Extract from The Guardian
Labor says money should be spent on building
infrastructure, not on ‘a propaganda campaign designed to conceal
... the collapse in infrastructure investment’
The office of the deputy prime minister, Warren
Truss, has confirmed a $305,910 market research contract could lead
to an $18m transport infrastructure advertising campaign. Photograph:
Lukas Coch/AAP
Daniel
Hurst Political correspondent
Wednesday 6 January 2016 06.03 AEDT
The Turnbull government has been accused of
wasting infrastructure funding on “propaganda” as it pressed
ahead with plans to spend up to $18m promoting its involvement in
transport projects.
Newly released contract
records reveal the Department of Infrastructure and Regional
Development has awarded a $305,910 contract to the Wallis Consulting
Group for what it described as “Market Research – Building Our
Future”.
The office of the deputy prime minister, Warren
Truss, confirmed the research could pave the way for an
advertising campaign with a budget of up to $18m.
A spokesman for Truss, who is also the
infrastructure minister, said previous market research commissioned
seven months ago found “significant knowledge gaps” and suggested
that people “were interested in knowing more about the Australian
government’s investment in transport infrastructure”.
“As a result of the market research, an $18m
national advertising campaign is being considered to raise awareness
with Australian road users that long-term planning and investment
into road and rail infrastructure is vital to ensuring the economy
remains competitive, people and goods can move effectively on safer
roads, with less traffic congestion and faster travel times as well
as the economic and social benefits delivered,” he said.
Market research is typically
conducted before a government formally approves taxpayer-funded
advertising, because campaign
guidelines say such activities “should only be instigated where
a need is demonstrated ... and the campaign is informed by
appropriate research or evidence”.
A government notice disclosing the $305,910
consultancy contract cited the “need for independent research or
assessment”. AusTender
records show the earlier market research contract, worth
$214,720, was awarded to JWS Research in June 2015.
The Coalition foreshadowed an infrastructure
communications campaign in its budget update in December, when it
also said $999m in funding for the Northern Connector in Adelaide,
the Armadale Road duplication project in Perth, and the second
stage of the Gold Coast light rail would be met from within the
existing infrastructure investment program rather than additional
allocations.
Budget documents said the communications campaign
would also be funded from within the program, but did not put a price
tag on the proposal.
Labor’s infrastructure spokesman, Anthony
Albanese, said the new market research contract was “the
practical result of the government’s decision to transfer funding
from infrastructure building to infrastructure propaganda” in the
midyear economic and fiscal outlook.
“The government should invest money in building
infrastructure rather than wasting money pretending that
infrastructure is being built when we know there has been a 20%
decline in public infrastructure investment since it was elected,”
he said.
Albanese was referring to Australian Bureau of
Statistics figures showing the value of engineering construction
activity in Australia. Total public investment fell about 20% between
the September quarter of 2013 and the June quarter of 2015, although
this measure includes federal, state and local government spending.
The Labor frontbencher derided the government’s
explanation of the need for the campaign as “Orwellian”.
“Australians expect Mr Truss to actually build
infrastructure, not to manufacture a propaganda campaign designed to
conceal his failures and the collapse in infrastructure investment,”
Albanese said.
Truss’s office did not respond directly to
Albanese’s “propaganda” claims, but said market research was
commissioned in June “to gain an understanding of the level of
awareness around the Australian government’s investment in
transport infrastructure”.
“That research demonstrated a general lack of
awareness and significant knowledge gaps within the Australian
population regarding the Australian government’s investments in
transport infrastructure,” a spokesman said.
“The research identified that members of the
public in general were interested in knowing more about the
Australian government’s investment in transport infrastructure.”
Truss has previously defended the government’s
record, telling parliament more than $9.7bn in federal funding for
infrastructure would flow next financial year in “the single
biggest commonwealth infrastructure investment to date”.
Malcolm Turnbull has attempted to draw a line
under the transport policies of the former prime minister, Tony
Abbott, by expressing a willingness to provide federal funding for
urban rail projects, rather than focusing on roads.
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