagai
table).
- For
s 263(3)(e2), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in two respects. First, the applicants criticised
the
Delegate’s statement that the majority of staff employed in senior staff
positions by Gundagai and Cootamundra Councils
“are already approaching
retirement age” when discussing senior staff terminations (p 40, Gundagai
Delegate’s report).
The applicants submitted that “it is the
position which will or will not be terminated, not the specific
individual”
(p 10, Gundagai table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s conclusion
that:
There is no reason to believe that Gundagai Shire’s fears about job losses
and the subsequent negative impact on the town’s
economy and viability
will come to pass in the event that the merger proposal goes ahead. There is
ample protection for non-senior
staff under the Act, and as Cootamundra
Shire’s submission makes clear, the distance and travel time between the
two towns
means that the new council is likely to have to run two offices, two
depots and two operation teams. This is not unlike other rural
council areas.
Accordingly, the Delegate does not consider that the merger proposal will have
an adverse impact on the employment
of non-senior council staff.
(pp 41-42, Gundagai Delegate’s report)
The applicants
submitted that it was irrational for the Delegate to so conclude, “yet
still cling obstinately to the KPMG projected
savings for the proposed
amalgamation” (p 10, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(e3), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination because he did not address the point raised in
Gundagai
Shire Council’s submission to the Delegate “that loss of
representation will mean that the small rural villages
surrounding [Gundagai]
will suffer with less services” (p 10, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(e4), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in two ways. First, the applicants argued that
the
Delegate’s conclusion did not logically follow from his earlier
discussion. The applicants argued that it was not adequate
for the Delegate to
state in his discussion that “given the concerns raised about proportional
electoral representation and
a new merged entity, there may be scope for wards
to ensure that no one community is disenfranchised or another given undue
influence”
but then to conclude that: “The issue of wards would be a
matter for the new council in the event that the merger goes ahead.
However,
given the strongly agreed preference against wards of Cootamundra Shire and
Gundagai Shire and the difficulty in determining
equitable representation on a
geographic basis, it would seem unnecessary and potential divisive to require
them” (p 44, Gundagai
Delegate’s report).
- Second,
the applicants inferred from the lack of reference to s 211(2) and s 224A(1) of
the Act in the Delegate’s report that the Delegate was ignorant of those
statutory provisions and did not consider them
(p 11, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(e5), the applicants submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination in two ways. First, the applicants criticised
as factually
incorrect the Delegate’s finding that “[n]one of the submissions
made reference to these groups [indigenous
groups or non-English speaking
groups] – the only reference to diverse communities was in the context of
the perceived lack
of community of interest between Cootamundra Shire and
Gundagai Shire” (p 45, Gundagai Delegate’s report). The applicants
submitted “this is not correct and shows that the [Delegate] did not read
the submissions carefully” (p 11, Gundagai
table).
- Second,
the applicants criticised the Delegate’s statement that “[t]he
definition of ‘diverse communities’
is open to interpretation but is
generally assumed to mean culturally or ethnically diverse communities, or
groups with special needs”
(p 45, Gundagai Delegate’s report). The
applicants submitted that this interpretation is “very narrow and at odds
with
a reasonable interpretation of the legislation”. The applicant did
not elucidate on what was a reasonable interpretation of
the legislation (pp
11-12, Gundagai table).
- For
s 263(3)(f), the applicant submitted that the Delegate did not conduct an
adequate examination because he failed to address three issues that
had been
raised in Gundagai Shire Council’s submission to the Delegate, being
“rationalising resources”, “financial
statements
comparison” and “previous merger experience” (p 12, Gundagai
table).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents rejected both the applicants’ construction of the duty under s
263(3) of the Act to have regard to the specified factors and the
applicants’ factual argument that the Delegates failed to have regard
to
certain factors.
- The
respondents submitted that the duty under s 263(3) is not, as the applicants
argued, to “examine” each of the factors in s 263(3), but rather to
“have regard to” the factors when examining the proposal that has
been referred by the Minister. Accordingly,
the issue is correctly framed as
being whether the Delegates “had regard to” the s 263(3) factors in
examining each proposal (par 72, p 20, respondents’ further submissions,
31 May 2016).
- The
respondents disputed the applicants’ argument that the Delegates were
required to treat each factor in s 263(3) as a fundamental element in or a focal
point of the examination process. The respondents submitted that the phrase
“have regard
to” in s 263(3) merely required the Boundaries
Commission or the Departmental Chief Executive to whom a proposal has been
referred for examination
and report to consider the factors, rather than treat
them as fundamental elements or focal points: Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship v Khadgi at [61]. There are 11 factors listed in s 263(3).
Although the Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief Executive was required
to “have regard to” each factor, not
all of them will be central or
fundamental to every proposal the Boundaries Commission or Departmental Chief
Executive is called
upon to examine: see Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship v Khadgi at [62] (pars 79-80, pp 21-22, respondents’
further submissions, 31 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that the applicants’ arguments that the Delegates
failed to have regard to certain factors depended
on the applicants
reformulating the factors at a greater level of factual specificity than they
are expressed by the legislature
in s 263(3). In order for the applicants to
succeed on the ground of failure to consider a relevant matter, “the
statute must expressly
or impliedly oblige the decision maker to enquire and
consider the subject matter at the level of particularity involved in the
applicants’
submission”: Walsh v Parramatta City Council at
[60] applying Foster v Minister for Customs and Justice (2000) 200 CLR
442; [2000] HCA 38 at [23] and adopted in Notaras v Waverley Council
(2007) 161 LGERA 230; [2007] NSWCA 333 at [120]. The respondents submitted that
it is not legitimate for the applicants to reformulate the factors in s 263(3)
at a greater level of factual specificity and then allege that the Delegates
failed to have regard to the specific matters so identified.
Yet that is exactly
what the applicants seek to do in the tables they provided with their written
submissions commenting on each
Delegate’s examination of the s 263(3)
factors. The applicants’ ground of challenge can be dismissed on this
basis (par 74, p 20, respondents’ further submissions,
31 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that having regard to the factors in s 263(3) does
not involve a proper, genuine and realistic evaluation of the merits of each
factor, including the reasons and evidence supporting
each factor, as argued by
the applicants. Too ready an employment of the formulation of “proper,
genuine and realistic”
evaluation has been criticised by the courts as
risking an impermissible review of the merits of an administrative decision:
Bruce v Cole (1998) 45 NSWLR 163 at 186; Kindimindi Investments Pty
Ltd v Lane Cove Council (2006) 143 LGERA 277; [2006] NSWCA 23 at [73],
[75] and [79]; (par 81, p 22, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
- The
respondents noted that the only factor that the applicants alleged was not
considered at all was the factor in s 263(e5). The applicants relied on the
Boundaries Commission’s conclusion that the consideration of
factor (e5) by the Delegate in the
report on the Oberon proposal was
inadequate. The respondents submitted that the Boundaries Commission’s
conclusion did not
establish that the Delegate failed to have regard to
factor (e5) or that any inadequate consideration of that factor caused the
Delegate’s
examination of the proposal to be invalid.
- First,
the Boundaries Commission was not expressing an opinion on whether the
Delegate’s consideration of factor (e5) was such
as to render the
examination and report legally invalid. That was not the Boundaries
Commission’s remit. Even if it did, the
Court would properly ignore its
opinion. The Boundaries Commission’s opinion, while no doubt an important
matter for the Minister
to consider in deciding on his recommendation, is of no
particular relevance to the Court in determining whether there has been,
in
fact, a failure to have regard to factor (e5) so as to invalidate the
Delegate’s exercise of power (par 83, pp 22-23, respondents’
further
submissions, 31 May 2016).
- Second,
the approach taken by the Boundaries Commission is apparent from the Boundaries
Commission’s comments on the Oberon
Delegate’s report, where it was
stated at p 10:
The Delegate noted that nine submissions (3%) provided comment on the effective
representation of diverse communities, with one referring
to Council support for
people with disabilities.
The Delegate concluded that as each Council already has mechanisms in place to
engage with diversity within the broader community,
resources committed to this
engagement will continue to be available in a merged council. However the
Delegate stated that there
will be an opportunity to examine whether engagement
with identified community groups can be carried out more effectively across
current council boundaries.
The Commission’s view is that the Delegate did not adequately consider the
issues under this factor.
- The
respondents submitted that it was apparent from that comment that the Boundaries
Commission was not expressing a view that the
Delegate had failed to engage at
all with factor (e5). Rather, the Boundaries Commission did not consider
that the Delegate had given
sufficient attention to this issue. That is a
different matter altogether (pars 84-85, p 23, respondents’ further
written submissions,
31 May 2016).
- Third,
applying the authorities such as Kindimindi Investments Pty Ltd v Lane Cove
Council, and thus being careful not to slip into impermissible merits
review, the respondents submitted that it is clear that regard was
had to
factor (e5) by the Delegate examining the Oberon proposal. The Delegate
identified and summarised the submissions relating
to representation of diverse
communities (there is no allegation that any submission was overlooked or not
properly characterised)
and then observed that while “[e]lected
representatives are one way of ensuring the needs of diverse communities are
represented
... none of the existing councils relies on representation to
satisfy the need to engage with diverse communities” (p 52 of
Delegate’s report; Exhibit 2, p 656). The Delegate then made the
observation the subject of the Boundaries Commission’s
comments set out
above. Importantly, so far as representation was concerned, the Delegate
observed that “elected representation
issues” were raised by Oberon
Council and were dealt with under a different heading (being factor (e)).
There were further
comments in that section on representation of diverse
communities (for example, “[t]he opportunity for farming communities
to be
represented may be diminished for Oberon LGA residents but may be enhanced for
Bathurst LGA residents”: p 39 of Delegate’s
report; Exhibit 2, p
643). Overall, the respondents submitted, it is apparent that the Delegate
considered that there was merit in
Bathurst Council’s submission that a
greater range of skills would be available to a merged council to communicate
and engage
with diverse communities. That was a view that was well open to the
Delegate and displayed no failure to address the statutory criterion
(par 86, p
24, respondents’ written submissions, 31 May 2016).
- Accordingly,
the respondents submitted, the consideration of factor (e5) in the
Delegate’s reports goes well beyond “mere
advertence”. That is
all the Court needs to be satisfied of in this regard to reject the
applicants’ challenge that there
has been a failure to have regard to
factor (e5) (par 87, p 25, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May
2016).
- The
respondents submitted that the applicants’ arguments that other factors in
s 263(3) were not considered adequately by the Delegates were flawed for at
least two reasons. First, the particular aspects focused on by
the applicants
were not the relevant factors in s 263(3) themselves, but rather facts, matters
or circumstances said to be relevant to those factors. This involved
impermissibly reformulating
the level of particularity at which the factors are
to be considered. Any failure to consider the particular facts, matters or
circumstances
identified by the applicants does not establish that the Delegates
failed to consider the factors in s 263(3) that are the relevant matters to be
considered. Second, the applicants’ arguments as illustrated in the tables
attached to
the written submissions and in the oral submissions are really just
“a factual quibble” with the Delegate’s consideration
of the
relevant matters (T 31/5/16, p 103). Proper consideration of a relevant matter
does not demand factual correctness. A wrong
assessment of a relevant matter is
not a reviewable error of law: Walsh v Parramatta City Council at
[61]-[63].
The Delegates had regard to the s 263(3)
factors
- The
applicants have not established that each Delegate’s examination and
report on the proposal fell short of what was required
in any of the ways argued
by the applicants. I agree with the respondents’ submissions.
- First,
the applicants’ argument that there was a failure to examine the factors
in s 263(3) depended on an incorrect construction of the Act. The statutory
obligation in s 263(3) is to “have regard to” the factors specified
when “considering” the matter referred (being the proposals
for
amalgamation), but not to “examine” the factors when
“examining” the matter referred: see Woollahra Municipal Council
v Minister for Local Government at [149]-[152]. I reject the
applicants’ construction that the Delegates were required to
“examine” the factors
in s 263(3).
- I
also reject the applicants’ argument that the Delegates were required to
examine “each” factor and to make a finding
on every question of
fact relevant to each factor. This argument was founded on the decision in
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf. However, the
decision turned on the terms of the particular federal statute concerned. The
Act imposed no obligation on the Delegates
when considering the proposals
referred by the Minister to make a finding on every question of fact relevant to
each factor in s
263(3).
- The
applicants are also incorrect in arguing that the phrase “have regard
to” in s 263(3) demands that each factor in
s 263(3) be treated as a
fundamental element or focal point; it is sufficient in this statutory context
for the Delegates to consider
them: Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
v Khadgi at [61]. Different factors will take on different importance
depending on the proposal being considered.
- The
applicants’ invocation of the formulation “proper, genuine and
realistic consideration” as the standard against
which the
Delegates’ consideration must be evaluated was also problematic. What the
applicants argued was necessary in order
for there to be proper, genuine and
realistic consideration of the factors by the Delegates was, at base, a
disagreement with the
merits, including the correctness of the findings and
conclusions and the sufficiency of the supporting evidence. Such disagreement
does not establish a failure to consider the relevant factors.
- Second,
the applicants have not established on the evidence that each Delegate failed to
have regard to any factor in s 263(3). I
reject the applicants’ argument
that the Oberon Delegate failed to have regard to the factor in s 263(3)(e5),
for the reasons
given by the respondents. The applicants also have not
established that each of the Delegates failed to have regard to the other
factors identified by the applicants.
- On
the face of each report, each Delegate did consider each factor in s 263(3) of
the Act. Each report has a chapter headed “Examination
of the
proposal”, within which are sections addressing each factor in s 263(3).
In each section, although the form varies,
the substance of the discussion
includes a quotation of the factor, a discussion of the submissions commenting
on the factor, a consideration
of the issues and a conclusion about the
factor.
- The
discussion by the Delegate of each factor might not descend to the level of
particularity argued by the applicants. However, s
263(3) does not demand that
this be done. Section 263(3) did not, expressly or impliedly, oblige the
Delegates to inquire and consider
the subject matter of each factor at the level
of particularity argued by the applicants: see Foster v Minister for Customs
and Justice at [23] and Walsh v Parramatta City Council at [60].
The degree of discussion undertaken by each Delegate is sufficient to
evidence that the Delegate had regard to the factors at the
level of
particularity stated in s 263(3).
- The
applicants’ arguments depended to a large extent on the content of the
reports by the Delegates. The applicants seized on
what was said but more often
on what was not said in the reports. The applicants referred, for example, to
the evidence of Dr Drew
and Professor Dollery and the submissions made by the
applicants to the Delegates to establish what would need to be done in order
to
consider adequately certain matters, such as the financial disadvantages,
including the diseconomies of scale (under the factor
in s 263(3)(a)). The
applicant inferred from the fact that the reports of the Delegates did not set
out a discussion of the type
or in the terms advocated by these people or these
submissions that the Delegates must not have considered these matters.
- However,
the failure of a decision maker to refer in the decision maker’s reasons
or report to some facts, matters or circumstances
or some form of analysis said
to be pertinent to a relevant consideration is not determinative that the
relevant consideration was
not taken into account by the decision maker. As the
Court of Appeal of Western Australia said in Jacob v Save Beeliar Wetlands
(Inc) (2016) 216 LGERA 201; [2016] WASCA 126 at [53]:
The duty to take into account relevant considerations is confined to the
decision-making process. It does not extend to the content
of the reasons for
the decision or recommendation, although the reasons are inevitably relied upon
as evidence of a claim that the
decision-maker failed to take into account a
relevant consideration. However, as decision-makers who are required to give
reasons
are not obliged to canvass all matters or evidence that have been taken
into account, the failure to refer to a relevant consideration
in the reasons
(or report) is necessary, but not determinative.
- Hence,
the failure of the Delegates to canvass in their reports all the matters
referred to by the applicants does not establish that
the Delegates did not
consider these matters.
- The
applicants’ various arguments, set out in the tables to their written
submissions, as to the ways in which each Delegate
did not conduct an adequate
examination of each factor fell into similar categories:
- (a) the
Delegate misunderstood or misinterpreted a factor in s 263(3);
- (b) the
Delegate made wrong findings or inferences of fact or conclusions;
- (c) the
Delegate relied on incorrect, out of date or unreliable information or data in
making findings or inferences of fact or conclusions;
- (d) the
Delegate failed to undertake the inquiries, analysis or examination or obtain
the information that the applicants said that
the Delegate should have
undertaken or obtained;
- (e) the
Delegate failed to address in the report some point or issue or some information
that had been raised by the applicants in
their submissions to the Delegate;
and
- (f) the
Delegate failed to give reasons in the report for certain findings or
conclusions or explain what would be the consequence
of those findings or
conclusions or how adverse consequences could be addressed.
- Arguments
in the first category might establish an error of law if the Delegates did
actually misinterpret the legislation. However,
the ways in which the applicants
argued that the Delegates misunderstood some factor in s 263(3) were, at base,
really a disagreement
about the application of the factor to the facts, not the
interpretation of the factor. For example, I do not agree that the
Delegates’
discussions of the factor in s 263(3)(a) reveals that they
misunderstood or misdirected themselves as to the economies or diseconomies
of
scale (being part of the consideration in s 263(3)(a)). The applicants might say
that there could have been more or different
discussion of the economies or
diseconomies of scale than the Delegates actually undertook, but this does not
establish that the
Delegates misunderstood the factor or asked themselves the
wrong question.
- Another
example given by the applicants was the Oberon Delegate’s discussion of
the factors in s 263(3)(d) and (e). The applicants
construed the Oberon
Delegate’s statement that strong opposition to a merger, while an
important matter to consider in deciding
whether or not to proceed with a
merger, is not a threshold impediment to the merger, as revealing a
“perverse interpretation”
of s 263(3)(d). I disagree. The statements
reveal no misinterpretation. Similarly, the Oberon Delegate’s discussion
of the
factor in s 263(3)(e) of the importance for the merged council to
implement mechanisms to ensure appropriate elected representation
does not
establish that the Delegate misinterpreted s 263(3)(e).
- I
do not agree that any of the other ways in which the applicants argued the
Delegates misinterpreted the legislation have been established.
- Arguments
in the second to fifth categories do not establish that each Delegate’s
consideration of the factors in s 263(3) was
inadequate in law. Proper
consideration of a relevant matter does not demand factual correctness.
Establishing the judicial review
ground of failure to consider a relevant matter
does not involve reviewing the correctness of the decision, or the sufficiency
of
the evidence supporting it, or the weight of the evidence against it, or the
regularity of the manner in which the decision maker
has proceeded: Walsh v
Parramatta City Council at [62]-[63] and cases cited therein. The
applicants’ complaints that there was a wrong assessment of considerations
which
the applicants say might reasonably be regarded as relevant, or a failure
to rely on information, data or submissions that the applicants
say ought to
have been relied upon, or a failure to give certain considerations or
information, data or submissions the weight which
the applicants contend they
should have been given, are not reviewable errors: see, for example, Brunetto
v Collector of Customs [1984] FCA 383; (1984) 4 FCR 92 at 97-98. This deals with the vast
majority of the applicants’ arguments about the ways in which the
applicants contended the
Delegates did not conduct an adequate examination of
the factors in s 263(3). The applicants might disagree with the Delegates’
assessments of the factors in s 263(3), but even if it were to be assumed that
the assessments were wrong (and I do not so find),
such wrong assessments would
not establish a failure to have regard to the factors in s 263(3). It is not
necessary, therefore, to
deal with the detail of each of the applicants’
arguments as to how the Delegates’ assessments might have miscarried.
- Arguments
in the final category also cannot establish reviewable error. There was no
statutory duty on the Delegates to give reasons
in the ways argued by the
applicants. The duty to provide a report of the Delegate’s examination of
each proposal did not require
the Delegate to canvass all matters or evidence
that had been taken into account by the Delegate or to refer to every submission
and every point made in every submission to the Delegate. The failure of the
Delegates to refer in the reports to the matters raised
by the applicants is not
a reviewable error in itself and is also not determinative of a failure to have
regard to those matters.
- I
reject the challenge to the Delegates’ examination of and report on the
proposals.
Procedural fairness by the Delegates
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants alleged that the inquiry by each Delegate was conducted without
affording procedural fairness to the applicant councils
and to the ratepayers
and residents of each area proposed to be amalgamated. The applicants alleged
that procedural unfairness arose
by reason of:
- (a) the legal
insufficiency of the notice given of the holding of the inquiry: Scurr v
Brisbane City Council at 252; Dunghutti Elders Council (Aboriginal
Corporation) RNTBC v Registrar of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Corporations at 367-368; Ogawa v Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship at 58-59;
- (b) the
“limited access rights and involvement in participation in the
inquiry”, as explained in the applicants’
affidavit evidence:
Kioa v West at 609; Annetts v McCann (1990) 170 CLR 596;
[1990] HCA 57 at 598; Assistant Commissioner Condon v Pompano Pty Ltd
(2013) 252 CLR 38; [2013] HCA 7 at [156]; and
- (c) the inquiry
being “blinkered and insufficient” and “not an informed
inquiry”, as explained in the applicants’
affidavit evidence:
Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v MZYTS (2013) 230 FCR
431; [2013] FCAFC 114 at [58]- [62]; Wei v Minister for Immigration and
Border Protection (2015) 90 ALJR 213; [2015] HCA 51 at [49] (par 12, p
9, outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May
2016.
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents did not dispute in principle that a duty to afford procedural
fairness may attach to the exercise of the statutory
power under s 263 to
examine and report on a proposal for amalgamation. The respondents did, however,
contest that the content of
the duty to accord procedural fairness was as
contended by the applicants or that there was any denial of procedural fairness
to
the applicants.
- The
respondents noted that the leading decision on the content of the duty to accord
procedural fairness under the statutory scheme
for examination and report on a
proposal is the Court of Appeal’s decision in Minister for Local
Government v South Sydney City Council. The respondents noted that the
Court of Appeal:
- (a) held that
the use of a consultant by the person charged with examining and reporting on
the proposal was not an abdication of
duty, and there was nothing wrong in
principle with the task of recording, collating, organising and summarising
submissions being
assigned to an agent: at [211];
- (b) held that
the person charged with examining and reporting on the proposal (in that case
the Boundaries Commission, in this case
the Delegates of the Departmental Chief
Executive) had a “duty ... to consult with affected councils
about the detailed issues
required to be taken into account by
s 263(3)” and give them “a reasonable opportunity to address
these statutory issues”
but that duty had been discharged by giving the
affected council an opportunity to present detailed written submissions on those
matters and by meeting with the affected councils for
1-2 hours: at [113], [242] and [243];
- (c) rejected a
submission that the statutory scheme required the affected council to have
access to and an opportunity to comment
on submissions made by other
stakeholders that were adverse to its interests (described as the “open
file” submission):
“An obligation with such content cannot be
accepted. It effectively converts the examination and report stage of the
process
into a full-blown adversarial trial”: at [251], see also
[44]; and
- (d) said that
while it was not possible “to describe or define with precision”
what adverse material was required to be
disclosed in order to afford an
affected council a “reasonable opportunity” to address the statutory
criteria, the Court
clearly favoured a narrow view. The Court warned against
uncritically applying the general statement of Brennan J in Kioa v West
at 629 endorsed in Muin v Refugee Review Tribunal (2002) 76 ALJR
966; [2002] HCA 30 that “an opportunity should be given to deal with
adverse information that is credible, relevant and significant to the decision
to be made”, noting that “[t]he facts of Muin were, however,
far removed from the present case, having regard to the specific interest of the
applicant, the direct impact of the
adverse material and the way in which he was
misled by a positive misrepresentation about the true
position”: at [260]. The
Court made observations about the
attenuated nature of the obligation to disclose adverse material in the
statutory context of examining
and reporting on a
proposal: at [264]-[268] (pars 40-44, pp 13-15, respondents’
summary of argument, 23 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that decisions of the Court of Appeal since Minister
for Local Government v South Sydney City Council confirm the attenuated
nature of the content of the obligation to afford procedural fairness where the
decision affects a wide range
of persons and involves “policy” or
high level “political” considerations: Castle v Director
General, State Emergency Service [2008] NSWCA 231 at [6]- [7]; Director
General, Department of Trade and Investment, Regional Infrastructure and
Services v Lewis (2012) 301 ALR 420; [2012] NSWCA 436 at [55]- [62]; see
also Vanmeld Pty Ltd v Fairfield City Council (1999) 46 NSWLR 78;
[1999] NSWCA 6 at [61].
- The
respondents submitted that the notices given of the holding of the inquiries
were reasonable and in accordance with the statutory
requirements (referring to
their submissions on the applicants’ ground of challenge to the notice
under s 263(2B)). Procedural
fairness did not require any notice to be
given to the applicants that was different in content or timing to the
reasonable public
notice required to be given under s 263(2B) (par 92,
p 26, respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that the inquiry held by each Delegate was in accordance
with the statutory requirements for an inquiry
under s 263(2A) (referring
to their submissions on the applicants’ ground of challenge to the inquiry
under s 263(2A)). Procedural
fairness did not impose any greater
requirement. The Delegates did not deny the applicants’ procedural
fairness by the way
in which they organised and conducted each
inquiry.
No denial of procedural fairness by the
Delegates
- The
applicants have not established that the Delegates denied them, or their
ratepayers and residents, procedural fairness in any
of the ways argued by the
applicants.
- The
first way was the insufficiency of the notice given of the holding of the
inquiry. The applicants argued that the notice given,
by reason of its
inadequate content and not being reasonable notice, did not satisfy the
statutory requirements in s 263(2B) of the
Act so as to be reasonable public
notice of the holding of the inquiry. The applicants argued that the inadequacy
of the notice also
impeded the applicants, residents and ratepayers, and members
of the public from participating fully in the inquiry. For the reasons
I have
given in relation to the applicants’ challenge to the notice, I do not
accept that the public notice given of the holding
of the inquiry was
inadequate. The public notice given was not only the advertisement placed in
newspapers, but also the notice given
on the Council Boundaries Review website,
attached to the Delegate’s letters to the applicant councils and placed on
the applicant
councils’ websites at the Delegates’ request.
Considering all of the forms of public notice given, the applicants, residents
and ratepayers and members of the public were given adequate notice of the
holding of the inquiry and had sufficient opportunity
to participate in the
inquiry, if they chose to do so.
- The
second way was based on the limitations imposed by the Delegates on the
applicants and members of the public participating in
the inquiry, including
requiring speakers to register and imposing short time limits on speakers at the
inquiry. The applicants argued
that these limitations caused the inquiries held
by the Delegates not to satisfy the statutory requirement in s 263(2A) of the
Act
of an inquiry in relation to the proposals. The applicants argued that these
limitations on the inquiries also impeded the applicants,
residents and
ratepayers, and members of the public from participating fully at the inquiries.
For the reasons I have given in relation
to the applicants’ challenge to
the inquiries, I do not accept that the limitations on how the applicants,
residents and ratepayers,
and the members of the public were able to participate
at the inquiries denied them procedural fairness. The Delegates had a discretion
to formulate the procedure to be followed at the inquiry. The requirements for
registration of speakers and restrictions on time
for speakers were within the
discretion of the Delegates to facilitate the orderly and efficient conduct of
the inquiries. Imposition
of these requirements did not cause the inquiries not
to answer the statutory description of “inquiry”. But they also
did
not deny the applicants, residents and ratepayers or members of the public the
opportunity to participate in the inquiry.
- The
adequacy of the opportunity to participate also needs to be viewed in context.
The inquiry was held for the purpose of the Delegates
exercising their functions
of examining and reporting on the proposals for amalgamation referred by the
Minister. The opportunity
for the applicants, residents and ratepayers, and
members of the public to express their views on these proposals was not limited
to the actual inquiries themselves. They also had the opportunity to make
written submissions on the proposals. The public notices
given of the holding of
the inquiries also invited written submissions. The Council Boundary Review
website, referred to in the notices,
also called for written submissions and
provided the opportunity to lodge written submissions through that website. The
Delegates
at the inquiries repeatedly invited written submissions, including
from those persons who were restricted in the time available for
them to speak
at the inquiry. Viewed holistically, there was an adequate opportunity for the
applicants, residents and ratepayers,
and members of the public to express their
views on the proposals to the Delegates.
- The
third way was that the inquiry was neither informed nor inquiring, but rather
was “blinkered” in its approach. The
applicants argued that the
Delegates and persons wishing to make submissions or to speak at the inquiry
were not provided with sufficient
information about the reasons for and
evidentiary basis of the Minister’s decision to make the proposals, which
were the subject
of the inquiries, to enable the Delegates and such persons to
adequately examine the proposals and make submissions or speak about
the
proposals. The Delegates did not actively inquire into the proposals or seek out
the responses of persons affected by the proposals,
such as the applicant
councils and residents and ratepayers, including by questioning people at the
inquiries. The applicants argued
that these failures to investigate and
interrogate caused the inquiries not to satisfy the statutory description of an
“inquiry”.
The applicants argued that these failures also caused a
denial of procedural fairness by impeding the applicants and other persons
in
making submissions or speaking at the inquiries about the proposals.
- For
the reasons I have given in relation to the challenge to the inquiry, I do not
agree that the Delegates were uninformed or blinkered
in their approach to
examining the proposal, including in their conduct of the inquiry. The Delegates
did not, by their actions,
deny or impede the opportunity for the applicants,
residents and ratepayers or members of the public to make submissions to the
Delegates
or speak at the inquiries. The Delegates made publicly available the
material about the proposal that they had been provided by the
Minister,
including by making the material available on the Council Boundary Review
website.
- Insofar
as the applicants criticised the unavailability of the undisclosed KPMG
documents, the Delegates did not deny the applicants
procedural fairness by not
disclosing those documents and giving the applicants an opportunity to make
submissions on them. First,
those documents had not been provided to the
Delegates; they cannot disclose documents that they did not have. Second, it has
not
been established that the documents contained information that “was so
damaging and so unforeseeable” that the applicants
“should not have
been ‘left in the dark’ about it” until publication of each
Delegate’s report: Minister for Local Government v South Sydney City
Council at [272]. Third, the information that the undisclosed documents were
said to contain was the modelling and other material underpinning
the KPMG
analysis in the proposal documents and KPMG Technical Paper. The information
that was “adverse” to the applicants
was contained in those proposal
documents, the KPMG Technical Paper, the Impacts Document and other documents
that were made publicly
available. This information included the asserted
financial advantages of the proposals. This adverse information was disclosed.
What was not disclosed were KPMG’s internal workings and calculations
underpinning the conclusions expressed in the publicly
available documents. The
duty to disclose “adverse” material was discharged by disclosure of
the publicly available documents
containing KPMG’s modelling assumptions,
analysis and conclusions; it did not extend to require disclosure of the
workings
and calculations underpinning those conclusions. It was sufficient in
the circumstances to disclose “the gist of any adverse
information”:
Minister for Immigration and Citizenship v Maman (2012) 200 FCR 30;
[2012] FCAFC 13 at [37]; Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v
SZSSJ (2016) 90 ALJR 901; [2016] HCA 29.
- Any
duty of procedural fairness also did not require the Delegates to disclose to
the applicants, and give them the opportunity to
respond to, submissions of
other persons that might be seen to be adverse to the applicants. An obligation
of procedural fairness
with such content was not accepted in Minister for
Local Government v South Sydney City Council at [257], [267] and [268] per
Mason P with whom Spigelman CJ agreed at [1], [44] and Ipp JA agreed at [297]:
see also Woollahra Municipal Council v Minister for Local Government at
[244].
- I
reject this ground of challenge that the Delegates failed to accord procedural
fairness to the applicants.
The reviews of the Delegates’
reports
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants argued that the Boundaries Commission did not conduct a proper and
informed review of and comment on each of the Delegate’s
reports, as
required by s 218F(6)(b) of the Act. The applicants submitted that
“there was no ‘review’ in law by
the Boundaries Commission of
the factors in the comments upon each Delegate’s report into his or her
examination of each amalgamation
proposal of [the Minister], save for
factor (e5) in respect of Oberon ... and even then the review was
perfunctory” (par 11,
p 8, outline submission of the applicants in
closing, 31 May 2016).
- First,
the applicants submitted that the functions of review and comment are more
demanding than merely checking that the report of
the Departmental Chief
Executive complies with the statutory requirements of examination and report.
The applicants submitted that
the verb to “review” involves
“to view, look at, or look over again” or “to inspect,
especially formally
or officially” and that the noun of
“comment” involves “a note in explanation, expansion,
criticism of a
passage in a writing, book etc; an annotation” and the verb
to “comment” involves “to write explanatory or
critical notes
upon a text” (Macquarie Dictionary (4th ed, 2005)). The applicants
submitted that the Boundaries Commission’s actions fell short of such a
review and comment
on each Delegate’s report.
- The
applicants submitted that the action of review “does not infer reference
only, or mere consideration of the function performed,
but rather a detailed,
proper and genuine review to determine if the task, in this case an examination
and report, has been attended
to. This requires consideration of at least what
modification if any is appropriate to be recommended by the Boundaries
Commission
which has an expert role to play with respect to the proposal”
(p 16, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- The
applicants referred to the character of the Boundaries Commission as a
specialist entity whose members have expertise in local
government governance.
Having regard to this character, the applicants submitted, the review the
Boundaries Commission undertakes
“involves arriving at the ‘correct
or preferable decision’ as upon the merits”, akin to the merits
review
undertaken by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, citing Esber v
The Commonwealth of Australia (1992) 174 CLR 430; [1992] HCA 20 at 440 and
448; Bushell v Repatriation Commission (1992) 175 CLR 408; [1992] HCA
47 at 425.
- The
applicants submitted that “the opening words of s 218F(6) make it
clear that the [Boundaries Commission] is required to
review more than the
report, but is to have regard to the nature and terms of the amalgamation
‘proposal’” (p 16,
submissions of applicants, 3 June
2016).
- Second,
the applicants noted that the Boundaries Commission’s comments on the
report of the Departmental Chief Executive may
provide the basis for the
Minister to determine that the proposal should be modified.
Section 218F(7)(a)(ii) of the Act allows the
Minister to recommend to the
Governor that the proposal be implemented with such modifications as arise out
of the Boundaries Commission’s
comments on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report. The applicants submitted that the Minister is bound to
take into account
the Boundaries Commission’s comments, citing Hot
Holdings Pty Ltd v Creasy (1996) 185 CLR 149; [1996] HCA 44 at 165,
170-171 and Minister for Local Government v South Sydney City Council
at [42] (par 11, pp 8-9, outline submissions of applicants in closing,
31 May 2016).
- In
these circumstances, the applicants submitted, the Boundaries Commission has
power to consider and propose modifications to the
proposal in the course of its
review to assist the Minister (par 11, pp 8-9, submissions of applicants,
3 June 2016).
- Third,
the applicants referred to the statutory structure of staged consideration of
the proposal. The Minister has a choice at which
stage he or she will involve
the Boundaries Commission. The Minister can refer the proposal directly to the
Boundaries Commission
for examination and report or refer the proposal to the
Departmental Chief Executive for examination and report, in which event the
Boundaries Commission will review and comment on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report of his or her examination of the
proposal. The
applicants submitted that in the first scenario, the Boundaries Commission would
examine and report on the proposal,
bringing its expertise to bear. If the
function of review and comment in the second scenario were to be constrained as
the respondents
submitted it should be, the expert Boundaries Commission would
“merely be a cypher”. However, if the function of review
and comment
were to be more expansive and demanding, as the applicants argued it should be,
the Boundaries Commission would act as
“an expert check of the
administrative functions” exercised by the Departmental Chief Executive
(pp 16-17, submissions
of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- The
applicants submitted that if the function of review and comment did not involve
more rigorous reviewing and commenting on the
correct and preferable decision,
then the Boundaries Commission would fail to perform this
function.
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ construction of the statutory
function of the Boundaries Commission under s 218F(6)(b)
of reviewing and
commenting on the report of the Departmental Chief Executive. The respondents
summarised the statutory function
of various persons under s 218F of the
Act, in circumstances where an amalgamation proposal is opposed by one or more
of the councils
affected, as follows:
- (a) the
Delegate of the Departmental Chief Executive is to conduct an examination of the
proposal, and report on the proposal (ss
218F(1) and (2)); note that an
incident of the examination function is the holding of an ‘inquiry’
(s 263);
- (b) the
Boundaries Commission, on the other hand, is to review the Delegate’s
report (and not the proposal) and send its comments
on the Delegate’s
report to the Minister (s 218F(6)); and
- (c) the
Minister may make a recommendation to the Governor that the proposal be
implemented (with or without modifications), or decline
to make such a
recommendation (ss 218F(7) and (8)).
- The
respondents noted that two points are apparent from this statutory scheme.
First, the only person required to make (or decline
to make) a
“recommendation” is the Minister. Second, while the object of the
Departmental Chief Executive’s “examination”
and the
Minister’s “recommendation” is the “proposal”, the
object of the Boundaries Commission’s
review and comment is the
“report” of the Delegate.
- The
respondents noted that the only document that the Act requires be
“furnished” to the Boundaries Commission for the
purposes of its
review and comment is the Delegate’s report (s 218F(6)(a)). The
Boundaries Commission does not have any power
to compel the production of
documents and it is not required to be provided with the submissions made to the
Delegate or the other
material relied upon by him or her. That is consistent
with its task being to review the “report” rather than the
“proposal”.
- The
respondents noted that the Boundaries Commission is charged with reviewing and
commenting upon the Delegate’s report. It
does not refer the proposal and
does not conduct an examination or hold a public inquiry (contrast the duties of
the Departmental
Chief Executive pursuant to ss 218F(1) and (2) and
s 263). The purpose of the Boundaries Commission’s
“review”
and “comment” function is evidently to assist
the Minister in carrying out his or her recommendatory function under
ss
218F(7) and (8). The Boundaries Commission, as an expert body,
provides a checking or “quality assurance” role in relation
to the
report of the Departmental Chief Executive (pars 19-22, pp 6-7,
respondents’ further submissions, 31 May 2016).
- The
respondents submitted that, so understood, the function of review and comment
does not involve, contrary to the applicants’
submissions, a review of the
proposal itself, or arriving at the correct or preferable decision as to whether
the proposal should
be implemented, or making any recommendations as to whether
the proposal should be implemented.
- The
respondents submitted that, on a proper understanding of the function of review
and comment, the applicants have not established
that the Boundaries Commission
failed to exercise that function of reviewing and commenting on each
Delegate’s report.
The Boundaries Commission’s
reviews and comments were valid
- The
applicants have not established that the Boundaries Commission’s review
and comment on each Delegate’s report did
not satisfy the statutory
requirements in s 218F(6)(b) of the Act. I agree with and adopt the
respondents’ submissions.
- The
applicants’ arguments depended on construing the statutory requirements of
review and comment as involving a re-examination
of the merits of the proposals,
including a re-examination of each of the factors in s 263(3) of the Act. That
construction is incorrect.
First, the object of the review and comment of the
Boundaries Commission under s 218F(6)(b) is the report of the Departmental Chief
Executive, not the proposal referred by the Minister. In contrast, the object of
the Departmental Chief Executive’s report
is the proposal referred by the
Minister.
- Second,
the functions of the Boundaries Commission under s 218F(6)(b) are to
“review and comment”, not “examine
and report,” which
are the functions of the Departmental Chief Executive. The functions of the
Boundaries Commission under
s 218F(6)(b) “are substantially more
confined” than the functions of the Departmental Chief Executive:
Botany Bay City Council v The State of New South Wales at [93].
- Third,
the Boundaries Commission’s role in reviewing and commenting on the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report does
not involve re-examining the
merits of the proposal referred by the Minister: Botany Bay City Council v
The State of New South Wales at [97] and [98]. The Boundaries Commission
does not undertake merits review to arrive at the correct or preferable decision
about
the proposal.
- On
a proper understanding of the role of the Boundaries Commission, the review of
and comments on each Delegate’s report did
not fall short of what was
required under s 218F(6)(b) of the Act. I reject this
challenge.
Procedural fairness by the Boundaries
Commission
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants argued that the Boundaries Commission failed to afford procedural
fairness to the applicants and to the ratepayers
and residents of each area
proposed to be amalgamated, by failing to give them a reasonable opportunity to
be heard or to make submissions
with respect to the reviews of the
Delegates’ reports by the Boundaries Commission.
- The
applicants submitted that the Boundaries Commission was under a duty to afford
procedural fairness. A duty of procedural fairness
will apply to the exercise of
a statutory power unless excluded expressly or by necessary implication. The
intention of the legislature
to exclude natural justice requires “clear
manifestation” and upon the face of the statute “plain words of
necessary
intendment”: Kioa v West at 584; Annetts v
McCann at 598; Jarratt v Commissioner for Police for New South
Wales (2005) 224 CLR 44; [2005] HCA 50 at [24], [51], [138] and [150].
- The
applicants submitted that no such plain words appear in s 218F(6)(b) of the
Act. The fact that certain hearing requirements have
been expressly imposed
elsewhere in the Act (such as in s 263(2B) in relation to the conduct of an
inquiry) has been held not to
exclude the operation of the rules of natural
justice: Ainsworth v Criminal Justice Commission (1992) 175 CLR 564;
[1992] HCA 10 at 575. This is because, even in respect of bodies whose role it
is to report or comment to another, or to research and generate
proposals for
law reform, “it is improbable that, though it did not say so, the
legislature would intend that a body of that
kind should not act
unfairly”: Ainsworth v Criminal Justice Commission at
575-576.
- In
the present case, the applicants submitted, the Boundaries Commission not only
receives the Departmental Chief Executive’s
report and must review that
report, it must comment on the report. Those comments, together with the report,
must be considered by
the Minister under s 218F(7)(a)(ii) of the Act.
Further, the Boundaries Commission’s comments may recommend or form the
basis
for any modification of the proposal by the Minister, including a
proposal’s terms under s 213 and further boundary changes,
limited
only by the requirement that the modifications do not constitute a new proposal
(p 9, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- The
applicants submitted that the silence of the legislature in s 218F(6)(b) of the
Act rather indicates an intention to allow the
common law principles of
procedural fairness to determine what procedures are appropriate for the
Boundaries Commission’s review
of and comment on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report, citing Baba v Parole Board of New South Wales
(1986) 5 NSWLR 338 at 347 and 349 and Re Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs; Ex parte Miah (2001) 206 CLR 57; [2001] HCA 22 at 93
and 115. The applicants submitted that there is no provision in s 218F(6)(b) for
any express statutory procedure for fairness
in respect of the Boundaries
Commission conducting its review, and none is excluded by express words or
necessary implication. There
is, therefore, no conceptual difficulty in reading
the rules of procedural fairness into the words of the statute (p 10,
submissions
of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- The
applicants submitted that there are other indications that procedural fairness
should be implied for a review by the Boundaries
Commission under
s 218F(6)(b) of the report of the Departmental Chief Executive’s
examination of a proposal. The first stage,
being an examination of prescribed
factors by the Departmental Chief Executive, is more inquisitorial in character
involving an examination
of the amalgamation proposal, whereas the review of the
report arising from the first stage is more responsive and akin to the
adversarial
paradigm, inviting responses to the report by way of review, and is
more suited to the proposition that the Boundaries Commission
should hear the
affected party before referring the proposal for amalgamation. Each stage
involves different considerations of procedural
fairness and with different
content of the rules of procedural fairness (pp 10-11, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016).
- Accordingly,
the applicants submitted, the principles of procedural fairness applied to the
Boundaries Commission’s review and
comment on each Delegate’s
report.
- The
applicants submitted that the evidence establishes that the Boundaries
Commission denied the applicants procedural fairness.
- First,
the applicants submitted that each of the applicant councils had a distinct
interest in their boundaries because the alteration
of the boundaries of an area
involving an amalgamation under s 218A brings with it the total dissolution
of the council as a recognised
entity: Minister for Local Government v
South Sydney City Council at [39]-[40] and Muin v Refugee Review
Tribunal. Cases such as Castle v Director General, State Emergency
Service at [6] and Vanmeld Pty Ltd v Fairfield City Council at [61]
are distinguishable because, here, the Minister’s political decision takes
place at the next stage of the statutory
process.
- Second,
the applicants submitted that the existence of the Boundaries Commission’s
review and comments upon each proposal was
not known and each was not available
to the applicants until posted on the NSW Government “Stronger
Councils” website
on or after the day of the proclamation of 12 May
2016.
- Third,
the applicants submitted that the Boundaries Commission, prior to the making of
the Minister’s decisions on 4 May 2016
regarding whether to implement
the proposals, gave to the applicants no opportunity whatsoever to respond to
the Delegates’
reports or to be heard on its review of the
Delegates’ reports or to respond to draft proposed comments by the
Boundaries Commission
affecting the Minister’s adoption, rejection or
modification of the proposal in light of the examination and report by the
Delegate and the review of it by the Boundaries Commission under
ss 218F(7)(a)(ii) and (8).
- Fourth,
the applicants submitted that there was a duty to afford procedural fairness to
the applicant councils at least with respect
to the process followed by the
Boundaries Commission prior to forming its final review with comments to the
Minister: Minister for Local Government v South Sydney City Council at
388 and 416, especially at [36]-[37]; Annetts v McCann at 598; Kioa
v West at 609; Assistant Commissioner Condon v Pompano Pty Ltd at
[156] (par 13, p 10, outline submissions of applicants in closing,
31 May 2016).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents disputed that the Boundaries Commission had a duty to afford
procedural fairness as alleged by the applicants. The
respondents submitted that
the Boundaries Commission was not required to provide the applicant councils or
their residents and ratepayers
reasonable public notice of the relevant
Delegate’s report, the Boundaries Commission’s review of the
Delegate’s
report or its comments on that report, or give the applicant
councils or their residents or ratepayers an opportunity to make submissions
on
the Delegate’s report. The respondents gave three reasons.
- First,
the respondents noted that the applicant councils and their residents and
ratepayers had already been afforded an opportunity
to make both oral and
written submissions in relation to the proposal. The applicant councils took
advantage of each such opportunity.
The statutory scheme in respect to
amalgamations is a clear example of Parliament having decided what opportunity
to be heard should
be afforded, namely a public inquiry held during the
examination and report phase, pursuant to s 263(2A). The respondents cited
Minister for Local Government v South Sydney City Council at [35] and
[267].
- Second,
the respondents submitted that, unlike a public inquiry concerning the proposal,
the Act does not require public notice to
be given of the Delegate’s
report being furnished to the Boundaries Commission or that the Boundaries
Commission will commence
reviewing the Delegate’s report and commenting on
it. Further, the Boundaries Commission is only charged with providing its
comments on the report to the Minister. This indicates that this stage of the
amalgamation process is not intended to be public.
Rather, the Boundaries
Commission’s review and comments, which are limited to the report of the
Delegate who held the public
inquiry, are for the benefit of the Minister.
- Furthermore,
there is no basis for inferring an obligation to afford procedural fairness in
circumstances where the Boundaries Commission
is only required to be given one
document, that is the report, and has no powers of gathering information. It is
not the function
of the Boundaries Commission, in undertaking the review of the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report, to conduct any inquiry
or gather
any information. The extent of the Boundaries Commission’s statutory
function is limited and there is no room within
the statutory scheme for
implying a duty of procedural fairness within that process (T 31/5/16,
p 85).
- Third,
the respondents submitted that the applicants’ contention that the
affected councils should have a second opportunity
to make submissions is
unworkable because, logically, such a contention would have to extend further.
There would be no reason to
confine the duty so as to permit comment by the
affected councils only; it would extend also to permit residents and ratepayers
to
comment. Further, if the Boundaries Commission was required to allow affected
persons to make submissions, why would not the Minister
also be so required?
Thus, if the applicants’ construction were to be accepted, all affected
councils, residents and ratepayers
would be given the opportunity, first, to be
heard at the public inquiry before the Delegate; second, to make written
submissions
to the Delegate; third, to make written submissions to the
Boundaries Commission; and fourth, to make written submissions to the
Minister.
This would be entirely unworkable. For this reason, it is unsurprising that
Parliament turned its mind to the manner in
which affected persons would have an
opportunity to be heard in respect of amalgamation proposals, by mandating that
a public inquiry
must be held during the first stage of the statutory process,
and not at all three stages (pars 24-28, pp 7-9, respondents’
further
submissions, 31 May 2016).
No denial of procedural fairness
by the Boundaries Commission
- The
applicants have not established that they were denied procedural fairness by the
Boundaries Commission. The Boundaries Commission
was not obliged to furnish the
applicants with a copy of each Delegate’s report, give the applicants an
opportunity to comment
on that report or consider any comments of the applicants
in reviewing each Delegate’s report and sending its comments to the
Minister.
- I
agree with and adopt the respondents’ submissions summarised above that
the Boundaries Commission did not have a duty to afford
procedural fairness, as
alleged by the applicants. I also repeat the reasons I gave in Woollahra
Municipal Council v Minister for Local Government at
[267]-[272]:
The common law duty to accord procedural fairness, when applicable, attaches to
the exercise of a statutory power: Minister for Local Government v South
Sydney City Council at [15]. For this claim of denial of procedural
fairness, the relevant statutory power is that of the Boundaries Commission
under
s 218F(6)(b) to review the report of the Departmental Chief Executive (or
his or her delegate) and send its comments to the Minister.
Does a duty to
accord procedural fairness attach to the exercise of this statutory power? In my
view, it does not. The statutory
scheme evinces an intention on the part of the
legislature to exclude the application of the principles of procedural fairness
at
this stage in the statutory process in relation to the proposal for
amalgamation of local government areas.
The legislature has turned its mind to the times at which and the manner in
which persons affected by a proposal for amalgamation
would be given an
opportunity to be heard. The legislature expressly required the holding of an
inquiry in relation to an amalgamation
proposal (s 263(2A)). Reasonable public
notice must be given of the holding of the inquiry (s 263(2B)). Members of the
public must
be allowed to attend the inquiry (s 263(5)). The factors to which
regard must be had in considering the amalgamation proposal are
prescribed (s
263(3)).
The legislature made no equivalent prescription for participation of the public
or affected councils at the following stages in the
statutory process in
relation to the amalgamation proposal. The legislature required the Departmental
Chief Executive (or his or
her delegate) to “furnish the Departmental
Chief Executive’s report to the Boundaries Commission for review and
comment”
(s 218F(6)(a)). The legislature did not require the Departmental
Chief Executive to furnish a copy of his or her report to anyone
else, including
the councils, affected by the amalgamation proposal, or prescribe the process by
which anyone other than the Boundaries
Commission, including affected councils,
might be given an opportunity to review and comment on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s
report.
Specification of the persons and the process for providing persons with the
opportunity to review and comment on the Departmental
Chief Executive’s
report would be critical to ensure the workability of any scheme for review and
comment by persons other
than the Boundaries Commission. Who are the persons or
classes of persons who are to be given a copy of the Departmental Chief
Executive’s
report? By what criteria are the persons or classes of persons
to be selected? Who decides which particular persons or classes of
persons
satisfy the criteria? How is the Departmental Chief Executive’s report to
be furnished to the selected persons or classes
of persons? What is the content
of the opportunity to be heard? Is it the same as the duty on the Boundaries
Commission under s 218F(6)(b)
to review and comment on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report or is it different? Can persons provide further
comments
on the amalgamation proposal that is the subject of the report? Does
any other information have to be provided apart from the Departmental
Chief
Executive’s report to enable the person to be able to review and comment
on the report? How long should the person have
to provide their comments? These
questions would need to be answered in order to provide a workable scheme for
persons other than
the Boundaries Commission to review and comment on the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report.
Providing an opportunity to persons to review and comment on the Departmental
Chief Executive’s report also changes the duty
of the Boundaries
Commission. Under s 218F(6)(b), the sole focus of the Boundaries
Commission’s duty is to review and comment
on the Departmental Chief
Executive’s report. If persons are to be provided with an opportunity to
review and comment on the
Departmental Chief Executive’s report, the
Boundaries Commission would need to consider these comments in its review and
comment
on the report. Does the Boundaries Commission need to include in its
comments to the Minister a summary of the comments made by other
persons and
explain how the Boundaries Commission dealt with those comments? If so, the
object of the review and comment expands
beyond merely being the Departmental
Chief Executive’s report to also include the comments of other persons on
that report.
However, the legislature has not provided for this to be done.
The exercise of the statutory power in question, s 218F(6)(b), also is not apt
to affect adversely a council affected by an amalgamation
proposal. Woollahra
Council relied on the stark consequence that once a recommendation for the
implementation of an amalgamation
proposal is adopted by the Governor, the
affected councils are immediately dissolved. However, the Boundaries
Commission’s
action in reviewing the Departmental Chief Executive’s
Report, and sending its comments to the Minister, although a step in
the
statutory process, does not itself have any consequence for an affected council.
The focus of the Boundaries Commission’s
comments is the Departmental
Chief Executive’s Report and not the amalgamation proposal itself. The
Boundaries Commission’s
comments on that report are not apt to adversely
affect the councils affected by the amalgamation proposal.
- For
these reasons, the Boundaries Commission did not deny the applicants procedural
fairness by not giving them an opportunity to
review and comment on each
Delegate’s report on the proposals. I reject this ground of
challenge.
The claim of misleading statements
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants argued that various statements were made concerning the independence
of KPMG, but that these were misleading and affected
the legal validity of
various steps in the statutory process for amalgamation.
- The
statements relied on by the applicants were made in various documents, including
the “merger proposal” documents for
the Oberon proposal, Cabonne
proposal and Gundagai proposal, published on or after 6 January 2016. The
proposal documents stated
that:
- (a) each
proposal was: “... supported by independent analysis and modelling by
KPMG”;
- (b) “[a]nalysis
by KPMG shows the new council has the potential to generate net savings to
council operations”; and
- (c) “the
analysis also shows the proposed merger is expected to generate ... savings
every year from 2020 onwards. Savings will
primarily be from the redeployment of
back office and administrative functions; streamlining of senior management
roles; efficiencies
from increased purchasing power of materials and contracts;
and reduced expenditure on councillor fees”.
- The
applicants pleaded that the references in the proposal documents to
“independent analysis and modelling by KPMG” and
“independent
analysis” and the description of KPMG’s role as
“independent” in the amalgamation process
under ss 218F and 263
of the Act were “misleading and deceptive” in that “as from at
least June 2015 to March 2016,
the preparation and making of the amalgamation
proposals and the said other publicly available documents pursuant to Divs 2A
and
2B of Pt 1 of Ch 9 of the Act has been a joint venture and/or partnership
and/or collaboration between the [State of New South Wales]
and KPMG and the
analysis and modelling of KPMG was not independent and impartial, there was no
independent assessment of the process,
and KPMG’s role as a consultant to
the [State of New South Wales] in the amalgamation process under the Act was not
independent
and impartial” (par 11A of second further amended
statement of claim of Oberon Council, the other statements of claim being
in
similar terms).
- The
applicants pleaded that this alleged misrepresentation was relied upon, and
believed to be true and correct, by the Departmental
Chief Executive and the
Delegates, the Boundaries Commission and the ratepayers and residents of the
affected councils in respect
of their participation in the amalgamation process
under ss 218F and 263 of the Act (par 11B of second further amended
statement
of claim of Oberon Council and equivalent paragraphs in the other
statements of claim).
- The
applicants pleaded that, as a result of the misrepresentation, the Departmental
Chief Executive and Delegates, the Boundaries
Commission and the ratepayers and
residents of the affected councils proceeded in their respective roles and
functions under ss 218F
and 263 “upon a fundamental misapprehension
of fact, namely that the analysis and modelling by KPMG in respect of each
proposal
including that concerning the applicant council was independent,
impartial and reliable, and that there had been an independent assessment
of the
proposal, and that the role of KPMG in the amalgamation process was independent
and impartial when that was not the case”
(par 11C second further
amended statement of claim of Oberon Council and equivalent paragraphs in the
other statements of claim).
- The
applicants pleaded that the misrepresentation was also contained in other
documents published by the New South Wales Government,
including:
- (a) A document
prepared by KPMG entitled “Local Government Reform Merger Impacts and
Analysis” (‘Impacts document’)
published on or about
18 December 2015 which:
- (i) stated that
“[a] comprehensive analysis was undertaken to evaluate the impacts of the
proposed local government reforms.
These include quantified and non-quantified
impacts, including:
● a
financial appraisal of how a merger impacts a council’s Long Term
Financial Plan (‘LTFP’) based on the
potential savings and costs
generated by the merger;
● an assessment of state-wide merger impacts,
including net financial benefits and the overall benefit cost ratio (BCR) of
the
proposed local government reforms...”;
(ii) contained information about the asserted costs and benefits of the
proposal, which information was said to be sourced from “KPMG”
and
“KPMG analysis” (pp 4-6 of the Impacts document) (par 20
of second further amended statement of claim of Oberon Council).
(b) The KPMG Technical Paper published on or about 20 January 2016 which
stated that: “KPMG was engaged by the NSW Department
of Premier and
Cabinet to prepare independent modelling of the potential financial impacts of
selected council mergers. The financial
modelling undertaken relied on publicly
available council data and a financial model developed by KPMG...”
(p 2 of the KPMG
Technical Paper) (par 21 of second further amended
statement of claim of Oberon Council).
386 The applicants argued
that KPMG was not independent:
a. It is apparent from the further disclosure of documents and
material that KPMG was in its own words in partnership with DPC
from as early as
July [2015] in respect of the amalgamation process and latest by the date of
relevant agreements between KPMG and
the NSW [Government] made on or after
27 August 2015.
b. KPMG was not independent of the NSW [Government] in any
relevant sense and in the ordinary meaning of that word having regard
to its
context from that date at least until May 2016 assuming then that the joint
venture with the [State of NSW] concluded.
c. Copy contracts between KPMG and [the State of NSW] from
22 June [2015] to date demonstrate that KPMG was not appointed to provide
an independent analysis and modelling of the proposals for amalgamation made by
the Respondents announced by [the Minister] on 6
January 2016 and that it
was not, as represented to the [Departmental Chief Executive] and his Delegates,
the public and the Boundaries
Commission, independent of the process but on the
contrary was an essential partner in it.
(par 6, p 4, submissions of applicants, 3 June
2016)
- The
applicants referred to a number of documents that they said established that
KPMG was in partnership with DPC and was not independent.
These included various
agreements between KPMG and the NSW Government for KPMG to assist in the NSW
Government’s local government
reform project. They also included various
proposals that KPMG put to the NSW Government bidding to be awarded contracts to
do further
work. One of these proposals was the “Local Government Reform -
Merger Proposals” dated 1 November 2015.
- In
the letter enclosing this proposal, KPMG said: “Having supported the
Department of Premier and Cabinet (‘DPC’)
and the Office of Local
Government (‘OLG’) as a reform partner over an extended period, we
have a strong appreciation
of the importance of this next phase of work”.
The applicants submitted that the concept of a “reform partner”
is
inconsistent with the notion of impartiality and independence (T 3/6/16,
p 176).
- In
the proposal itself, KPMG set out its understanding of the NSW
Government’s local government reform agenda. KPMG
said:
There is a strong case for change to support mergers as part of a comprehensive
local government reform agenda.
Through our long-standing role as DPC and OLG’s strategic adviser
throughout the reform process, we have developed a deep understanding
of the
unique challenges you face ...
... we appreciate that the next phase will be the most challenging to the
achievement of the reform’s objectives.
- KPMG
referred to the process in the Act for referring merger proposals for
examination and report and continued:
A sensitive and agile approach is required to support this process – and
KPMG is uniquely placed to provide the rigour and
flexibility to support you in
achieving the reform objectives ... KPMG is uniquely credentialed to provide the
knowledge, experience,
collaboration and – importantly – the
flexibility required to support DPC and OLG in successfully delivering the
Merger
Proposals and driving the success of the local government
reforms.
- KPMG
set out the methodology it would use if awarded the work:
Our methodology has been developed to support you in meeting your objectives,
and will leverage the substantial base of evidence
and knowledge that our team
has built and refined in collaboration with you over the past
18 months.
● [w]e can ‘hit the ground running’ –
we are able to rapidly leverage the evidence base we have developed
with you
previously to deliver this Engagement within the required timeframes ...
● we have the evidence to-hand and the expertise within
our team to tailor each Merger Proposal to capture local level insights
...
- KPMG
elaborated on its proposed methodology in each of four phases. For phase 1
– project initiation and governance, KPMG said
that: “[w]e will hold
a Project Initiation Meeting at the commencement of the project to ensure
understanding and agreement
on project scope and critical timing. Specifically,
during this meeting we will ... [agree] on the format and schedule of the weekly
project status updates between KPMG and the DPC Project Team”. KPMG said
that outputs of phase 1 would include “[u]nderstanding
and agreement
on the project scope and timing” and “[s]takeholder management
agreed”.
- For
phase 2 – template design, KPMG said that it would develop a draft
merger proposal template, suitable to inform key aspects
of the Boundaries
Commission public consultation process. It said “[f]ollowing the
completion of the draft template, we will
hold a workshop with you to outline
the elements of the draft and seek input and agreement on the final
Proposal”. The applicants
observed that this evidences “a stake of
the partnership in the proposal” (T 3/6/16, p 177).
- For
phase 4 – merger proposal testing and finalisation, KPMG said that
“[p]hase 4 involves three key tasks” including
“incorporating feedback received on merger Proposals from DPC,
Premier’s Office and the Minister’s Office”.
The applicants
submitted that this shows that KPMG and the NSW Government are “working
hand in glove” (T 3/6/16, p 177).
- KPMG
continued that “[i]t is understood that the Government is likely to
consider Merger Proposals in the near future. KPMG
has a thorough understanding
of the sensitivity of the Local Government Reform which requires a flexible and
agile approach. We will
fully utilise our recent experience in supporting DPC to
anticipate and plan for potential revisions. KPMG will need to work in close
partnership with DPC to ensure any changes are processed in a timely manner, to
support Government’s decisions”. The
applicants submitted that there
is nothing wrong with the Government entering into contracts of this type, but
they should not represent
it as being an independent process (T 3/6/16,
p 177).
- In
the section on “Our Experience”, KPMG said:
The success of our collaboration with you has most recently been exemplified by
the endorsement of the Business Case for the merger
reforms by the NSW
Expenditure Review Committee.
- In
the section on “Our Team”, KPMG said:
We offer a team that is known to you, is available for the duration of the
project, has a track record of delivering high quality
products for you and
offers a breadth of expertise to meet your needs in full ...
● our project leadership team has worked with DPC and OLG
on the Local Government Reform Agenda for more than 18 months and
has a
deep understanding of the NSW Government’s reform strategy and how best to
meet your needs.
- The
applicants submitted that these statements of KPMG refer to “the notion of
an informal arrangement or collaboration or partnership
being a joint venture to
amalgamate selected councils, including the applicants”. The applicants
submitted it was akin to the
joint venture entered into between the Commonwealth
and the State referred to in P J Magennis Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth
(1949) 80 CLR 382; [1949] HCA 66 at 424 (T 3/6/16, pp 177-178).
- The
applicants argued that the misrepresentation affected the validity of various
steps in the statutory process for the amalgamations.
- First,
the misrepresentation was incorporated into and infected the public notices
given under s 263(2B) of the Act. The applicants
alleged that people
reading the notices would have been guided to the Council Boundary Review
website referred to in the notice and
to the relevant proposal document, Impacts
document and KPMG Technical Paper posted on that website. Those documents
contained the
misrepresentation as to KPMG’s independent role in the whole
process of amalgamation of the areas. The public notice, by “incorporating
by reference information ... which [was] misleading and deceptive,” was
rendered “inadequate and void” (T 3/6/16,
p 182).
- The
applicants argued that, in this way, the notice “misrepresented the public
process to the Delegates, the Boundaries Commission
and the ratepayers and
residents of each area and the councils” (par 6(f), p 5,
submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016). The
applicants
submitted:
All the participants then proceeded upon a fundamental misapprehension of fact
in that regard sufficient to vitiate the process and
the Minister’s later
decision based upon the integrity and lawfulness of it, such that the whole
purpose of the notice which
is to assist the Delegate, the Boundaries Commission
and the public and ultimately the Minister as a responsible decision-making
authority to fulfil their respective functions, and providing those affected by
the process to exercise their rights in relation
to later stages in the process:
Scurr v Brisbane City Council at 252.
(p 7, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016)
- The
applicants submitted that residents and ratepayers of the affected councils or
members of the public might have been “deflected”
from making a
submission or qualifying their submission or attending the inquiry and speaking
at it, as they had been invited to
do by the notice, by the misrepresentation in
the documents referred to in the notice. The applicants submitted that
“those
who have heard of KPMG know that it’s a multinational
accountancy firm with a professed skill in the sort of area that it was
professing to be involved with, may be disinclined to question its modelling and
assumptions or feel that they’re unable to
do so because they don’t
have the resources of KPMG” (T 3/6/16, pp 185-186).
- The
applicants secondly argued that the misrepresentation, incorporated by reference
in the notice and contained in the material posted
on the Council Boundary
Review website, and relied on as integral by the key participants in the
process, caused the inquiry under
s 263(2A) to be a “misinformed
inquiry”, the examination under s 263(1) to be a “misinformed
examination”
and the review under s 218F(6)(b) to be a
“misinformed review” (par 6(g), p 5, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016).
The applicants argued that the misrepresentation
deflected the Delegates from carrying out an informed inquiry and examination
and
the Boundaries Commission from carrying out an informed review of the
Delegate’s report. For example, they might have been
deflected from
examining the assumptions in the KPMG Technical Paper. As a consequence, the
Minister was denied the opportunity of
fulfilling his decision making authority
on the basis of an inquiry, examination and review which were informed
(T 3/6/16, pp 185-187).
- The
applicants also argued that the misrepresentation infected various decisions of
the Minister. The misrepresentations made the
Minister’s decision to make
each proposal under s 218E(1) and to refer the proposal under
s 218F(1) manifestly unreasonable.
The applicants argued that it was
manifestly unreasonable for the Minister to make or refer a proposal
“where the stated ‘independent’
KPMG material (being the
disclosed material, including the Proposal Document and the Technical Paper) is
not impartial or independent,
but is the result of a long standing collaboration
in partnership with the NSW [Government]/DPC regarding forced amalgamations in
NSW” (p 1, submissions of applicants, 6 June 2016).
- The
applicants argued that the misrepresentation also infected the decision of the
Minister under s 218F(7) to recommend implementation
of the proposals for
amalgamation. The applicants argued that it was manifestly unreasonable for the
Minister to recommend implementation
of the proposals “after the statutory
amalgamation process has [been] completed upon an erroneous basis which he
caused to
happen ie by his own representations that the KPMG information is
‘independent’ in the Proposal Documents and Technical
Paper which is
both erroneous and likely to mislead participants in the process and which makes
no mention of the inaccuracy of that
assertion he had made but rather on the
contrary assumes it to be correct” (p 1, submissions of applicants,
6 June 2016).
The respondents’ rebuttal
- The
respondents disputed that the evidence showed that KPMG did not carry out its
work, including its modelling and analysis, independently
or that it was
dictated to by the NSW Government. The respondents referred to the KPMG
documents tendered by the applicants, which
the applicants said showed the joint
venture between KPMG and the NSW Government. One of these documents was the
“Options Analysis
Local Government Reform Project Plan” dated
7 July 2015. This project plan noted that the purpose of the engagement of
KPMG
was:
to develop an appropriate evidence base that:
1. provides the necessary information to the NSW Government on
the full range of financial, economic, social and community impacts
of reform
options and support optimal reform decisions; and
2. underpins the communication of reform outcomes to each
affected community and the broader population, cognisant of local priorities
and
concerns about local government reform. (p 3)
- The
respondents submitted that this showed that the first purpose was to collect
material in a form that provided an appropriate evidence
base for decision
making (T 6/6/16, p 204).
- The
second document to which the respondents referred was the “Local
Government Reform Merger Proposals” document of 1
November 2015. In
the section “Appendices – Template Designs”, KPMG referred to
work that it had done previously
for the NSW Government. KPMG said that it was
“engaged in October 2015 to prepare a public report on the impacts of
local government
reform in NSW” and that that report drew heavily on
“the analysis undertaken for the comprehensive merger business case
KPMG
had previously prepared for DPC” (p A13). The respondents said that
this analysis of KPMG involved independent modelling.
The respondents noted that
there is nothing wrong in these statements or previous work to support an
inference of want of independence
but instead they are completely consistent
with KPMG having performed its role in the manner described in the documentation
(T 6/6/16,
p 205).
- The
respondents referred to the various agreements between KPMG and the NSW
Government tendered by the applicants. The agreement of
22 June 2015
between KPMG and the OLG, for example, described the services to be provided by
KPMG as being to:
● Assist the Government to make a decision on optimal
council mergers, based on a combination of qualitative and quantitative
analysis; and
● Support the Government to effectively communicate the
benefits of proposed mergers to each affected community and the broader
population.
- The
respondents submitted that there was nothing wrong with the second aspect and
nothing in the first aspect to suggest that the
modelling was to be anything
other than independent, based on the application of KPMG’s undoubted
expertise and experience
in this area (T 6/6/16, p 205).
- The
respondents referred to a request for quotation by the OLG on “Local
Government Reform – Options Analysis” (T
6/6/16, p 206). This
document stated that:
The objective of this RFQ is to:
● [a]ssist the Government to make a decision on optimal
council mergers, based on a combination of qualitative and quantitative
analysis; and
● [s]upport the Government to effectively communicate the
benefits of proposed mergers to each affected community and the
broader
population. (p 3)
- The
request for quotation set out what the contractor was being invited to do. This
included developing a model that:
(a) [s]upports the development and consideration of options for
optimal local government mergers, with the following
characteristics:
● [u]tilises the recommendations
and maps of the Independent Local Government Review Panel as a starting point
for analysis;
● key demographic and financial data for all councils
eg population, population growth, rates, electors per councillor, revenue,
assets, debt, administration expenditure;
● performance against each of the Fit for the Future
benchmarks;
● Priorities and challenges for the
council/community/region, based on relevant State and regional plans and
council’s
strategic plans (and other available material eg publicly
available FFTF proposals ...
(b) [e]nables aggregation and dissemination of this information
to analyse and compare possible merger options ...
- The
contractor was also invited to “[d]esign a template/narrative that can be
populated with requisite analysis to present preferred
options for local
government reform in all councils in an easy to understand format
including:
(d) [p]referred structural change option, including councils
where mergers are not proposed – description and map;
(e) [c]omparison of new and previous local governments, based
on key quantitative and qualitative material;
(f) [r]ationale for, against key criteria (improved value for
ratepayers’ dollars, better services, better infrastructure)
using
quantitative and qualitative information. (p 4)
- In
the section on assessment of quotations, the OLG said that it would assess:
“[q]ualifications and CVs held by individuals
in the project team”,
“[r]elevant experience, proven capability and successful outcomes in other
projects by both the
tenderer and the personnel who will be involved in the
project”, “[d]emonstrated competency and experience to project
manage the engagement” and “[v]alue for money”
(p 6).
- The
respondents submitted that the Government was requesting the contractor to
undertake and develop a model of a particular kind
for the local government
reform project.
- The
respondents submitted that the subsequent documents and work done by KPMG
supported the inference that KPMG did what they were
engaged to do. KPMG
developed the independent modelling, using its skills and experience that
allowed it to win the bid and as they
were called upon to do by the contract
documents. Moreover, they did this independently.
- The
respondents rebutted the applicants’ suggestion that the modelling and
assumptions set out in the KPMG Technical Paper and
used to derive the financial
benefits described in the proposal documents were developed by DPC or by DPC in
a joint venture with
KPMG. The respondents referred to an email from one DPC
officer to another that candidly noted that the key assumptions and data
sources
for the model were KPMG’s work, but that she had removed KPMG’s
branding in producing a version for publication.
Nevertheless, the published
version was an accurate reflection of KPMG’s work. This established that
the modelling assumptions
and data sources were KPMG’s work
(T 6/6/16, p 203).
- The
respondents next submitted that, even if contrary to the evidence, the
applicants established that KPMG did not model independently,
this would not
invalidate any step in the statutory process (T 6/6/16, p 207). Any
misleading representation about the independence
of KPMG in undertaking the
modelling and analysis did not cause the notice given, the inquiry held, the
examination and report undertaken
or the review and comment on the report to not
satisfy the statutory requirements. The respondents submitted that a holistic
analysis
of what was done at each stage in the statutory process needs to be
undertaken and any misleading representation must be considered
in the whole
context. For example, in assessing whether reasonable public notice was given,
there needed to be a holistic analysis
of all of the forms of public notice that
were provided and an assessment of whether the misleading representation had the
consequence
of causing the public notice that had been provided not to be
“reasonable public notice” for the purposes of s 363(2B)
(T 6/6/16, pp 207-208 and 217).
- The
respondents submitted further that any misrepresentation in the documents made
available on the Council Boundary Review website
and referred to in the public
notice could not cause the notice itself to be misleading or legally inadequate.
There would have to
be in the notice itself something that was misleading and
deceptive about the subject matter of the notice before the notice was
misleading and adequate. Cases such as Scurr v Brisbane City Council all
concern inadequacy in the notice itself. (T 6/6/16, p 218).
- The
respondents submitted that any misrepresentation in the publicly available
documents could not vitiate the examination and report
by the Delegates,
including the inquiries held. The mere fact that statements or figures in the
documents are misleading or deceptive,
or even wrong, cannot invalidate public
decision making. The respondents submitted that all sorts of statements are made
to those
who exercise statutory power with varying degrees of accuracy. Public
submissions may contain misleading or deceptive or even plainly
wrong statements
or information. The making of such submissions to a public decision maker cannot
invalidate the exercise of power
by the decision maker, even if the misleading
or deceptive or wrong statements are accepted or acted upon by the decision
maker.
There is no error of law by a decision maker making a wrong finding of
fact or an unsound decision. Misleading conduct, which is
not characterised by
fraud, bad faith or the like is, at least generally, insufficient to vitiate an
administrative decision: Anderson v Minister for Infrastructure Planning and
Natural Resources (2006) 151 LGERA 229; [2006] NSWLEC 725 at [79] (T 6/6/16,
p 218).
Statements were not misleading and did not invalidate the
amalgamation process
- The
applicants have not established that the statements concerning the independence
of KPMG were misleading or, even if they were
to be, that this invalidated any
step in the statutory process in respect of each proposal. I agree with and
adopt the respondents’
submissions.
- First,
I do not accept that the statements relied on by the applicants were misleading.
KPMG was engaged as a contractor to provide
financial consulting services to the
NSW Government over an extended period of time in relation to local government
reform. The various
agreements tendered described the nature of the services to
be provided. KPMG bid for and was successful in being awarded contracts
to
perform these services. KPMG used its knowledge, expertise and experience, which
enabled it to be awarded the contracts, to perform
the services. That knowledge,
expertise and experience continued to develop with each contract performed;
there were cumulative benefits
over time, both for KPMG and the NSW Government.
KPMG developed a special understanding of and insights into the
Government’s
local government reform project, which enabled KPMG to better
provide the contracted services to the Government. The nature of the
services to
be provided, and the repeated engagements over an extended period of time,
necessitated consultation, collaboration and
co-operation between KPMG as the
contractor and the Government as the client.
- None
of these matters concerning the working relationship between KPMG and the
Government caused KPMG not to be an independent contractor
providing independent
advice and services. They certainly did not cause KPMG and the Government to be
in any form of “joint
venture” to amalgamate local government areas,
including the applicants’ areas. The advice and services provided by KPMG,
including the modelling assumptions and analysis, remained KPMG’s work.
The fact that there was dialogue and discussion between
KPMG and the Government,
including on KPMG’s modelling assumptions and analysis, did not cause the
relevant materials and documents
to cease to be KPMG’s work.
- In
these circumstances, the statements relied on by the applicants concerning the
independence of KPMG and of KPMG’s work were
not misrepresentations. This
conclusion is sufficient to dispose of this challenge.
- In
any event, however, any misrepresentation that might have been made in the
documents did not vitiate any step in the statutory
process for the amalgamation
proposals.
- The
misrepresentations were not contained in the public notices required to be given
under s 263(2B) of the Act. It is not sufficient
that the misrepresentations
were in documents made available on a website referred to in the public notices.
That cannot cause the
notices to be legally inadequate.
- The
documents in which the misrepresentations were contained were not documents
required to be produced or publicly exhibited by the
Act. The documents had no
statutory status. Hence, any misrepresentation in the documents could not cause
them not to be documents
required by statute: see Woollahra Municipal Council
v Minister for Local Government at [305]-[307].
- The
applicants have not established that any misrepresentation caused each Delegate
to fail to have regard to any mandatory relevant
matter (under s 263(3)) or to
fail to exercise the duty to examine and report on the proposal (under s
263(1)). The mere fact that
a repository of administrative power (the Delegates
in this case) might consider a factually false or misleading statement (that
is
not fraudulent) does not, by that fact alone, cause any exercise of power to
miscarry in law. It will only do so if, as a consequence
of the false or
misleading statement, a recognised ground of judicial review is established or a
mandatory statutory requirement
is not complied with: Woollahra Municipal
Council v Minister for Local Government at [308].
- In
this case, the applicants have not established that the Delegates even took into
account the statements alleged by the applicants
as being misrepresentations,
let alone that any such consideration was material in the Delegates exercising
the functions of examining
and reporting on the proposal. The applicants do not
refer to any statement in each Delegate’s report establishing that the
Delegate had regard to the misrepresentation or that the misrepresentation
affected the Delegate’s examination of the proposal
in any way.
- The
applicants also have not established that the misrepresentation affected in any
way the Boundaries Commission’s review of
and comment on each
Delegate’s report. The sole focus of the Boundaries Commission’s
review was each Delegate’s
report; it did not consider any of the
documents in which the misrepresentation was contained. The Delegate’s
report contained
no reference to the misrepresentation contained in the
documents. Hence, the Boundaries Commission could not have considered the
misrepresentation.
- The
allegedly misleading statements, therefore, have not had the legal consequence
of invalidating any step in the statutory amalgamation
process for the proposal.
I reject this ground of challenge.
The recommendation to the
Governor
The applicants’ challenges
- The
applicants’ final grounds of challenge concern the Minister’s
exercise or purported exercise of power under s 218F(7)
of the Act to
recommend to the Governor that the proposals for amalgamation be implemented.
The grounds of challenge differ for the
Oberon and Cabonne proposals and for the
Gundagai proposal.
- For
the Oberon and Cabonne proposals, the applicants argued that the Minister had no
power to make conditional recommendations to
the Governor for implementation of
the proposals. In both cases, the Minister received a briefing recommending that
the Minister
make a decision to amalgamate the relevant local government areas.
In both cases, the Minister made a decision on 4 May 2016 in these
terms:
Subject to the outcome of the current legal proceedings affecting this proposal,
my decision is for this proposal to be implemented.
- The
applicants submitted that this purports to be a decision under s 218F(7)
recommending that the proposal be implemented but conditioned
on the outcome of
the proceedings in this Court. Such a decision is “ultra vires the power
conferred because each is impermissibly
conditioned” (par 1,
p 18, submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016).
- In
relation to the Gundagai proposal, the Minister made a decision on 3 May
2016 “to recommend to the Governor that the proposal
be
implemented”. The Governor made a proclamation on 12 May 2016 to
amalgamate many different local government areas to become
new areas, including
to amalgamate the former areas of Cootamundra and Gundagai to constitute a new
area named Gundagai: cl 4(1)
of Local Government (Council Amalgamations)
Proclamation 2016 (‘the Proclamation’). The councils of the areas
amalgamated
were dissolved: cl 4(2) of the Proclamation. Schedule 7 of
the Proclamation contained provisions relating to the new Gundagai area
and the
council of that area. One of these concerned the ward structure, that “the
new council is not to be divided into wards
for the first election”:
cl 7 of Sch 7 to the Proclamation.
- The
Proclamation also gave the Minister power to determine any matter or thing for
the purpose of giving effect to the Proclamation.
Clause 5(1) of the
Proclamation provided:
For the purposes of giving effect to this Proclamation, the Minister may from
time to time determine any matter or thing at the Minister’s
discretion or
if a new council or an Administrator refers any matter or thing requiring
determination to the Minister for that purpose.
- The
applicants challenged this Proclamation, insofar as it applied to the Gundagai
proposal, on two grounds. First, the applicants
argued that the Minister had no
power to recommend to the Governor and the Governor had no power to make a
proclamation for the implementation
of the Gundagai proposal because, the
applicants believed, there was already another proposal for the amalgamation of
the areas of
Harden, Cootamundra and Gundagai (‘the Harden
proposal’). The applicants argued that the statutory scheme does not
permit
there to be concurrent proposals but rather requires a “staged
process” whereby proposals are dealt with consecutively
(par 8, p 4,
outline submissions of applicants in closing, 31 May 2016 and p 18,
submissions of applicants, 3 June 2016; T 27/5/16,
pp 6-8).
- The
applicants argued that once the Harden proposal was received by the Minister, it
had to be dealt with under Div 2B of Pt 1 of
Ch 9 of the Act and
the Minister could not deal with the Gundagai proposal that he had made until he
had finished dealing with the
Harden proposal. The Minister therefore had no
power to make the decision he purported to make on 3 May 2016 to recommend
the implementation
of the Gundagai proposal because he had not finished dealing
with the Harden proposal (T 27/5/16, pp 6-8).
- Alternatively,
the applicants argued, if the Minister’s decision to recommend the
Gundagai proposal could be seen to be a modification
of the Harden proposal, it
was ultra vires the power in s 218F(7) because the modification would
constitute a new proposal.
- On
the converse factual assumption that the making and referral of the Gundagai
proposal preceded the Harden proposal, the applicants
contended that the
Minister had no power to recommend the implementation of the Gundagai proposal
because this proposal had been
superseded by the Harden proposal. The superseded
Gundagai proposal could not be recommended for implementation because only the
Harden proposal, with or without modifications, could be recommended for
implementation. If the Minister purported to recommend the
superseded Gundagai
proposal, this could only be lawful if it constituted a modification of the
Harden proposal. Given the significant
differences between the two proposals,
the applicants submitted that the superseded Gundagai proposal was a new
proposal and not
a modification of the operative Harden proposal. The Minister
had no power under s 218F(7) to recommend the implementation of a new
proposal
(T 31/05/16, pp 59-60).
- Second,
the applicants argued that the Proclamation impermissibly conferred power on the
Minister by cl 5(1) allowing the Minister
to determine any matter or thing
at the Minister’s discretion (par 2, p 18, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016 and T 31/5/16,
p 59).
- The
applicants noted that a proclamation may include facilitating provisions of the
kind referred to in s 213 and s 218C(1) of the
Act as are necessary
and convenient for giving effect to the Proclamation. In this case, the
Proclamation did include such provisions,
both generally in the body of the
Proclamation and specifically for the new Gundagai area and council in
Sch 7 of the Proclamation.
However, the applicants argued, cl 5(1) of
the Proclamation also gave power to the Minister to determine any matter or
thing at the
Minister’s discretion for the purpose of giving effect to the
Proclamation. The applicants submitted that this was an impermissible
conferral
of power.
- The
applicants submitted that it is not possible to sever “the unauthorised
power of the Minister from the Proclamation [under
ss 31 and 32 of the
Interpretation Act 1987] because without such [a power] the Proclamation
fails to address the necessary requirements in the legal and practical sense:
see
ss 213 and 218CA” (par 2, p 18, submissions of
applicants, 3 June 2016).
The respondents’
rebuttal
- The
respondents rejected the applicants’ challenges to the Minister’s
decisions concerning implementation of the Oberon
and Cabonne proposals and the
Gundagai proposal.
- In
relation to the Oberon and Cabonne proposals, the respondents submitted that the
Minister has not yet made, under s 218F(7) of
the Act, a recommendation to
the Governor that either proposal be implemented. The Minister’s decision
of 4 May 2016 (“[s]ubject
to the outcome of the current legal
proceedings affecting this proposal, my decision is for this proposal to be
implemented”)
was not a decision under s 218F(7) of the Act. In
terms, it does not state that it is a decision to make a recommendation to the
Governor, which is what s 218F(7) requires, and there is no evidence that
the Minister has made a recommendation to the Governor
(T 31/5/16,
pp 96-97). Each decision of the Minister of 4 May 2016 is not a
“self-executing decision”; it cannot come
into force once this Court
determines the outcome of these proceedings. The Minister will still have to
exercise the power under
s 218F(7) to recommend to the Governor that the
proposals be implemented (T 31/5/16, p 97).
- In
relation to the Gundagai proposal, the respondents submitted that the
applicants’ argument that there cannot be concurrent
proposals is
factually and legally erroneous.
- Factually,
the applicants have reversed the order in which the proposals were made and
dealt with. The Minister made the Gundagai
proposal on 6 January 2016 and
referred it on the same day to the Departmental Chief Executive for examination
and report. On the
same day, the Departmental Chief Executive delegated the
function of examining and reporting to Mr Turner. The Delegate held the
required inquiry on 4 February 2016. The Delegate furnished his report on
24 March 2016 to the Boundaries Commission and the Minister.
The Boundaries
Commission reviewed and sent its comments on the Delegate’s report to the
Minister on 29 April 2016. The Minister
made his decision on 3 May
2016 “to recommend to the Governor that the [Gundagai] proposal be
implemented”.
- The
Harden proposal was received and dealt with later. Following resolutions of
Harden Council on 20 January and 17 February 2016,
Harden Council
forwarded to the Minister on 28 February 2016 the Harden proposal and
requested the Minister to refer the Harden proposal
for examination and report.
In early March 2016, the Minister referred the Harden proposal that he had
received to the Departmental
Chief Executive for examination and report. On
3 March 2016, the Departmental Chief Executive delegated the function of
examination
and report to Mr Turner. The Delegate held the required inquiry
on 5 and 6 April 2016. The Delegate furnished his report on 22 April
2016 to the Boundaries Commission and the Minister. The Boundaries Commission
reviewed and sent its comments on the Delegate’s
report on the Harden
proposal to the Minister on 3 May 2016. The Minister decided on 5 May
2016 “to decline to recommend to
the Governor that the [Harden] proposal
be implemented”.
- The
respondents noted, therefore, that the applicants’ argument that the
Minister had no power to refer the Gundagai proposal
he had made because he had
already received the Harden proposal had an incorrect factual basis. The
applicants’ argument cannot
succeed on the correct facts. On the
applicants’ argument, if the Gundagai proposal was first in time, the
Minister had power
to refer it and have it dealt with before referring the
Harden proposal and having that proposal dealt with. The Minister would have
had
power to make a decision under s 218F(7) in relation to the Gundagai
proposal before he decided the Harden proposal.
- Legally,
the respondents submitted that the statutory scheme does not prohibit proposals
being dealt with concurrently. Indeed, the
statutory scheme mandates that the
Minister refer each proposal made or received by the Minister on making or
receiving the proposal
(s 218F(1)) and that each proposal must be dealt
with separately according to the statutory procedures in ss 218F and 263 of
the
Act. It is not until the stage of the Minister’s decision under
s 218F(7) that the statutory scheme moves from the mandatory
“must” to the discretionary “may” (T 31/5/16,
p 102).
- The
approach that was adopted of processing the Gundagai proposal and the Harden
proposal separately but concurrently was consistent
with the Court of
Appeal’s recent decision in Botany Bay City Council v Minister for
Local Government at [43]-[44] upholding the Land and Environment
Court’s decision in Botany Bay City Council v Minister for Local
Government [2016] NSWLEC 35 at [31] (par 69, p 19, respondents’
further submissions, 31 May 2016). The respondents submitted that two or
more proposals, once made
or received, can be dealt with in parallel processes
that are conducted in effect together (T 31/5/16, p 101).
- In
relation to the applicants’ challenge to the Proclamation leaving matters
to the Minister’s discretion, the respondents
submitted that cl 5(1)
of the Proclamation was within power. Section 218C(1) enables a
proclamation for the amalgamation of areas
to include provisions of the same
kind as are referred to in s 213. Section 213(1) enables a
proclamation to include “such
provisions as are necessary or convenient
for giving effect to the proclamation, including provisions for or with respect
to”
various specified matters. Section 213(2) provides that such a
proclamation may, amongst other things, “(c) authorise any matter
or
thing to be from time to time determined, applied or regulated by any specified
person or body”.
- The
respondents submitted that cl 5(1) of the Proclamation was authorised by
these provisions in s 213. The power in s 213 “is
wide enough to
cover a provision of the kind made in [clause 5(1)] which is no more than a
sensible administrative provision to deal
with a myriad of small matters as they
arise” (T 31/5/16, p 98). In particular, the closing words of
the chapeau of s 213(1),
“for or with respect to”, are wide and
authorise a provision of the kind made in cl 5(1) (T 31/5/16,
p 99).
- The
respondents submitted that cl 5(1) of the Proclamation would not be read as
allowing the Minister to use the power in cl 5 to
vary the Proclamation
itself; the Minister could only deal with residual matters that have not been
dealt with by the Proclamation
(T 31/5/16, p 100). So construed,
cl 5(1) of the Proclamation is within the power to make a
proclamation.
- In
the alternative, the respondents submitted that cl 5(1) is severable:
“[t]he blue pencil merely need go through one clause”
of the
Proclamation (T 31/5/16, pp 99-100).
The
recommendations and Proclamation are valid
- The
applicants have not established any of their challenges to the Minister’s
decisions concerning the Oberon proposal and the
Cabonne proposal or the
Minister’s decision and the Governor’s Proclamation concerning the
Gundagai proposal. My reasons
accord with the respondents’
submissions.
- In
relation to the Oberon and Cabonne proposals, although the Minister made a
decision in relation to each proposal, it was not a
decision to exercise the
power under s 218F(7) to recommend to the Governor that the proposal be
implemented. The terms of the decision
in each case do not invoke the language
of the power in s 218F(7). The Minister does not state that he has decided
to “recommend
to the Governor that the proposal be implemented”. The
Minister’s decision is recorded at the end of a briefing that
reminded the
Minister that he had “provided an undertaking to the Court that he will
not make a recommendation to the Governor
in respect of this proposal” and
accordingly, he “will not be able to recommend the proposal to the
Governor until any
undertakings affecting this proposal expire (which is not
likely to occur until the resolution of legal proceedings)”. Finally,
there is no evidence that the Minister has recommended to the Governor that
either proposal be implemented. In these circumstances,
I would not draw the
inference that the Minister has made a decision under s 218F(7) to
recommend to the Governor that the Oberon
and Cabonne proposals be
implemented.
- In
relation to the Gundagai proposal, I reject the applicants’ argument that
there was no power to deal with the Gundagai proposal
and the Harden proposal
concurrently.
- Factually,
the Gundagai proposal was made and referred before the Harden proposal was
received and referred. Even on the applicants’
argument, there was no bar
to referring and dealing with the Gundagai proposal if it was made first. I also
reject the applicants’
alternative argument based on the correct factual
assumption that the Gundagai proposal preceded the Harden proposal. The receipt
by the Minister of the Harden proposal did not, as a matter of fact, supersede
the earlier made Gundagai proposal. Each proposal
was separately referred by the
Minister for examination and report, examined and reported on by the Delegate,
and reviewed and commented
on by the Boundaries Commission.
- Legally,
the applicants’ argument is erroneous. There is nothing in the statutory
scheme that prevents proposals being dealt
with concurrently. Indeed, the
mandatory language used in the provisions concerning the referral of proposals
made or received by
the Minister (s 218F(1)), the examination and report on
the matter referred (s 263(1)), the holding of an inquiry in relation to
a
proposal for the amalgamation of two or more areas that has been referred
(s 263(2A)), the furnishing of the report on the examination
of the
proposal to the Boundaries Commission for review and comment (s 218F(6)(a))
and the review and comment by the Boundaries Commission
on that report
(s 218F(6)(b)) all are indicators that proposals are to be dealt with under
ss 218F and 263 once they are made or
referred and cannot be held in
abeyance while a proposal that has been made or received at an earlier time is
dealt with. Rather,
each proposal must be dealt with separately and, if they are
contemporaneous, concurrently.
- Similarly,
a new proposal which concerns similar local government areas to an existing
proposal does not have the effect of superseding
the existing proposal or
modifying the terms of the existing proposal. There is no legal basis in the Act
to support the applicants’
claim that the Harden proposal superseded or
modified the existing Gundagai proposal. The exercise of the Minister’s
power
under s 218F(7) to recommend the implementation of the Gundagai proposal
did not involve a modification of the Harden proposal.
- Accordingly,
in this case, there was no bar to the Minister referring the Gundagai proposal
and having it dealt with under Div 2B
and he had power under s 218F(7)
to recommend to the Governor that the Gundagai proposal be implemented.
- I
also reject the applicants’ argument that cl 5(1) of the Proclamation
was ultra vires by impermissibly conferring power on
the Minister.
Clause 5(1) was authorised by s 218C(1) which permitted the
Proclamation to include provisions of the same kind as
are referred to in
s 213. Section 213(2)(c) expressly provides that a proclamation may
“authorise any matter or thing to be
from time to time determined, applied
or regulated by any specified person or body”. This is precisely what
cl 5(1) does. It
is authorised by s 213(2). Furthermore, cl 5(1)
of the Proclamation would authorise the Minister to determine matters or things
for
or with respect to the matters listed in s 213(1). A provision of this
kind is itself a provision for or with respect to the matters
in s 213(1)
and hence is authorised by s 213(1).
Conclusion and
orders
- The
applicants have not established any of the grounds of challenge to the
administrative decisions and actions in relation to the
Oberon proposal, the
Cabonne proposal or the Gundagai proposal. Each of the proceedings should be
dismissed. The usual order for
costs in judicial review proceedings, namely that
costs follow the event, should apply.
- The
Court orders in each of the proceedings:
- (1) The
proceedings are dismissed.
- (2) The
applicant is to pay the respondents’ costs of the
proceedings.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWLEC/2016/131.html