Monday, October 27, 2025

Articles by The Herald's View

2 articles found

Public servants’ silence could hurt transport agency
Technology

Public servants’ silence could hurt transport agency

The Independent Commission Against Corruption is 10 weeks through an expected three months of public hearings into allegations of a kickback scheme involving several Transport for NSW officials and nine road contracting companies. The kickbacks inquiry is the fourth into corruption in procurement processes at Transport for NSW since 2019. As the ICAC inquiry this time investigates allegations that agency officials pocketed money from road contractors, the latest survey reveals that only 52 per cent of Transport for NSW staff feel “empowered to speak up about tough issues”, a concerning response given such silence could cover alleged corruption, malpractice or workplace matters in a huge department that devours almost half the state’s investment budget each year. Transport for NSW’s spending on projects easily dwarfs other government departments, partly due to mega-projects such as Sydney’s new metro rail lines and motorways, including the Western Harbour Tunnel and the M6 in the city’s south. The transport agency’s capital spending this financial year alone is forecast to hit $14.4 billion. Transport for NSW secretary Josh Murray said the survey was a “tougher report card than we’d hoped” but it reflected the fact that the agency was finalising long-standing reforms that affected people’s jobs and responsibilities. “That’s meant a sustained period of complex change at Transport and tough decisions have been made,” he said. Yet, the survey shows the very people closest to knowing Transport for NSW’s problems are not on board: only 60 per cent were proud to tell others they worked for the agency, down 8 percentage points, while the number of staff confident that action would be taken had fallen 13 percentage points to 30 per cent.

Northern Beaches deserve clarity on private services
Politics

Northern Beaches deserve clarity on private services

Last week, the state government announced the controversial public-private partnership at Northern Beaches Hospital would come to an end. The agreement was for Healthscope to operate public and private health services at the Frenchs Forest hospital, which opened in 2018 following the closure of public hospitals at Mona Vale and Manly, for 20 years. But, after a series of concerning incidents – from a cancer patient having the wrong side of their colon removed during the hospital’s first year of operation, through to the tragic death of toddler Joe Massa in emergency revealed in February – the government expects take full control of the hospital from Healthscope by the middle of next year. The private operator’s financial situation – Healthscope went into receivership in May with $1.6 billion in debt – also did little to instil confidence in the arrangement. Ultimately, the Northern Beaches deal was untenable for NSW’s gold-standard public health system. Premier Chris Minns’ government has made the right call bringing public services back under government control.