17 September 2024

The Capital Water Cooler: Comings and goings in the APS

| James Day
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Three images compiled together: two women and a man

A breakdown of the latest appointments in the Australian Public Service and across the ACT public sector.

APS Senior Executive Service

Band 1

The Department of Social Services has appointed Heidi Kiekebosch-Fitt as chief of staff to its secretary.

David Meredyth is a branch head at Cancer Australia.

The Office of the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security has made Andrew Corradin its next inspector-general for legal and assurance.

The Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry has appointed Martin Mosely as assistant secretary.

Brett Mason is the assistant secretary of media and communications at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), which also promoted Clemency Oliphant to assistant secretary.

The Australian Government Solicitor has appointed Erin Shriner and Jennifer Davenport as senior government lawyers.

Band 2

Treasury has made Neena Pai and Margaret Thomas assistant secretaries.

Other federal

Inaugural First Nations Board for the Arts

The Federal Government has appointed 10 members to a new First Nations Board, dedicated to supporting and promoting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander arts practice.

It follows the passage of legislation earlier this year to establish First Nations Arts as a new part of Creative Australia, the Commonwealth’s principal arts investment and advisory body.

First Nations Arts will receive funding over four years from 2024-25.

The 10 board members, including two co-chairs, deliver broad representation across theatre, visual arts, television, film, dance and governance.

The appointees are:

  • Rachael Maza AM (co-chair) – a Yidinji and Meriam woman and the current artistic director and co-chief executive officer of Ilbijerri Theatre Company
  • Philip Watkins (co-chair) – part of large extended Arrernte and Larrakia families from Alice Springs (Mparntwe). He is currently chief executive director of Desart Incorporated
  • Clint Bracknell (member) – a Noongar song-maker, composer and Professor of Music at the University of Western Australia
  • Pauline Clague (member) – a Yaegl woman from the North Coast of New South Wales. She has worked as a storyteller and producer in film and TV for 25 years
  • Jeanette James (member) – a practising Tasmanian Aboriginal artist and traditional shell-necklace stringer whose work is deeply rooted in her Palawa cultural heritage
  • Deborah Mailman AM (member) – an award-winning television and film actor and singer. Ms Mailman has both Aboriginal (Bidjara) and Maori (Ngati Porou and Te Arawa) heritage
  • Daniel Riley (member) – a Wiradjuri man, originally from Western NSW. He is currently the artistic director of the Australian Dance Theatre in South Australia
  • Rhoda Roberts AO (member) – a Bundjalung woman, current member of the Board of Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute Inc and director of MusicNSW. She is also the Elder-in-Residence at SBS Television
  • Dennis Stokes (member) – belongs to the Wardamann, Luritja, and Warramunga peoples of the Northern Territory and the Wagadagam people of the Torres Strait. He is chief executive officer of the Cairns Indigenous Art Fair
  • Jared Thomas (member) – a Nukunu person of the Southern Flinders Ranges, he is Research Fellow, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Material Culture and Art at the South Australian Museum.
a man and a woman

Co-chairs of the first dedicated First Nations Board for the arts: Philip Watkins and Rachael Maza. Photo: Creative Aus/GRM Artists.

Shifts in the arts and music sectors

Professor Larissa Behrendt AO has been appointed to the Australia Council Board, which will again be joined by Alexandra Dimos and Stephen Found. They will sit for a four-year term, along with Catherine Haridy, who’s now on the Music Australia Council.

The Australia Council Board provides leadership to Creative Australia, while the Music Australia Council provides strategic direction to support and grow Australia’s contemporary music sector.

Professor Behrendt is a Euahleyai/Gamillaroi academic, lawyer, award-winning author and filmmaker. From November 2024, she will also be chair of the Council of the National Library of Australia.

Ms Dimos is currently the managing director of the Nunn Dimos Foundation and Nunn Family Investments, and director of Philanthropy Australia. She has been a member of the Australia Council Board since April 2022, as well as a member of the Audit and Risk Committee.

Mr Found owns and operates Foundation Theatres, which manages the Capitol Theatre, Sydney Lyric, and Foundry Theatre. He has been a member of the Australia Council Board since March 2022.

Ms Haridy is the founder and director of Catherine Haridy Management, and the current chief executive officer of the Australian Music Centre.

Ad Standards executive director to step down

Ad Standards, Australia’s advertising complaints-handling body, has announced that Richard Bean will step down from his role as executive director at the end of September.

Chair of the Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA), Martin Brown, thanked Mr Bean for his contribution to the agency.

This includes developing the Community Panel that independently reviews all advertising complaints, growing the Canberra-based team’s capability and leadership, along with representing the Australian industry on the Executive Committee of the International Council for Advertising Self-Regulation (ICAS).

smiling man in a suit

Richard Bean is a former CEO of the NSW Environment Protection Authority and deputy chairman of the Australian Communications and Media Authority. Photo: Ad Standards.

Dr Ian Watt joins NDIA board

NDIS Minister Bill Shorten has announced the appointment of Dr Ian James Watt AC to the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) Board, where he will sit on a part-time basis for up to three years.

Dr Watt previously served as the secretary of multiple federal agencies, including Prime Minister and Cabinet, Finance, Defence and Communications.

man wearing a university robe and cap

The NDIA Board consists of a chair and up to 11 other members, now including Dr Ian J Watt, who help guide the agency’s work. Photo: UOW.

GRDC welcomes SA grower as board chair

Sharon Starick is joining the Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) for a three-year term as its new board chair – making her the first female to lead the largest of the rural research and development corporations.

Managing director Nigel Hart welcomed the appointment, noting the South Australian grain grower’s experience on the board since 2018 “so she has an in-depth understanding of the business”.

“She is a grain and pork producer from the Mallee region of South Australia, so she also brings the hands-on practical understanding and experience of farming that is invaluable for a grower-focused organisation like GRDC,” Mr Hart said.

Mrs Starick has an agricultural science degree from the University of Adelaide and is currently the chair of Animal Health Australia, director of the Regional Investment Corporation and independent chair of the South Australian Future Drought Fund Advisory Group. She is also a past chair of the South Australian Murray-Darling Basin Natural Resources Management Board.

woman standing in a canola field

Sharon Starick replaces outgoing Grains Research and Development Corporation board chair John Woods, a Goondiwindi grain grower who has led the organisation since 2016. Photo: GRDC.

Foreign Minister Wong appoints ambassador, consul-general and Japan Foundation chair

Foreign Minister Penny Wong has announced the appointment of several people to stations across the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT).

Jason Robertson is Australia’s first Ambassador to the Organisation of American States (OAS). It is a pre-eminent regional organisation with 34 members and 75 Permanent Observers, the latter of which Australia already is. Mr Robertson is a senior career officer within DFAT and is currently Deputy Head of Mission at the Australian Embassy in Washington, DC.

Glen Askew is replacing Fiona Hoggart as Consul-General in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-largest city. Her new role will be in working to strengthen two-way trade and investment by implementing initiatives under Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040. Mr Askew is a career officer with DFAT and was most recently assistant director of the Israel-Gaza Taskforce.

Natsuko Ogawa is the new chair of the Australia-Japan Foundation (AJF), cementing her as the first woman and citizen of Japanese heritage in the role. Established in 1976, the AJF is Australia’s oldest cultural council and underpins its Special Strategic Partnership with Japan. Ms Ogawa is a respected lawyer with more than 20 years’ experience, but also holds positions on the Australia-Japan Business Council of Victoria and the Australia-Japan Business Cooperation Committee.

Original Article published by James Day on PS News.

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