SPOC Referral Statisics for July 2018

Response to this request is long overdue. By law, under all circumstances, Department of Veterans' Affairs should have responded by now (details). You can complain by requesting an internal review.

Dear Department of Veterans' Affairs,

Under s 17 of the FOI Act, I apply for a one page summary document to be compiled from information held in your agency’s information systems, which will primarily (and possibly only require) information from DVA’s aDVAnce system, to set out the number of DVA clients, by age group, that were referred to SPOC management by the Coordinated Care unit and Client Liaison Unit (to be listed separately) for the month of July 2018 (TRIM and Outlook need not be searched, based on information given by the Coordinated Client Support Program, that states such methods have not been used since Feb 2016 for referral management).

As per the relevant ANAO report, the Client Liaison Unit (CLU) was established by DVA in Setptember 2007, and the Coordinated Care (CC) unit in January 2010, following criticisms made by various preceding reviews.

DVA implemented the Case Coordination program to case manage clients identified (Level 3 or Level 2) as being at increased risk of self‐harm or harm to others, who have multiple complex needs (although recent veterans who were at risk, such as Jesse Bird, were not managed by this unit). The Client Liaison Unit was established to case manage clients identified (Level 1) as vulnerable or having complex behaviours.

DVA breaks veterans into age groups referred to as ‘young veterans’ (64 and under) and ‘veterans’ (65 and over), based on historical retirement age. For the purpose of this FOI, we will stick to this age split.

Format of compiled document:

Unit....................FY15/16...................FY16/17..................FY17/18
CLU - >65
CLU - 65+
CC - >65
CC- 65+

The purpose of this FOI is to determine what DVA itself has determined are the numbers of vulnerable veterans, by age group, it has, by reference to the number of referrals it makes (which, as the Jesse Bird case reflects, will be a lower number than the actual number of vulnerable veterans DVA is communicating with, but gives some indicative evidence).

Yours faithfully,

Verity Pane

Attn Department of Veterans' Affairs,

Considering my other FOIs made at the same time received an acknowledgement this morning, the fact that one was not given to this one rather stands out.

I note in the past this is often a prelude to DVA intentionally ignoring the FOI to force deemed refusal.

Ms Pane

INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

1 Attachment

Dear Verity Pane,

 

Acknowledgement of FOI Request – FOI 25062

 

I refer to your request to access information held by our Department under
the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act).  The Department received
your request on 13 October 2018. In accordance with section 15(5)(b) of
the FOI Act, the Department has 30 days to process your request. As such,
a decision on your request is due by 12 November 2018.

 

If you have any questions about your FOI matter, please contact us using
the following details:

 

Post: Legal Services & Assurance, Department of Veterans’ Affairs

GPO Box 9998, Canberra ACT 2601

Facsimile: (02) 6289 6337

Email: [1][email address]

 

In all communications please quote reference FOI 25062.

 

Kind Regards,

 

 

Information Law | Legal Services & Assurance Branch

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

GPO Box 9998 Canberra ACT 2601

E: [2][email address]

 

 

[3]cid:image001.png@01D0027A.1DAB84F0

 

 

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INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

1 Attachment

Dear Verity Pane,

 

Acknowledgement of FOI Request – FOI 25062

 

I refer to your request to access information held by our Department under
the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act).  The Department received
your request on 13 October 2018. In accordance with section 15(5)(b) of
the FOI Act, the Department has 30 days to process your request. As such,
a decision on your request is due by 12 November 2018.

 

If you have any questions about your FOI matter, please contact us using
the following details:

 

Post: Legal Services & Assurance, Department of Veterans’ Affairs

GPO Box 9998, Canberra ACT 2601

Facsimile: (02) 6289 6337

Email: [1][email address]

 

In all communications please quote reference FOI 25062.

 

Kind Regards,

 

 

Information Law | Legal Services & Assurance Branch

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

GPO Box 9998 Canberra ACT 2601

E: [2][email address]

 

 

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INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

2 Attachments

Dear Verity Pane

 

FOI 25062 – Preliminary Assessment of Charge

 

Please find attached the preliminary assessment of charge for your freedom
of information request received by the Department of Veterans’ Affairs on
13 October 2018.

 

Kind regards

 

Information Law Section | Legal Services & General Counsel Branch

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

E: [1][email address]

 

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Attn INFORMATION.LAW,

Oh dear, just when I thought you might be turning a new leaf, yet another grossly inflated and ridiculously overstated charges levy notice.

Collectively, over this past year or so, the amounts DVA have tried to levy exceed into five thousand dollars, yet every time these charges are examined, they prove to well and truly belonging in the fiction section of the library.

DVA’s systemic and endemic practice of using charges notices to stop the s 15(5)(b) processing clock, to intentionally seek to interfere with the aims and objects of the Freedom of Information Act is in utter bad faith.

Disappointingly, there isn’t even an attempt to justify the processing time claimed (at least previous ones did have some description) this time, and the summary charges even incorrectly has two different total charge amounts on it (obviously this was just a quick cut and paste job) - being a total charge of $119.54 or $403.45 depending where you look.

At least this is a preliminary notice this time.

But yet again it highlights the fictional nature of these estimates.

The same data, but for a six month period, recently had an invalid post-dated charges notice for $507.75 issued https://www.righttoknow.org.au/request/4...

The same data, but for a one month period here, amazingly gets a $403.45 charges levy.

DVA Information Law employee’s math is either genuinely terrible (even for lawyers) or this is yet another example in the long list of DVA charges notices where the assessment bears no relationship to the work involved, but is merely a reflection of the amount of DVA’s unwilling to legitimately deal with the FOI request in accordance with the law.

The calculations are clearly fictional, being inconsistent with previous calculations, lack any evidentiary basis let alone reasonable description, and are thus challenged accordingly.

Ms Pane

Verity Pane left an annotation ()

As stated by the Information Commissioner:
...it is implicit that a charge must not be used to unnecessarily delay access or discourage an applicant from exercising the right of access conferred by the FOI Act and that charges should fairly reflect the work involved in providing access to documents on request. Where a charge is justified, it would be in keeping with the objects of the FOI Act to ensure that the method of payment should also facilitate prompt access to the documents.

Attn INFORMATION.LAW,

Almost forgot, an even earlier DVA decision, for the same data, but an earlier month had no charge at all https://www.righttoknow.org.au/request/4...

Consistency in charging methodology is not DVA’s strength, but I guess that is because your charging practice has nothing to do with the work involved, and everything to do with the level of malice and fraud the Department has at that particular moment.

After all, given these wild variations, it’s not like DVA tries to hide its unlawful message to applicants, in that “if you ask us to provide transparency, we will punish (and even throw insults at you) you for asking, regardless of your rights under FOI law”.

I get your unlawful message, but ultimately it is how you respond to FOI requests that provides the evidence here, so in my view the blatant nature of the interference by DVA in the lawful right to access that FOI creates is ultimately an injury to yourself.

You would find it far more productive to drop the endemic hostility to FOI and work with FOI applicants to provide open government at the lowest practicable cost to all involved (and because on the rarest of occasions, you demonstrate you can be minded that way, I know you can do it).

Ms Pane

INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

Dear Verity Pane

We acknowledge receipt of your reconsideration of charges request below and will notify you of our decision within 30 days of receiving your email in accordance with section 29(6) of the FOI Act.

Kind regards

Information Law Section | Legal Services & General Counsel Branch
Department of Veterans’ Affairs
E: [email address]

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INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

2 Attachments

Dear Verity Pane

 

FOI 25062 – Charges Decision

 

Please find attached the charges decision in relation to your charges
reconsideration request received by the Department of Veterans’ Affairs on
25 October 2018.

 

Kind regards

 

Information Law Section | Legal Services & General Counsel Branch

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

E: [1][email address]

 

[2]cid:image001.png@01D0027A.1DAB84F0

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To INFORMATION.LAW,

Another ridiculous and unsubstantiated set of estimates that lack any basis in reality.

The FOI Guidelines explain that the decision to impose a charge is discretionary and any charges must be fair, accurate and should not be used to unreasonably hinder an applicant from pursuing an FOI request - which is something DVA repeatedly and unlawfully do. Further, a charge must not be used to unnecessarily delay access or discourage an applicant from exercising the right of access conferred by the FOI Act - again something that DVA repeatedly and unlawfully do,

The FOI Guidelines further explain that in exercising the discretion to impose a charge, an agency should take into account the ‘lowest reasonable cost objective’ in s 3(4) of the FOI Act, which provides that ‘functions and powers given by this Act are to be performed and exercised, as far as possible, to facilitate and promote public access to information, promptly and at the lowest reasonable cost’. Again, DVA here repeatedly fail to do this, instead choosing the least efficient and cost effective method possible - including calculating charges based on a senior Executive Level Information Law Lawyer carrying out the basic tasks of reading and writing down numbers and totalling them (and despite that Information Law does not do this work themselves and certainly don’t have an senior Executive Level lawyer do this basic transposing work).

Under s 55D(1) of the FOI Act, it is the agency that bears the onus of establishing that the charges decision given in respect of the request is justified. Instead DVA just dream up some wild estimates and use that figure without any actual proof they are reasonable and relevant to the work involved.

Revealing is that these processing charges were previously calculated in earlier decisions at $20 per hour but have in decisions of late tripled to roughly $60 per hour.

Because of the above, the Information Commissioner will not likely be satisfied that the charges are accurate and fairly reflects the work involved.

As FOI Guidelines provide an underlying assumption in calculating processing charges is that the officers involved in this process are skilled and efficient, not by a senior DVA Information Law lawyer intent on using the least efficient and most drawn out method possible, so as to create the largest possible charges they think they might be able to get away with.

I contend the charges have been constructed with bad faith and do not reflect the lowest economical cost of providing them. Further I note DVA claims the costs result from providing in a ‘preferred format’ but it certainly hasn’t offered any alternative format for these figures.

I also note that according to documents released under FOI, that collation and analysis of the numbers of clients referred and managed in 2016 to present date was only slated as taking two hours. Yet oddly now one month takes the same time as 3 years of data previous.

I also note that a earlier Information Commissioner decision ruled that agencies could not charge applicants for any time the agency took on verifying and confirming figures as applicants are not paying for the agency assurance activities, which are predominantly for their own benefit.

Again, DVA are continuing to engage in bad faith by fraudulently exaggerating by an order of magnitude the actual work involved, including charging for work that is entirely for their own benefit and which has not been requested by the applicant (QA is at your cost, not mine).

Ms Pane

Verity Pane left an annotation ()

IC Review applied for 21 November 2018

INFORMATION.LAW, Department of Veterans' Affairs

2 Attachments

Good evening Verity Pane,

 

FOI 25062 - Revised decision and statement of reasons

 

Please find attached a revised decision issued to you in accordance with
section 55G of the FOI Act. Please do not hesitate to contact us should
you have any questions.

 

Kind Regards,

 

Information Law Section | Legal Services and Audit Branch

Integrity, Assurance and Communications Division

Department of Veterans’ Affairs
E: [1][email address] | W: [2]www.dva.gov.au

 

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References

Visible links
1. mailto:[email address]
2. http://www.dva.gov.au/

Verity Pane left an annotation ()

After nearly 4 years, the OAIC finally made an Information Commissioner Review in my favour that the charges notice issued by DVA was invalid.

In 'ABX’ and Department of Veterans’ Affairs (Freedom of information) [2022] AICmr 57 (29 July 2022), Freedom of Information Commissioner, Leo Hardiman PSM QC stated:

I consider the correct and preferable decision is that the applicant is not liable to pay a charge. This is because, in my view, a fair and reasonable assessment of a charge in the circumstances of the matter clearly discloses that there is no utility in the imposition of a charge and that attempting to do so is likely only to delay or discourage access while incurring a net financial cost to the Commonwealth.

More particularly, even if a charge could have been correctly imposed by reference to an actual cost, the Department should have considered at the outset whether it was preferable to decide that the applicant was liable to pay a charge at all. The amount of that charge should have raised an obvious question in the minds of those considering its imposition – would it cost the Commonwealth an amount greater than the charge itself to assess and notify the charge, provide the applicant with procedural fairness, and collect the charge? The likely answer to that question would have been ‘yes’. In those circumstances, proceeding with a charge would likely only serve to delay access at a net financial cost to the Commonwealth. While the FOI Act and Charges Regulations would not, by their terms, have prevented the Department from deciding the applicant was liable to pay a charge, the preferable decision would have been to decide that the applicant was not liable to pay a charge.

Further, it is clear that the task required of the Department to produce the document was almost entirely in the nature of a search and retrieval task (with a 5 minute manual compilation task required to produce the document sought). In that case, even if it is legally correct to say that item 3 of Part 1 applied (which, as noted above, I have not found necessary to decide for the purposes of this decision), it would be fair and equitable to reduce that actual cost by reference to the search and retrieval nature of the task involved. That is, it would be fair and reasonable to apply the fixed hourly rate of $15 in calculating the charge, which would have resulted in a charge amount of $73.20. This would have reflected what I consider to be the preferable approach to calculation of the charge in the circumstances of the matter. Adopting that approach, it would have been immediately apparent that imposition of liability to a charge could serve no useful purpose and would be likely only to defer access inconsistently with the objects of the FOI Act.

INFORMATION.ACCESS, Department of Veterans' Affairs

Good afternoon Ms Pane,

 

I write to you seeking your agreement to an extension of time of 30 days
under s15AA of the FOI Act for LEX 51217 or a potential revision of scope.

 

Your Request

The primary decision on the request for information LEX 25062 has been set
aside by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner and a
decision is currently due 26 August 2022.

 

The scope of the request is:

 

‘…Dear Department of Veterans' Affairs,

Under s 17 of the FOI Act, I apply for a one page summary document to be
compiled from information held in your agency’s information systems, which
will primarily (and possibly only require) information from DVA’s aDVAnce
system, to set out the number of DVA clients, by age group, that were
referred to SPOC management by the Coordinated Care unit and Client
Liaison Unit (to be listed separately) for the month of July 2018 (TRIM
and Outlook need not be searched, based on information given by the
Coordinated Client Support Program, that states such methods have not been
used since Feb 2016 for referral management).

As per the relevant ANAO report, the Client Liaison Unit (CLU) was
established by DVA in Setptember 2007, and the Coordinated Care (CC) unit
in January 2010, following criticisms made by various preceding reviews.

DVA implemented the Case Coordination program to case manage clients
identified (Level 3 or Level 2) as being at increased risk of self‐harm or
harm to others, who have multiple complex needs (although recent veterans
who were at risk, such as Jesse Bird, were not managed by this unit). The
Client Liaison Unit was established to case manage clients identified
(Level 1) as vulnerable or having complex behaviours.

DVA breaks veterans into age groups referred to as ‘young veterans’ (64
and under) and ‘veterans’ (65 and over), based on historical retirement
age. For the purpose of this FOI, we will stick to this age split.

Format of compiled document:

Unit....................FY15/16...................FY16/17..................FY17/18
CLU - > 65
CLU - 65+
CC - > 65
CC- 65+

The purpose of this FOI is to determine what DVA itself has determined are
the numbers of vulnerable veterans, by age group, it has, by reference to
the number of referrals it makes (which, as the Jesse Bird case reflects,
will be a lower number than the actual number of vulnerable veterans DVA
is communicating with, but gives some indicative evidence)…’

 

Response

After consultation with the business area responsible for the above data,
they have provided an overall number of referrals for the month of July
2018. However, they have advised me they are unable to provide the level
of granularity you have requested, due to the aDVAnce now being a legacy
system. They are unable to drill down to the age of the client or team the
referral was made to.

 

I am currently pursuing another avenue to obtain the level of granularity
you requested from our data team. However, there is a risk that they will
not be able to produce this information within the current timeframe. 

 

If you are agreeable to a 30 day extension the data team will try to
provide the information as requested. If you do not wish to wait, and in
the alternative, the scope could be revised to “provide the total number
of referrals to client Liaison Unit and Case Coordination for the month of
July 2018” so that I can meet the current deadline.

 

I appreciate your consideration.

 

Thank you in advance,

 

Brett (Position Number 62258141)

Assistant Director

Information Access Unit

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

 

“DVA is committed to supporting veterans and their families.  We all
deserve to be treated with courtesy and respect.  We ask that you treat us
the same way”. 

 

DVA has arrangements in place for staff to work at home as much as
possible to contribute to the Nation’s agenda to minimise social
interaction and support social distancing. To assist us it would be
appreciated if you could communicate with me via email using this address
[1][email address]

 

 

 

References

Visible links
1. mailto:[email address]

INFORMATION.ACCESS, Department of Veterans' Affairs

1 Attachment

Good afternoon Ms Pane,

 

Please see the attached FOI Decision. The Information Commissioner set
aside the Department’s original decision of LEX 25062 (charges notice).

 

This decision substitutes the original.

 

If you would like any further information please contact me.

 

Kind regards

 

 

Brett (Position Number 62258141)

Assistant Director

Information Access Unit

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

 

“DVA is committed to supporting veterans and their families.  We all
deserve to be treated with courtesy and respect.  We ask that you treat us
the same way”. 

 

DVA has arrangements in place for staff to work at home as much as
possible to contribute to the Nation’s agenda to minimise social
interaction and support social distancing. To assist us it would be
appreciated if you could communicate with me via email using this address
[email address]

 

 

 

INFORMATION.ACCESS, Department of Veterans' Affairs

Good afternoon again Ms Pane,

 

We refer to the FOI decision we forwarded to you of todays’ date.

 

We also note that it is open to the department to consider providing you
with administrative access as an option to release information outside of
the FOI Act.  

 

As such the department wishes to provide you administrative access to the
limited data that the Coordinated Client Support Branch (CCSB) were able
to extract from the legacy system aDVAnce.

 

Please be advised that the total number of referrals made to the Client
Liaison Unit and Coordinated Care team for the month of July 2018 was 96.

 

We acknowledge that this administrative information release does not meet
the full scope of your original FOI request but we hope it is of
assistance to you.

 

Kind regards

 

 

Brett (Position Number 62258141)

Assistant Director

Information Access Unit

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

 

“DVA is committed to supporting veterans and their families.  We all
deserve to be treated with courtesy and respect.  We ask that you treat us
the same way”. 

 

DVA has arrangements in place for staff to work at home as much as
possible to contribute to the Nation’s agenda to minimise social
interaction and support social distancing. To assist us it would be
appreciated if you could communicate with me via email using this address
[email address]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: INFORMATION.ACCESS
Sent: Friday, 26 August 2022 12:50 PM
To: '[FOI #4882 email]'
<[FOI #4882 email]>
Subject: LEX 51217 (Previously LEX 25062) - FOI Decision - PANE, Verity
[SEC=OFFICIAL]

 

Good afternoon Ms Pane,

 

Please see the attached FOI Decision. The Information Commissioner set
aside the Department’s original decision of LEX 25062 (charges notice).

 

This decision substitutes the original.

 

If you would like any further information please contact me.

 

Kind regards

 

 

Brett (Position Number 62258141)

Assistant Director

Information Access Unit

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

 

“DVA is committed to supporting veterans and their families.  We all
deserve to be treated with courtesy and respect.  We ask that you treat us
the same way”. 

 

DVA has arrangements in place for staff to work at home as much as
possible to contribute to the Nation’s agenda to minimise social
interaction and support social distancing. To assist us it would be
appreciated if you could communicate with me via email using this address
[1][email address]

 

 

 

References

Visible links
1. mailto:[email address]

Attn Department of Veterans' Affairs,

Pass this on to the person who conducts Freedom of Information reviews.

Paragraph 25 of your access refusal decision of 26 August states:

Under section 54 of the FOI Act, you may apply in writing to the Department for an Internal Review of my decision. The Internal Review application must be made within 30 days of the date of this letter. Where possible please attach reasons why you believe review of the decision is necessary. The internal review will be carried out by another officer within 30 days.

I am therefore seeking in writing an internal review of Department of Veterans' Affairs's access refusal decision of 26 August.

This FOI was made in 2018 but instead of dealing with it DVA unethically raised a grossly exaggerated charges notice that DVA fraudulently used as a barrier to access for nearly four years to claim no such records exists.

A full history of my FOI request and all correspondence is available on the Internet at this address: https://www.righttoknow.org.au/request/s...

Verity Pane

INFORMATION.ACCESS, Department of Veterans' Affairs

1 Attachment

Dear Ms Pane

The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (the department) has received your
request for internal review of the Department’s decision (LEX 51217) under
the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act). Your internal review
request reads as follows:

              Paragraph 25 of your access refusal decision of 26 August
states:

I am therefore seeking in writing an internal review of Department of
Veterans' Affairs's access refusal decision of 26 August.

 

This FOI was made in 2018 but instead of dealing with it DVA unethically
raised a grossly exaggerated charges notice that DVA fraudulently used as
a barrier to access for nearly four years to claim no such records exists.

 

A full history of my FOI request and all correspondence is available on
the Internet at this address:
https://www.righttoknow.org.au/request/s...

 

Your request for internal review was received by the department on 27
August 2022 and the 30 day statutory period for processing your request
commenced from the day after that date.

 

Where possible, your request for internal review will be handled by an FOI
officer authorised decision-maker who was not involved in the original
decision.

 

Your address

 

The FOI Act requires that you provide us with an address that we can send
notices to. You have advised your electronic address is
[1][FOI #4882 email] . Unless you tell us
otherwise, we will send all notices and correspondence to this address.

 

Disclosure log

 

Information released under the FOI Act may be published on a disclosure
log on our website, subject to certain exceptions. These exceptions
include where publication of personal, business, professional or
commercial information would be unreasonable.

 

Further assistance

 

If you have any questions about your request, please email
[2][DVA request email]

 

Yours sincerely

Arthur

Position Number 62210944

Information Access Officer

Information Access Unit              

Department of Veterans’ Affairs

Email: [3][email address]

 

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References

Visible links
1. mailto:[FOI #4882 email]
2. mailto:[DVA request email]
3. mailto:[email address]

INFORMATION.ACCESS, Department of Veterans' Affairs

3 Attachments

Dear Ms Pane

 

Thank you for your request for internal review of the decision made on LEX
51217 (LEX 51504).

 

Please find the final decision and documents for release attached.

 

Kind regards

 

Ramona

Assistant Director

Position Number: 62336362

Information Access Unit | Client Access and Rehabilitation Branch
Department of Veterans' Affairs

GPO Box 9998 Canberra ACT 2600 | 21 Genge St Canberra City ACT 2601

 

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References

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Verity Pane left an annotation ()

Ic review