I rise today on behalf of small business tradesmen in my electorate of
Paterson who have been failed by the Gillard Labor government. These
workers are owed in excess of $600,000 for work they completed in good
faith under Labor's Building the Education Revolution. Instead of
helping them, Labor hung these businesses out to dry and then washed
their hands of it. When Prime Minister Rudd announced a $16.2 billion
program to build infrastructure in our schools he said it was to boost
the economy. The government's website says that the BER will 'support
local jobs and stimulate investment'.
In
my electorate of Paterson a group of 56 small businesses were
subcontracted to build a school hall COLA facility at the Pacific Palms
Public School. Unlike many others, these small businesses completed the
job with distinction. They brought the supplies, they put in the hours
and they finished the hall in August 2010. It is now six months later
and they are still waiting for their payment. There are also
subcontractors owed money for BER projects at Bungwahl Public School in
my electorate and at Coopernook Public School in the member for Lyne's
electorate. How on earth has this been allowed to happen?
The
company that subcontracted my constituents, Cape View Developments, has
gone into liquidation. It failed to pay its subcontractors. The company
that contracted Cape View Developments, Reed Constructions, failed to
pay the subcontractors despite giving guarantees to the subcontractors
they would once the work was completed. Neither the former state Labor
Keneally government nor the current Gillard Labor government bothered
to ensure the debt was settled.
The
buck must stop with the Prime Minister, who, as the former education
minister, is responsible for the BER program. But our Prime Minister
Gillard wants all of the gain and none of the pain. When it came to
spruiking her program, Prime Minister Gillard was happy to send Senator
Forshaw to my electorate to open the building work at Pacific Palms
Public School and to speak to the media, but when it comes to ensuring
those who did the work in good faith get paid for it, neither she nor
Senator Forshaw was anywhere to be seen. Prime Minister Gillard has
left those businesses and families under severe financial stress. She
should be ashamed. For example, Carl Organ is a local plumber who
signed a contract, bought supplies and completed the job. He is now
owed more than $45,000. That is a massive amount of money for a small
business and a family that is trying to make a living and put their
kids through school.
There
are many other questions that are yet to be answered—questions such as:
did Cape View sign a declaration of payment to a subcontractor under
the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act stating
to Reed that it had paid its subbies in order to get paid itself? If
so, it could be in breach of the law. I have put the question to Reed
Constructions but they would not answer my questions. Even the
subcontractors themselves have been largely shut out by Reed, which
seems to have gone to ground on the issue. Put simply, no-one wants to
take responsibility for the BER program when things go wrong. Prime
Minister Gillard has handed out billions of taxpayers' dollars but
failed to put into place any mechanisms for accountability. So it is up
to her to settle this matter.
I
wrote to the Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills, Jobs and
Workplace Relations, Chris Evans, regarding this issue back on 3 March
and he has not bothered to reply. Yet they continue to send Senator
Forshaw to open school buildings in my electorate. Likewise the member
for Lyne also had the chance to stand up for these workers, many of
whom are his constituents, but he would not do anything for them.
Sadly, I am not surprised, because he had a chance to vote with the
coalition to approve an inquiry into the BER but he would not. I think
he is more interested in his own job than he is interested in standing
up for his own constituents. The small businesses who are already
struggling because of these debts will now have to pay for lawyers to
take this up in court on their behalf. It would be yet another burden.
Labor
must do something to fix this now and I will not rest until it does. I
have written to the Prime Minister and the New South Wales Minister for
Education, Minister Piccoli. Prime Minister, you are sending Senator
Forshaw to open a building in Grahamstown on Monday and in another town
on Tuesday. Will you instruct him to meet with the subbies who have not
yet been paid? Prime Minister, I am demanding that you take an active
role and end this debt problem for people who placed good faith in the
BER program, built a great building but have not been paid and are
wearing the burden of your policies.