29 November 2023

Public servants know their work is important, but too many feel bullied: State of the Service report

| Chris Johnson
Join the conversation
7
Dr Gordon de Brouwer

APS Commissioner Gordon de Brouwer has issued his first State of the Service Report. Photo: APSC.

A growing number of APS staff claim to have been bullied or harassed at work.

The 26th State of the Service Report has just been tabled in Federal Parliament (29 November), the first issued by Australian Public Service Commissioner Gordon de Brouwer, and gives a thorough insight into the APS and its 170,332 employees.

In part, the report draws on results of the APS Employee Census, which shows that 92 per cent of respondents understand how their role contributes to achieving an outcome for the Australian public.

A total of 84 per cent stated they believed strongly in the purpose and objectives of the APS, while 76 per cent agreed they gained a sense of accomplishment in their job.

“It is encouraging to see that engagement remains high,” Dr de Brouwer says in the report.

“These positive sentiments are consistent with the responses of staff to APS Reform initiatives, including the work on stewardship, where more than 1500 submissions were received from staff and around 90 per cent of respondents confirmed that they do see themselves as stewards in their workplace.

“For these staff, stewardship means taking care for the long-term and future generations, maintaining knowledge and responsible management.”

But the commissioner also notes negative aspects of the government’s workplaces that must be addressed, including “unacceptable behaviours”.

READ ALSO Father of Reconciliation’, WA Senator Patrick Dodson, to leave politics for health reasons

In 2023, 10.4 per cent of employee census respondents indicated they had been subjected to harassment or bullying in the workplace in the last 12 months.

That figure is up from 9.7 per cent in 2022.

In some individual agencies, reported rates are as high as 23.2 per cent.

“Reported rates of perceived harassment or bullying are higher for some APS agencies, and this is shown in a new agency benchmarking section in this report,” Dr de Brouwer says.

“We must have a culture of zero tolerance for any form of unacceptable behaviour in the APS and work together to bring this about.”

Interestingly, it seems the smaller the agency, the higher the rate of bullying, according to employee perceptions.

Most notably, perceptions of bullying and harassment at work are comparatively higher in some Indigenous-focused agencies.

Across the service, 555 employees were investigated for suspected APS Code of Conduct breaches, resulting in 52 terminations of employment over the year.

Staff perceptions of the senior executive service were most positive regarding immediate SES managers contributing to the strategic direction of agencies.

But the SES rated poorly in how they worked as a team within agencies and how effectively they communicated with each other and other employees (between 51 per cent and 54 per cent).

READ ALSO Was it easy for the PM to sack Pezzullo?

The largest number of APS employees are in the Australian Capital Territory (64,983 as of 30 June 2023), representing 38.1 per cent of the entire APS workforce.

NSW, Queensland and Victoria made up 78,378 (46.0 per cent) of the APS workforce.

The proportion of APS employees based in regional Australia has dropped from 13.7 per cent in 2014 to 12.8 per cent in 2023.

The gender pay gap in the APS has shrunk to below 6 per cent and, as at 30 June, 24 per cent of APS employees were born outside Australia.

Dr de Brouwer stressed that increasing fairness and inclusion in the workplace was a priority for the APS.

“It has been an important year for policies relating to First Nations, people with disability and women in the APS, with a number of new initiatives being introduced,” he says.

“In the past year, we have gained greater insights into APS staff who identify as LGBTIQA+ or consider themselves to be neurodivergent through the APS Employee Census and the valued contributions of staff-led networks.”

In accepting the report, Assistant Public Service Minister Patrick Gorman said the report showed that public service work was being put back in the hands of public servants.

He said the government had undertaken significant work over the past year to build APS capability through initiatives like Australian Government Consulting, the in-house consulting service, and the APS Capability Reinvestment Fund.

“This report shows how staff across the APS are focused on the purpose of their work,” Mr Gorman said.

“Ninety-two per cent of public servants understanding how their work delivers improved outcomes for the lives of Australians is a fantastic result.

“After what has been a very difficult few years for many APS employees, including the disheartening effects of Robodebt, it is encouraging to see engagement levels remain high.”

Join the conversation

7
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

The dishonesty and hidden agendas make it hard to know what is expected and set people up to fail. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if there were clear expectations enabling people to succeed instead?

William Teach8:28 pm 30 Nov 23

As usual, my department had a lower-than-ever percentage happy about pay. As usual, the department’s response has been to tell the SES to remind us of the EVP, having failed to notice that it never works. Most of the supposed benefits don’t benefit most of the staff, especially not in the groups and branches least happy about pay.

The Workplace Coach4:13 pm 30 Nov 23

These results are not surprising at all and the lack of confidence in the SES cohort to communicate effectively and work well together as a team has been trending for at least the last ten years. The increase in the number of people who feel bullied is also not surprising, although I would suggest that it is not that people are suddenly bullying more, its that expectations around how people should treat people at work has changed. The new focus on psychosocial safety will see these numbers rise even further in coming years unless managers at all levels get specific training on this topic.

In my experience some of the worst offenders at SES level were women. That simply got my back up.

Balance needed6:47 pm 30 Nov 23

Yes Teddy Bear. I used to have many conversations with distressed women about the extent of female bullying in the SES. And no it wasn’t behaviour that would be acceptable if done by a male boss. It was behaviour that fitted all the criteria for emotional relational aggression.
And of course the Jenkins report found that 61 per cent of all bullies in Parliament House were female, a result which should have surprised no one.

Why did the gender of the bully get your back up?

Hardly surprising really, it is rife and one of the reasons why I left the APS.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.