Ombudsman investigates council performance order

Should staff continue to brief councillors behind closed doors?

The NSW Ombudsman is examining the legality of the Performance Improvement Order (PIO) imposed on Central Coast Council by the Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig.

The move comes after a Central Coast resident looked at the fine print of the PIO.

Coast Community News has kept the identity of the informant private.

The resident believes a PIO could have been given to the 2020 group of Central Coast councillors but questions its use on a brand-new group of councillors, still yet to hold their first meeting.

The resident believes PIOs are meant to be early response mechanisms to councils and councillors in the hope of staving off administration, not be used against a council coming out of administration.

However, it is the wording of the PIO and what’s missing from it, compared to other PIOs given to other councils, that the resident noticed.

A Public Interest Disclosure was submitted to the NSW Ombudsman alleging misconduct by the Minister because the wording of the PIO does not meet the requirements of the Act.

Hoenig imposed the PIO on September 19 after giving Administrator Rik Hart notice of his intention in early September.

The resident said Hart should have asked for legal advice on the PIO.

“One of the things I noticed was one of the earlier councils that had a lawfully issued PIO sought legal advice before responding to the Minister with their feedback,” the resident said.

“That legal advice was held confidential, but if Rik Hart had asked for legal advice, then this might have been picked up.’’

The resident says he finds the mistake interesting because all the recent PIOs given to councils not in administration have the correct wording but the Central Coast PIO is missing a section.

Other councils coming out of administration and issued with PIOs are missing the same section.

The section outlines what the consequences would be if failing to meet the requirements of the PIO, and include the option of going into administration.

“Given that the notification does not satisfy the requirements of the Act, it and everything that followed is unlawful,” the resident said.

He said the excluded information would suggest the PIO was being inappropriately used.