|
National Identification Scheme - Media Reports 2007
|
The Federal government calls it a ‘Human Services Access
Card’
We call it for what it is: a National ID Card System
There have been hundreds of media reports. Here are the more important ones
that came to our attention:
- Fittingly, the journalist who persistently
followed and analysed the Coalition's ID Card proposal was the person who
wrote its obituary:
7 December – Labor
swift to dump Access Card, The Australian
IT Section (Karen
Dearne), incl. The Labor Government has moved
quickly to scrap the Howard administration's controversial $1.1 billion Human
Services identity card. The federal Government has shut down the Office of
the Access Card and closed its website, honouring its election promise to
scrap the controversial program. ... Bidders are understood to have
spent millions on preparing their tenders for systems integration and card
issuing; while the department spent more than $50 million on
consultants, administration and advertising. The Howard government also spent
an undisclosed amount on establishing the Consumer and Privacy Taskforce to
manage public consultation; its resulting reports provided recommendations
that were ignored by the then minister, Senator Chris Ellison.
A tribute to the APF's Campaign Director
is on the main Campaign Page
- 6 December – Is
the Access card dead or changing its identity?, ZDNet Australia, incl.
Queensland Senator Joe Ludwig is now the Minister for Human Services, his
office had not responded to ZDNet Australia's requests for comment at the
time of publication. But the wording of Plibersek's comments combined
with the silence from Ludwig's office have caused privacy advocates to demand
a commitment that the Labor government will not simply introduce an identity
card with a new name -- as many suggested the Howard government did
with the unpopular Australia Card proposal
- 29 November – First
Access Card casualty is..., The Australian IT Section (Karen
Dearne), incl. "A $2.5 million ongoing contract with Booz Allen
Hamilton may be terminated if the incoming minister of human services
moves quickly to dump the Access Card project. Prior to the election, Labor
human services spokesperson Tanya Plibersek confirmed that Labor would scrap
the Access Card project. The contract, a purchase order signed on
October 3, covers the period from October 29 to February 1 next year.
A Human Services departmental spokeswoman says work has continued on the contract
in line with caretaker conventions. "However, the existence of a purchase
order does not necessarily mean that funds have to be, or will be, fully expended
against it," she said. "The department has the right to terminate
the provision of services by Booz Allen Hamilton if those services are no
longer required." Labor has promised to scrap the $1.1 billion Access
Card scheme, and use the savings elsewhere. Booz Allen has earned around $33
million in the past 18 months, acting as the project's lead advisor.
- 27 November – Canberra
to cancel access card, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The Human Services Department will lose $1.2 billion in funding
over four years as the new Labor Government cancels the contentious Access
Card and slashes costs. Cancellation of the health and welfare access card,
consistently portrayed by opponents as a de facto national identity
card, will save up to $1.15 billion, according to an independent
costing review. ... "The Access Card was one of the policies that showed
hubris and which was part and parcel of the Howard government's downfall,"
says Tim Warner, a prominent Victorian Liberal who led the Access Card No
Way campaign. "Many Liberal supporters, and a significant number of party
members, felt that it simply wasn't a Liberal policy in the philosophic sense."
Mr Warner warned that the campaign would watch the new Government closely,
"as the difficulty in getting the ALP's final repudiation shows
an unhealthy interest in the basic idea". "We're not packing up
our tents yet," he said. "This is a battle, which some in the civil
service and government service delivery see with a narrow vision. "They
will not be resting until they have the complete details of people's lives
at their fingertips." Mr Warner said Australians owed a debt
to retiring Senator Natasha Stott Despoja and the Democrats
for achieving a measure of accountability on the issue. "Kudos also to
Liberal senators Brett Mason, Mitch Fifield and John Watson
for bucking party discipline and sending the card back to the drawing board
in March," he said. "Otherwise we would have a contract in place,
and Labor made it clear they would not repudiate any contracts signed by the
Coalition." IT vendors and the industry are yet to count the cost of
the project's collapse. About $52 million has been spent to date,
mostly on consultants, lawyers and advertising. Halting the flawed
project is better than proceeding, Labor says. The vast bulk of the cost lay
in the mammoth task of registering some 17 million card-holders, at an estimated
rate of 32,000 people each working day between 2008 and 2010. Two critical
technology contracts for systems integration and card issuing remain in limbo
nearly a year after private sector tenders were called. It's unclear what,
if any, compensation will be available to tenderers. Opposition spokeswoman
Tanya Plibersek foreshadowed Labor's plans to dump the card in March,
describing the project as "ill-conceived, poorly executed and will cost
a great deal more than the Government imagines or is prepared to admit".
24 November 2007 – Election – Coalition Rout
- 22 November – Bureaucrats
face Rudd axe, The Australian, incl. "Mr Tanner last night
claimed to have identified $10 billion worth of budget savings
to help fund Labor's election promises. The savings, which include
$1 billion from scrapping the Access card welfare identification program,
have been submitted to Treasury for costing"
- 20 November – Democrats
want to kill off ID card, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The Democrats will continue to oppose the introduction
of a national identity card, and will seek to wind back Australia's
"intrusive" anti-terror laws, says Senator Natasha Stott Despoja,
who will launch the party's privacy policy in Adelaide today. "The Howard
Government has enacted about 40 pieces of security-related legislation, many
of which have removed independent judicial scrutiny of surveillance and intelligence-gathering
operations," she said. "We have called for a Senate inquiry into
these laws, and will continue to push for an urgent review with whichever
party forms government in 2008." The Democrats will also push for the
reform of the Privacy Act, which Senator Stott Despoja describes as "more
like a block of Swiss cheese than a bulwark against undue incursions into
personal privacy"
- 17 October – Access
Card killed off by election?, ZDNet, incl. "The upcoming
election could prove a fatal blow to the government's Access Card plans, with
privacy advocates encouraging a voter rebellion on the issue and Labor promising
to drop the project if elected to government. The Access Card, the
controversial project that would see welfare payments, health and other government
services tied to a nationally administered smartcard, has been put on the
backburner by the government after Prime Minister Howard called an election
for 24 November. The government is unable to enter into new contracts while
in caretaker mode, stalling any new efforts to pass legislation supporting
the project or sign any further tenders."
- 16 October – Labor
to dump Access Card, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne
and Ben Woodhead), incl. "A Labor government would scrap the contentious
$1.1 billion Access Card project, human services shadow minister Tanya
Plibersek has confirmed. "We have said all along that if the
Access Card had not been introduced by the time of the election we would not
proceed with it," Ms Plibersek said. "So, yes, we would
scrap the proposal entirely." and "the project has been
in limbo since July, following a series of legislative and procurement stumbles.
Human Services Minister Chris Ellison was forced to withdraw enabling legislation
in March, after the draft bill was rejected by an all-party Senate committee.
A revised exposure bill has since been languishing, with Senator Ellison in
June saying the consultation period would extend beyond the 2007 election"
and "Labor declared its opposition to the Access Card back in March,
with Ms Plibersek describing it as "simply a national ID card in disguise".
"It is an ill-conceived, poorly executed project that will cost a great
deal more than the Government imagines or is prepared to admit," she
said. Ms Plibersek predicted the card would be an election issue.
"It will be on the radar, as people realise every single Australian will
have to attend an interview, be photographed and provide original documents
they will have to apply for and pay for," she said. "With the potential
for the information they provide to be lost, stolen or misused, I think they'll
be very anxious."
- 19 September – Access
card to go ahead despite backlash: Govt, ZDNet, incl. "Over 60 submissions
have been received on the draft Bill from public and private organisations
as well as individuals", "The Australian Bankers Association
(ABA) is calling for the government to remove parts of the legislation
which would make it illegal for the card to be used as an identifier by non-government
parties" and " ... the Australian General Practice Network
(AGPN) [calls] for more details on what information the card is going
to contain, and expresses concern that its members will be expected
to become Medicare-fraud police. "Health professionals cannot
be expected to refuse health services as a consequence of a Medicare Australia
rejection relating to Medical Benefits Schedule eligibility; this has consequences
in terms of policing of eligibility, as it is now directly managed at the
front desk in a practice," Kate Carnell, AGPN Chief Executive Officer
stated in a letter to the Access Card Senate Committee"
- 18 September – ID
theft brings tech to law, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
re the ALRC Discussion Paper, incl. "Privacy rules that prevent the use
of identifying numbers assigned by other parties should be extended to public-sector
agencies. The planned health and welfare access card would be caught
by this provision under the proposed Unified Privacy Principle on identifiers.
The commission says the Privacy Act policy intention of preventing identifiers
becoming de facto national identity numbers remains relevant for federal government
schemes. Privacy concerns about data matching include revealing previously
unknown information about individuals without their knowledge or consent,
profiling of individuals and compiling data sets based on possibly inaccurate
information without right of correction, and database security. The Tax File
Number scheme provides an example of the risk of function creep with unique
multi-purpose identifiers"
- 7 September – Access
card 'more secure than Medicare', The Sydney Morning Herald,
incl. " ...the existing Medicare card, which figures in 70 per
cent of serious and organised crime identity investigations and 50 per cent
of all fraud investigations," a spokesman for Senator Ellison told AAP
[??!]. [The Minister's adviser is mounting a 'straw man' defence: no-one ever
said that the Medicare card was the standard to be compared against]
- 6 September – In
'Future directions in technology-enabled crime : 2007-09' (1.5MB), Australian
Institute of Criminology, " ... [the Access Card] will
have widespread uses and applications, making it a likely target for
criminals. ... [S]uch cards may facilitate the surreptitious collection
of personal data. For example, the unique multi-purpose identifiers ease the
monitoring of individuals’ activities across different organisations
and could be exploited by rogue employees. Other areas of
risk include those associated with dishonest initial enrolment of
users as well as data security, both with respect
to the card’s computer chip as well as supporting databases" (pp.
42-43)
- 4 September – Smartcard
costs hit $52 million, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "Spending on the federal Government's mooted welfare smartcard
has reached $52 million, despite uncertainty over whether
the $1.1 billion program will proceed. New contracts worth nearly $10 million
have been signed by the Department of Human Services since June [!!!], with
most due for completion well before the end of this year. ... The project's
lead adviser, Booz Allen Hamilton, collected $30.5 million
in fees during the past financial year ... Law firm Minter Ellison earned
$6.2 million ... consultancy KPMG picking up $4 million for its monitoring
and assurance duties. Technology services provider SMS Consulting Group had
a steady run of contracts, totalling $1.6 million, while IT services supplier
Acumen Alliance earned $1 million during the year. ... Research and public
relations firms ORIMA, Porter Novelli and Mediascape held contracts worth
a combined $3 million over the past two years, while advertising firm HMA
Blaze earned $143,000 for two weeks' work seeking public comment on the draft
Access Card legislation "
- 29 August – Ruddock
attacks Labor access card 'mistake', ABC News, incl. "Federal
Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock says Labor's decision to scrap the Government's
planned access card is foolish. The Federal Opposition says it will
scrap the legislation drawn up to support the card if it wins power.
Speaking at the launch of National Identity Fraud Awareness Week, Mr Ruddock
said Labor is making a mistake. "It will minimise the opportunity for
people to establish false identity and obtain access to benefits and that's
where it has a very important spin off for the Australian community,"
he said. "It's one of the reasons I think it'd be foolish for the Labor
Party to walk away from the proposal"
- 29 August – Labor
pledges to kill off Access Card, The Age, incl. ""As
far as we're concerned, (the Access Card) is dead," Labor human services
spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said. Voters worried about the card now had a
clear choice between a Coalition government that would introduce the smartcard
— which would replace up to 17 social services cards and be required
by anyone wanting to access government payments — and one that
would not, Ms Plibersek said. She accused the Government of "doing everything
it can to minimise the Access Card as an election issue … (ever since)
it became obvious that it was not a popular proposal". Labor's
confirmation that it would scrap the card — and any similar proposals
— came as a new report by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner suggested
Australians may be warming to the idea. The survey of 1503 people found 63
per cent were happy with the Government giving them a unique identifying number,
compared with 53 per cent in 2004. [The question referred to "a"
unique identifying number cf. a general-purpose number designed to enable
cross-linkage across all databases]. And 80 per cent were happy for government
departments to share information about them, up from 71 per cent in 2004.
One of the fears raised by privacy advocates and opposition parties was that
under the Access Card proposal, information held across several government
departments could be combined through the use of the unique identifying numbers,
effectively creating a "super-database" of information. Ms Plibersek
denied the Privacy Commissioner's report suggested Australians were now more
open to the Access Card. The survey did not ask specifically about the card,
and, in any case, "when the Australia Card was first debated, the opposition
to it was not big," she said. "It took a year of public debate to
really shift attitudes on the Australia Card, but as people learnt more about
it, their concerns were heightened." Labor has argued that the
way the Access Card is designed, it would turn into a de facto identity card
much like the failed Australia Card. Ms Plibersek said Labor was not against
the use of smartcard technology to deliver some government services. But a
single card required by everyone who wanted to access services — and
supported by a database holding information about all card holders —
was simply an ID card by another name, she said. Under a Labor government,
there would be "no super-database that contains all the information about
a person and no effective ID card that you have to carry all the time,"
she said. Ms Plibersek also questioned Government estimates that
the Access Card could save up to $3 billion over 10 years by cutting down
on fraud, saying such claims were overblown. "The Government has made
very favourable assumptions about what (the card) would cost and what it would
save (in prevented fraud)," she said. "Even without the
objection to privacy implications, the card was going to cost a lot of money
for a very questionable benefit.""
- 28 August – Health card photo fears, The Sydney Morning
Herald, incl. "The Privacy Commissioner has advised the
Federal Government not to include photographs on the proposed health and welfare
card unless it wants people to think of it as a de facto national identity
card. ... [I]n comments on the draft legislation ..., Ms Curtis said
a photograph would make it easier to verify the bearer's identity but people
did not need to produce photographic proof to obtain most government payments
and services. Photo-identification should only be required for 'high-risk
or high-value transactions', but a driver's licence or passport would do"
- 28 August – APEC
pass farce: it's no go, The Sydney Morning Herald, incl. "The
security accreditation cards for the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum
have stopped working, hours after the APEC Taskforce began issuing them.
APEC staff at the Sydney Exhibition and Convention Centre were forced to abandon
a card-swipe computer and confirm the identity of individuals visually. ...
But an APEC Taskforce spokeswoman said the system was down for less than an
hour. "We haven't compromised our security by going through a
visual id check," she said. [So the automated system is unnecessary?!].
... The 1500 journalists expected into Sydney for the summit have all had
to register and receive a security identification card. Many people who work
and live the APEC security areas have also had to register and undergo a security
check for the summit. ... Mr Johnson said an APEC staff member said the database,
run by the defence company Thales Australia, was not uploading correctly to
the APEC computers. The Herald has been told that there had been numerous
problem with the APEC registration website run by Thales with many pages not
correctly capturing the data"
- 24 August – Smartcard
on hold till next year, The Australian, incl. Ellison admitted
that "I think the timeline we set was an ambitious one", and that
there is no way he would put forward legislation before 2008, i.e.
until after the election
- 12 August – China Enacting a High-Tech Plan to Track People, The New York
Times, reporting on a similar scheme in the un-free country of
the PRC: "in Shenzhen, a city of 12.4 million people, residency
cards fitted with powerful computer chips programmed by the same company will
be issued to most citizens. Data on the chip will include not just the citizen's
name and address but also work history, educational background, religion,
ethnicity, police record, medical insurance status and landlordís phone
number. Even personal reproductive history will be included, for enforcement
of China's controversial ìone childî policy. Plans are being
studied to add credit histories, subway travel payments and small purchases
charged to the card"
- 1 August – Access
denied: young people and the new 'smartcard', ABC Opinion by Luke
Bo'sher (a policy officer at the Youth Coalition of the ACT), incl. "Hidden
well beneath the simmering debate about privacy, technology, safety and cost,
the Federal Government has made young people's access to health care more
tenuous than it has ever been before ... Anyone below the age of 18 will require
an exemption from the Minister to get a card ... The Government is
proposing to substantially increase the power of one individual Minister to
decide whether or not a young person has the right to independently access
health care ...Requiring all young people to be on their parents' Access Card
would deny young people the opportunity to access health care independently
and would compromise their right to confidentiality of treatment. Confidentiality
and privacy in accessing health care is central to young people"
- 17 July – Big
spend on project in limbo, The Australian IT Section, incl. "The
pace of contract signings is in stark contrast to a decision by the federal
Government last month to put legislation governing the controversial smartcard
in limbo. The Government has since issued a draft
exposure of the proposed smartcard bill, but it has not committed to a release
date for the final legislation and is not expected to do so until after the
federal election"
- 12 July – Opposition
seeks costings on Access Card, The Age, incl. "Opposition
human services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said ... the ANAO's
decision was another vote of no-confidence in the project, which was "fast
becoming an expensive debacle" .... Ms Plibersek said great sums of money
had been spent on the card by the government and tenderers seeking work on
the project, even though it had not been approved by parliament. "The
Howard government has already spent 40 million taxpayers' dollars on the Access
Card, including more than $3 million on advertising," she said in a statement.
"Tenderers, which include small businesses, have been badly burnt by
the government's handling of this project, and are understandably angry"
- 12 July – Access
Card should be ordered off the field for good, OnLine Opinion
by Natasha Stott Despoja, incl. "the government could
just as easily snatch victory from the jaws of defeat despite the valiant
efforts of those who oppose the Access Card. Those of us who oppose the card
can not be complacent. This campaign could come down to extra time"
- 10 July – Watchdog
eyes card project, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The auditor-general may put the Human Services Department under
the spotlight over procurements for the proposed $1.1 billion Access Card.
The Australian National Audit Office has flagged the project for possible
audit this year. It would examine tender processes, service delivery
and administration, and payments under relevant contracts. "These procurements
are likely to include the co-ordination/construction of customer databases,
the development and production of the physical card, and the customer registration
process," the ANAO says. Democrats Senator Natasha Stott Despoja welcomed
scrutiny of "the administration of what amounts to the biggest invasion
of privacy" in the nation's history
- 1 July – Senator
protests info fee, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "In May, Democrat Senator Natasha Stott Despoja
lodged a freedom of information request for excerpts deleted from the business
case, arguing that commercial confidentiality no longer applied. The
Human Services Department has put an $867.23 price tag on the release of the
full KPMG Access Card report, including "commercially sensitive
information" previously withheld"
- 26 June – Ellison
rejects Access agency, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "Human Services Minister Chris Ellison has rejected recommendations
to establish a separate Access Card agency to handle governance of the registration
process and resolve complaints. Business consultancy KPMG and the Consumer
and Privacy Taskforce have both called for the creation of an independent
health and welfare smartcard management authority within the Human Services
Department" [Ellison thereby continues the well-established tradition
of Ministers ignoring the advice of the people who they employ, contract with
and appoint to guide them through the morass]
- 25 June – Access
Card re-draft fails to meet critics' concerns, ZDNet, incl. "The
Australian Democrats, the Australian Labor Party and privacy groups continue
to hold serious concerns regarding the federal government's proposed Access
Card, after a re-draft of the legislation was released on Thursday last week"
and "Concerns have also been raised by University
of New South Wales researcher Dr Richard Kemp that the government may overestimate
the effectiveness of photo ID in the prevention of fraud. His concern
is that the means to override the biometric identification will always fall
back on humans, whose capacity to recognise an unknown individual from a photograph
is somewhat limited. "My research shows an extremely high rate
of both false positive and false negative errors when human beings are asked
to recognise people based on a photo ID," Dr Kemp said. "When
you consider that we found a number of possible mistaken identities in a random
group of just a hundred, without even attempting to use family members, you
start to see how the effectiveness of photos can potentially be misleading""
- 23 June – Rebels
claim win over Smartcard, news.com.au, incl. "Rebel
Coalition MPs and senators – many Queenslanders – are claiming
victory in the fight to shelve the controversial welfare smartcard. One Queensland
Liberal said yesterday the Federal Government's proposed $1.1 billion card
was "dying a slow death" and there was "no way it would get
up before the election". ... But many civil libertarians, as
well as influential Liberals, are worried it will turn into a de facto national
identity card. ... Greens Senator Kerry Nettle said despite
the assurances it appeared the Government was going backwards in protecting
privacy. "In some ways the Bill is worse, confirming that police
and ASIO will be able to access the national database without a warrant,"
she said. A spokesman for Senator Ellison said there was no decision on the
future of the card. "The minister has said the legislation may or may
not be introduced this year," he said"
- 22 June – No warrant for smartcard data, The Sydney Morning Herald,
incl. "Police and intelligence officials will not need a
warrant to obtain personal information stored on the databank of
the proposed national smartcard under draft legislation made public yesterday.
The draft, released to allow two months of public scrutiny, allows details
to be disclosed on the written request of senior officers"
- 21 June – Card
laws fly low - lobbyists, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "Access Card No Way campaigner Tim Warner said ... to ensure
it isn't scrutinised officially, it has not been tabled in Parliament; it
has been distributed with a press release to journalists at the close of the
sitting, when the trash gets taken out", "the House is
now adjourned until August 2", "A spokesman said the document was
out for public comment, and did not require tabling in Parliament. "We
have said we will introduce the legislation when we're satisfied with the
outcomes of consultation," he said. "We have put it out for public
consultation for two months; we will also refer it to the Senate committee
(which rejected a previous Access Card Bill). Depending on how things go,
that could still happen before an election, the timing of which of course
is unknown", and "shadow minister Tanya Plibersek ... said
the confusion surrounding the Access Card had turned into a debacle, and expressed
outrage that the minister had given the draft to journalists, rather than
tabling it. "It was circulated to a hand-picked audience a couple
of hours before Parliament rose," she said. "The Government
has also reneged on its commitment to release a report on a card appeals mechanism;
a paper on the registration process, and a privacy impact assessment."
With more than $40 million in taxpayers' dollars already spent on the Access
Card, "all Australians have a right to know where this botched project
is heading," she said"
- 13 June – Angry Smartcard bidders want answers, AFR (Julian
Bajkowski), incl. one source claims delays in the project are costing
bidders – "We have already burned a truckload of cash.
How much more do they expect us to burn?". Companies understood to be
seeking clarification include Accenture, IBM, EDS and CSC. Many employees
of companies seeking smartcard contracts have been banned from communicating
with staff seconded from Centrelink and Medicare Australia to the Office of
Access Card, which manages the project. DHS has warned bidders that contact
with the media could cause them to be thrown off the list of companies being
considered. DHS sent written warnings to bidders informing them of penalties
related to making public statements without obtaining written permission from
the department
- 8 June – The
Access Card has stalled. So now let's really talk about it, The Age,
Op. Ed. piece by Christopher Scanlon, incl. "Speaking at the Australian
Smart Cards Summit on Tuesday, Senator Chris Ellison conceded that the Government's
trouble-prone Access Card is to be delayed, probably until after the election.
The official reason is to allow for greater consultation with the states and
the territories. That's a refreshing change, given that the Government
has so far shown very little interest in consultation. The Access
Card was unsuccessfully rammed through the Senate in a deliberate attempt
to limit debate. The good news is that the card's delay will give
the breathing space for some debate about the proposed card"
- 7 June – Some
details 'should be left off smartcard', news.com.au, incl. "Some
personal details should be left off the proposed national access card to protect
privacy and stop it becoming a de facto identity card, a government taskforce
says ... Mr Fels told the Australian Smart Cards Summit in
Sydney today that he was mindful of widespread community fears that
the access card could become a national identity card by stealth"
- 6 June – Smart
Card sacrificed ahead of election: Labor, ABC News, incl. "The
Federal Opposition says the Government has delayed introducing its Smart Card
policy because of community opposition. Yesterday the Government announced
the health and social services Access Card may not be introduced until next
year. Labor's human services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek
has told the Australian Smart Card Summit in Sydney that the Government-proposed
access card is too expensive and there are still privacy concerns. "What
happened yesterday was a bit of excess baggage that we've ditched from the
saddle bags on the way to an election," she said. "I think
this proposal has been jettisoned because it's been publicly unpopular,
not because of the technology but because of the whole framework that has
been presented to the public""
- 5 June – Access
card legislation could be delayed, The Age, incl. "Legislation
to introduce a national access card could be delayed until after the upcoming
federal election amid fears the photographic smartcard may become a de facto
identity card. Human Services Minister Senator Chris Ellison told
the Australian Smart Cards Summit in Sydney more consultation was needed with
the states and territories before the government could introduce the access
card bill. ... It is a controversial project and one the government wants
to distance itself from during an election year, Democrats senator Natasha
Stott Despoja said. "The project has been farcical from the
very beginning. The original bill was fatally flawed," she said in a
statement. "While not shutting the door on it, this announcement may
mean a gentle death for the access card proposal before the election""
- 5 June – Troubled
smartcard in doubt after delay, The Sydney Morning Herald, incl.
"The $1.1 billion national smartcard looks in jeopardy,
with the Government backing away from its plan to enact laws for the project
before the federal election ... The delay is the latest upset for the card
scheme after the first tranche of legislation was withdrawn earlier this year
following a critical report of a Government-chaired Senate committee which
raised concerns about security and privacy safeguards. The access
card and its biometric photograph faced a turbulent reception in the Senate,
with no guarantee it would pass because of likely resistance from some Coalition
members, including the Nationals' Barnaby Joyce. The Government has
also been under fire for not providing more time for public scrutiny of the
access card. Senator Ellison said yesterday that after "extensive
discussions" the Government had decided "further consultation would
be of value"."
- 4 June – Access
card put on backburner, Australian IT Section, incl. "The
federal Department of Human Services has delayed the launch of its $1.1 billion
welfare access card by up to eight months following a series of legislative
and procurement stumbles. The department previously said it would begin registrations
for the access card in April and May next year, but has now conceded it will
be late 2008 before it starts signing up Australian residents. The delay is
an embarrassing blow for the high-profile project, which has already cost
$41 million and has come under fire from the opposition political parties
and privacy groups. ... The revelation came in Senate hearings in which Department
of Human Services executives admitted $3.1 million had been spent on public
awareness campaigns for the card. The expenditure included about $1 million
each on market research and media placement services. ... The card
continues to encounter fierce opposition, and Australian Privacy
Foundation No ID Card campaign director Anna Johnston yesterday called for
the project to be scrapped. "The project management of the access card
is in such a state of shambles that the project should be shut down immediately,"
Ms Johnston said. "Forty million dollars of taxpayers' money has already
been spent this year on external advisers on this project and yet the Government
still has not figured out how the access card is supposed to work"
- 24 May – Govt
'spending big on Access card ads', The Age, incl. "The
federal government has spent more than $3 million on advertising the controversial
Access card even before it has been approved by parliament, a Senate
committee has heard. ... Draft laws setting up the smart card were put on
hold in March after a government-dominated Senate committee warned it was
likely to become a de facto identity card. The government now plans
to re-introduce the legislation into the Senate next month. ... Labor
senator Kate Lundy said it was absurd that so much money
had been spent when the government had not yet finalised the legislation"
- 21 May – Dems
demand smartcard report, Australian IT Section, incl. "Democrat
Senator Natasha Stott Despoja is seeking the release of the
full KPMG Access Card report, including "commercially sensitive information"
previously withheld""
- 17 May – Access
card heads back to Senate, Australian IT Section, incl. "Draft
laws establishing a controversial billion-dollar health and welfare access
card will be reintroduced to federal parliament next month.
A photograph, signature and personal number will be retained as key components
of the smart card, despite concerns raised by privacy advocates, Opposition
politicians and coalition backbenchers about such a move"
- 12 May – Smartcard hardly a picture of health, The AFR (Julian
Bajkowski), incl. a good short history, and "The billion-dollar project
is causing major headaches for the Howard government in the run-up to the
election expected later this year. It should have been a red-letter day, but
the federal government's troubled $1.1 billion welfare smartcard project has
celebrated an unhappy first birthday with another round of musical chairs
at the Department of Human Services, which is charged with heading the project.
A year after the ambitious proposal was launched, signs have emerged
that Prime Minister John Howard and public service head Peter Shergold are
starting to have reservations about the huge project, which aims
to issue 16 million photographic identity cards. Howard moved decisively this
week to swap Department of Human Services head Patricia Scott for Helen Williams,
the head of Helen Coonan's Department of Communications, Information Technology
and the Arts. ... One trigger for the government's present
woes and the resulting rotation of top bureaucrats was the demolition
of evidence submitted by Scott to a government-controlled Senate inquiry into
the smartcard by Australian Security Intelligence Organisation chief Paul
O'Sullivan. It was not the sort of performance anticipated by a government
that controlled the balance of power in both houses of parliament and which
has passed controversial workplace and media reforms. While Scott repeatedly
had stated that ASIO would require warrants to access the project's huge photographic
registry - supposedly capable of matching surveillance vision with pictures
of welfare recipients - O'Sullivan maintained that present national security
powers already permitted ASIO to access the registry without the need to obtain
a warrant. The dispute was immediately exploited by Labor and the minority
parties ... O'Sullivan's evidence ... crystallised concerns held by
Queensland Nationals senators Barnaby Joyce and Ron Boswell that the smartcard
had become another version of Labor's ill-fated Australia Card, which
was scuttled in 1984 [sic: 1987], and carried with it an Orwellian stench
of electoral death ... Notably, private sector conservative stalwarts,
including Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive
Peter Hendy, also remain hostile to the notion of a national identity
card, not least because of the increased burden it will place on
businesses ... A further unanticipated irritation is the obvious conflict
with anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism laws, which were introduced
by Ellison during his previous role as customs and justice minister. Banks
and merchants are angry that anti-money-laundering and counter-terrorism laws
compel them to collect, retain and submit records of a customer's identity,
while the new smartcard laws introduce heavy sanctions for just such an action"
- 8 May – Privacy
concerns over Government net plans, The Sydney Morning Herald,
incl. "The announcement [of a single sign-on service as part of the Australian
Government Online Service Point] comes as the government struggles
to win support for a national Access Card"
- 27 April – Ministerial Media Release, announcing that Helen
Williams (Secretary of the Department of Communications, Information Technology
and the Arts) will swap appointments with Patricia Scott (Secretary of the
Department of Human Services) as of Monday 7 May 2007. The gaffe before
the Senate Committee on 9 March would appear to have cost Scott her position
- 24 April – IBM, Thales make smartcard short list, The AFR,
incl. "a short list of two companies, IBM and Thales, to manage the project",
"Thales has a longstanding business installing smartcard systems in Europe"
and "Ellison faces a knife-edge vote in the Senate when he introduces
legislation to authorise the card in June. revising the proposed laws prepared
by his predecessor, Ian Campbell, earlier this year. Nationals senator Bamaby
Joyce has warned he will vote against the legislation if it does
not do enough to guarantee privacy, while Family First senator Steve
Fielding also has concerns about the project. But the most important
challenge to the project is likely to come from coalition MPs
who object to the inclusion of a photograph on the front of the card"
- 18 April – Democrats
urge revolt on access card, The Age (AAP), incl. "Democrats
senator Natasha Stott Despoja said Senator Ellison's comments
showed the card would still act as a national identity card. "I think
this government needs to get ready for some backbenchers crossing the floor,"
Senator Stott Despoja said. "I think it's possible this card will be
defeated if the National Party sticks to their guns, if Family
First really cares about the privacy of families in Australia and
if various small `L' Liberal backbenchers stay true to their
beliefs and conscience ... then this card should fail." Senator Stott
Despoja said committee chairman Brett Mason, now a Liberal frontbencher,
must stand tall with other coalition politicians. "There is no way that
they can go on record in the Senate committee process with such (strong) concerns
and back away from those," she said"
- 18 April – Photo
on card vital, says Ellison, The Australian IT Section, incl.
"A photograph, signature and personal number will be retained as key
elements of the Howard Government's new Access Card, despite backbench protests
this will make it a de facto identity card" and "Senator Ellison's
views threaten a split in Coalition ranks that could derail swift implementation
of the card. Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce said he was prepared
to cross the floor on the issue. "We don't believe Big Brother should
be watching you," Senator Joyce said. The Senate committee said
the rules meant to prevent the card being used for identity purposes would
"become dead letter law" and "Labor will oppose the
legislation, with human services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek
maintaining the card could increase fraud and lead to breaches of privacy"
"With that much information on the face of the card, it's a de facto
ID card," she said.
- 18 April – Access
card under fire over ID concerns, The Age (AAP), incl. "Ellison
said the concerns raised by his colleagues [about "a photograph, signature
and personal number" did not reflect the views of the community"
and "I think the case has been built [!!!] for there to be a photo, a
signature and a number on the face of the card ..."
- 17 April – Biometrics
errors 'too high', The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The EFA cites a European Commission report that found facial recognition
unsuitable for large databases. "Accuracy drops when the acquisition
and test occur further apart in time, suggesting faces may need regular re-enrolment,"
the report says. EFA rejects departmental claims that the access card proposal
is based on tried and tested technology, and claims references to international
projects are misleading" and "There was no evidence to substantiate
claims that face-matching technology would help identify unknown people, as
in the Cornelia Rau case". See the
EFA's submission on which the article is based
- 10 April – We've
given away our privacy, a card's just the final blow, The Age
(Opinion Piece by Christopher Scanlon), incl. "Hockey's description of
the Access Card [as 'a mini iPod'] was, of course, disingenuous in the extreme,
though there is a method to his madness", "There are, of course,
differences between surveillance by the state and deciding to put your whole
life online. For example, there's no compulsion to have a blog, or even to
reveal all on it. Individuals are free to put up and take down content as
they choose. A similar refusal to have, or produce, an Access Card would result
in a denial of access to medical and welfare services. However, such technologies
have made the Access Card palatable in a way that the Australia Card was not"
and "Hockey's likening the Access Card to an iPod isn't
as mad as it seems. Rather, it taps into deeply entrenched myths about
the capacity of technology to empower individuals and expand choice.
Defeating the Access Card will require more than simply arguing that the card
encroaches on individual privacy. Rather it will mean recovering a sense of
what privacy is and why it matters"
- 3 April – ID
card hearings cancelled, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "Public hearings on the Access Card registration process were cancelled
in Sydney yesterday and in Brisbane today due to "a lack of interest",
"anti-card campaigners are furious about the limited notice of the hearings,
which follow weeks of rushed consultations over technical matters and the
draft bill, and a Senate inquiry that sent back the legislation for revision",
"Details of the public hearings [were buried] ... Those wishing to attend
the Sydney session had only six working days notice" and "Once
again, proper process is being sacrificed for political expediency, and the
so-called independent taskforce is not standing up to the minister on this
issue," [No ID Card Campaign Director] Ms Johnston said"
- 30 March – Card
will be debated - Ellison, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "Senator Ellison said that the Access Card Bill would be
tabled in Parliament June 12 allowing two months' public debate before
its fate is considered by the Senate [BUT SEE CLARIFICATION BELOW]. Access
Card No Way convenor Tim Warner emerged from a 45-minute meeting
with Senator Ellison yesterday with a commitment to a firm timeline, and public
hearings in every state" and "Senator Ellison has also referred
concerns about costings, particularly for photo-capable terminals, to the
Finance Department and promised to release that information, Mr Warner
said". [Ellison later declared that he had made no commitment
to hold public hearings. Any public hearings would be the responsibility of
the Senate Committee. The Government does not recognise any public
right to participate in the process of designing schemes that are intended
to subjugate the public]
- 27 March – Card
opponents fear report go-slow, The Australian IT Section (Karen
Dearne), incl. "Anti-Access Card campaigners said that the federal
Government was undermining the Consumer and Privacy Taskforce by "sitting
on its reports" until publication suits them. Anna Johnston,
chair of the Australian Privacy Foundation's No ID Card campaign, said the
taskforce’s key paper on the card registration process appeared to have
been delayed until the Access Card Bill was passed by the Senate. "Happily
this tactic failed, as the Senate committee refused to let the Bill go through
without further scrutiny of the details," she said"
- 24 March – Fears
for card security, The Age, incl. "The taskforce warned
that there was a danger that criminals could try to hack into the
system to acquire passport or birth certificate details of applicants
when they registered online"
- 23 March – Sign-up
queue card's biggest hurdle, The Australian IT Section (Karen
Dearne), incl. "The fate of the federal Government's Access Card
scheme rests upon successfully registering more than 16 million people at
a rate of well over 30,000 per working day between 2008 and 2010,
the Consumer and Privacy Taskforce warns", "The initial application
will have to be in writing, followed by attendance at a face-to-face interview
where people will have to produce a range of identity documents which will
be copied for checking. A biometric photograph will be taken for inclusion
on the card, and people will need to provide a digital signature"
- 23 March – Photo could delay smartcard by five years, AFR
(Julian Bajkowski), incl. "Pressure has intensified for the federal
government to dump the biometric photograph planned for its troubled
welfare smartcard project after the head of a similar scheme in Austria warned
a photograph was unnecessary and could result in delays of up to five years.
The managing director of the Austrian government's welfare smartcard agency,
SVC, Ursula Weismann, said yesterday the exclusion of an identifying photograph
had been necessary to retain public support for a welfare smartcard scheme
largely similar to the one proposed for Australia", "The promotion
of a successful photo-free smartcard option by private industry supportive
of smartcard technology has come as the government mulls what concessions
it will need to make to persuade fiercely resistant coalition senators from
Queensland to support the troubled project ... senior coalition figures
... increasingly concerned the smartcard project has become an escalating
electoral liability in the face of deteriorating polls, with little
visible advantage for citizens in the near term"
- 21 March – Access
card legislation set for June, ZDNet, incl. "Ellison will
meet with the Federation of Ethnic Communities' Councils of Australia as well
as consumer, health and privacy groups in the next 10 days. "The purpose
of the meetings is to hear first hand from groups
who made submissions or attended the public hearing of the Senate
inquiry, about their views, issues and concerns regarding the Access Card.
This is not about revisiting the concept of the card ..."
[What, pray tell, is the point of a meeting that can have no outcome??]
- 20 March – ID
card stumbles on report of Senate, The Australian IT Section
(Karen Dearne), incl. "The Access Card Office "should do the responsible
thing and call off the tendering process", said Anna Johnston, No ID
Card campaign director for the Australian Privacy Foundation. "The Senate
committee was pretty damning of project development, and any suggestion
that procurement is not affected by the bill's cancellation is both contemptuous
and negligent," Ms Johnston said. "The Government really needs to
go back to the drawing board and think the whole project through again."
That meant "the tendering work done to date is surely null and void",
she said. "If the Government is telling tenderers any different, it's
leading people up the garden path" and "The Public Interest Advocacy
Centre said the Government was paying the price for putting "the cart
before the horse". "It must guarantee that it will proceed no further
until fundamental flaws are addressed," the centre's chief executive,
Robin Banks, said. "To sign contracts to roll out the Access Card before
accompanying legislation passes through both houses of parliament would be
completely irresponsible."
- 20 March – Privacy
no loss in Access Card, The Age Business Section (Mirko
Bagaric) – an impassioned but error-ridden hymn of
support for a national ID scheme, accompanied by a cartoon which
took a different line entirely
- 18 March – Access
card hits credit limit, The Canberra Times (Peter Martin). Apart
from a couple of quibbles, an excellent summary of the scheme and
the Senate Committee's review of it. It's so good that we've created
a mirror of the article
- 16 March 2pm – Govt
to push ahead with smartcard plan, The Age, incl. "The federal
government will push ahead with its proposed health and welfare smartcard,
despite a Senate inquiry raising major concerns it could become a de facto
identity card", "The government has taken the recommendation on
board, saying it hopes to introduce a consolidated bill as early as June.
Human Services Minister Chris Ellison says any changes won't delay the introduction
of the card. "I want to see the access card rolled out in 2008,"
Senator Ellison told reporters in Perth. Senator Ellison says
he will be meeting with stakeholders in the next fortnight to discuss other
concerns raised by the committee. "This is certainly not the
end of the access card and people are seriously mistaken if they think that
is," he said", and ""In order for the government
to fix up all of those problems ... the government would face the prospect
of dealing with an extraordinarily contentious piece of legislation just before
the federal election," [Greens] Senator Nettle told reporters in Canberra.
"Even their own backbench doesn't support this legislation and has massive
concerns about it," she said"
March 2007 Government-Dominated Senate Committee Hammers 'Access Card'
- 16 March, am edition – Access
Card vote halted by privacy doubts, The Age, incl. "Legislation
for the Government's controversial health and welfare Access Card will be
withdrawn from Parliament after it was sent back to be redrafted by a cross-party
committee over fears that it represented a threat to privacy. The Government
has avoided the embarrassment of having its own senators cross the floor to
vote against the Access Card bill by declaring it would follow the committee's
recommendation to introduce all the legislation for the card together in one
bundle. But Human Services Minister Chris Ellison said in a statement that
the Government was still committed "to having the legislation passed
this year" and that he was confident the Government could deal with concerns
raised by the Senate inquiry. But the scathing report suggests the Government
still has a long way to go before it convinces even its own backbenchers that
the Access Card is no Australia Card"
- 16 March – Greens
say good riddance to access card, The West Australian, incl.
"The proposed new access card has too many problems and should be ditched
instead of revamped, the Australian Greens say. ... Greens senator
Kerry Nettle said the card had too many flaws for the government
to deal with before the election. "In order for the government to fix
up all of those problems...the government would face the prospect of dealing
with an extraordinarily contentious piece of legislation just before the federal
election," Senator Nettle told reporters. "Even their own backbench
doesn't support this legislation and has massive concerns about it"
- 16 March, 08:22 – Backbenchers
warn of problems with access card, ABC AM, incl. "Some
of the fiercest critics of the Government's proposed Access Card are within
its own ranks. More than a handful on the coalition backbench are
worried it could easily morph into something like the Australia Card, which
was proposed back in the mid 1980s. And now this Senate report, chaired by
Liberal Brett Mason, has added its weight to that criticism and added a lot
more besides", "Chris Ellison: What we'll do is we'll simply
defer it, and we'll look at amending the Bill to include the further provisions
which we were going to include in the second tranche of legislation that was
going to deal with safeguards and appeals and a number of other aspects. We'll
also consider carefully what the Committee said ... I'm going to use that
as an opportunity to have some round tables with key stakeholders to assess
their views"
- 16 March – Access
Card stalls, The Australian IT Section, incl. "Although
the move heads off a split within Coalition ranks, it is likely to derail
the swift implementation of the card, which was designed to provide
access to government services. Senator Ellison said the Government still hoped
to pass the legislation this year, although it was unclear what impact the
delay would have on the rollout of the Access Card, which was slated to come
into operation in April next year", "Despite uncertainty about the
new timeline, Senator Ellison said the Government remained "committed
to having the legislation passed this year", "Seldom do Coalition
senators make recommendations that are critical of a government program, let
alone multiple critical recommendations ... but the Access Card is so bad
they have swallowed their fears and spoken out," Opposition Human
Services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said. Democrats senator
Natasha Stott-Despoja said the report showed that the card needed
to be "cut up and the flawed legislation shredded"
- 16 March – Backlash
fear sparks ID card rethink, The Sydney Morning Herald (Mark
Metherell), incl. "The Federal Government has swiftly bowed to a Senate
committee report critical of the proposed national smart card and agreed to
rethink the legislation. The report, by a Government-chaired committee, criticised
legislation for the card, warning the scheme risked becoming a de facto identity
card. Facing the prospect of a fiasco similar to that of
the Australia Card, which sank an identity card scheme 20 years ago, the
Government moved within two hours of the report's release to quell a backlash
against the $1.1 billion plan. It has promised to combine the legislation,
which has passed the House of Representatives, with a second tranche
containing privacy and other safeguards"
- 16 March, 1:15am – Govt
stands by smart card despite Senate concerns, ABC News, incl.
"The Federal Human Services Minister is standing by the Government's
plan to roll out a health and welfare access card from next year, despite
concerns raised by a Senate inquiry", "He says he is not convinced
by the committee's concerns that measures to limit the card's use will be
ignored in practice. "No-one can unlawfully demand them to produce
it to prove their identity," [Ellison] said. He says that distinguishes
this proposal from the failed Australia Card plan more than 20 years ago"
- 15 March, 8:40pm – Govt
agrees to delay smart card legislation, ABC News, incl. "The
Federal Government has agreed to delay the first round of legislation
designed to introduce a high-tech access card for health and welfare services"
- 15 March, 8:04pm – Access
card a risk: senate committee, The Sydney Morning Herald, incl.
"The federal government will delay the first stage of its proposed health
and welfare Smartcard, after an inquiry revealed major problems with the plan.
A cross-party Senate committee warned on Thursday the high-tech access
card was likely to become a de facto national identity card, despite
measures aimed at limiting its scope. The committee, chaired by Liberal Brett
Mason, says it was unable to fully assess the card because legislation
covering its privacy and security safeguards had not yet been introduced.
It recommended the legislation be rewritten to include the privacy provisions,
which the government had planned to introduce down the track" and "But
Democrats senator Natasha Stott Despoja says the inquiry has uncovered faults
in the application process, the information register, the chip and the card
itself. She wants the legislation scrapped"
- 15 March, 5:38pm – Smart
card delayed, The Courier-Mail, incl. "The Federal
Government will delay the first stage of its proposed health and welfare smart
card, after an inquiry revealed major problems with the plan. The
decision follows the emergence of serious problems with the Federal Government's
plan to issue smart cards to 16 million Australians from early next year.
A Coalition-controlled Senate inquiry last night appealed to the Government
to go back to the drawing board amid concern the technology was not ready
to be rolled out. In a damning report, the standing committee on finance and
public administration warned that the so-called Access Card could become a
de facto national ID card. The senators are worried safeguards are inadequate.
The Courier-Mail reported this week that Australia's privacy watchdog
had warned the Government's rush to introduce the technology was putting personal
freedom at risk"
- 15 March – Help
needed to access new card, The Australian, incl. "The Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission has signalled that indigenous
Australians could have difficulty meeting the registration requirements for
the card, which will be needed from 2010 by anyone wanting to claim from Medicare
or Centrelink" and "Labor human services spokeswoman Tanya
Plibersek ... said the same sort of problems would also be seen across
the broader population. "I think that the difficulties that people have
living in remote locations and having to travel and not having appropriate
documents, of course they apply to indigenous people, (but) they also apply
to non-indigenous people," she said. "It just shows what an enormous
bureaucratic nightmare this system will be." She said there was a strong
argument to be made for people who did not want their photo taken for cultural
reasons. But she said literacy problems could also make it hard for people
across the community to comply with the registration process. The Government
had given no indication of how it was going to deal with such issues, she
said.
- 15 March – Access
card to hit hip pocket, [Melbourne] Herald-Sun, incl. "FAMILIES
could be billed more than $100 to get the Howard Government's controversial
new Medicare Access Card. In a costly bureaucratic nightmare, every
person will have to supply a birth certificate, a passport or other "Category
A" document to obtain a card. The Government confirmed yesterday
that a driver's licence would be accepted only as a supporting document. Those
without a birth certificate will have to pay $25.80 to get one at the Registry
of Births, Deaths and Marriages -- or about $100 for a family of four. A new
passport costs $193, and also requires a birth certificate to obtain. Adding
to the inconvenience of collecting the documents, applicants will
be required to meet officials face-to-face, probably during business hours,
forcing many to take time off work"
- 15 March – Details
on card held forever, The Adelaide Advertiser, incl. "THE
Federal Government has admitted transaction logs for the
$1.1 billion welfare smart card will be kept indefinitely,
prompting new concerns about tracking and surveillance abuse. The Human Services
department has told the Democrats logs would be retained for "audit and
security" purposes"
- 13 March – ID
card personal freedom threat, Courier-Mail, incl. "In a
submission to a Senate inquiry examining the legislation, the Office
of the Privacy Commission appeals to the Government to slow down,
claiming a number of outstanding privacy and secrecy issues need to be sorted
out. In particular, the independent body has advised the Government against
finalising the legislative framework for the card before further consultation
with relevant privacy and technology experts. "The Office believes it
is important that legislative measures do not pre-empt the finalisation of
important design and policy considerations," it said.
- 13 March – Fears
card will access all areas , The Canberra Times (Peter Martin,
Economics Editor), incl. "Why is it that each time a new government minister
promotes the wonders of the new Access Card, I feel a chill?", [important
review of the function creep that quickly arose with the TFN], and [reference
to the shady businessmen behind the national ID card push],
- 13 March – New
boss in ID card rush, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The rush to introduce the Access Card continues, with new
Human Services Minister Chris Ellison unwilling to call a halt while
details of the controversial scheme are thrashed out", "Senator
Ellison brushed off suggestions that he'd had insufficient time to digest
the huge, $1.1 billion Access Card project. "In my previous portfolio
of Justice Minister, I had experience with a range of issues similar
to those involved with the program, including privacy and legislation,"
he said. "These included the introduction of reforms to Australia's anti-money-laundering
and counter-terrorism financing laws, and the document verification service",
"As Customs Minister, Senator Ellison also presided over the disastrous
$210 million cargo systems re-engineering IT project. His performance
in that instance was criticised in an independent review
last year by consultants Booz Allen Hamilton - now lead adviser on the Access
Card project", and "WA Premier Alan Carpenter has slammed
the lack of consultation. He said a promised briefing by former Human
Services minister Joe Hockey did not eventuate and a single meeting with Office
of Access Card officials "focused on technical issues rather than strategic
concerns and cost implications for the WA government". Mr Carpenter
has asked for "an agreed process for indemnifying the states for any
additional costs accruing from the implementation, including the
installation of infrastructure"
- 13 March – Security
advice missing over data card, The Sydney Morning Herald (Mark
Metherell), incl. "The Federal Government has proposed to push
ahead with initial legislation for the proposed national data card even before
the system's security has been vetted by electronic spy experts.
The Defence Signals Directorate, which is advising the Government on card
security, says it is too early to give advice on the issue", "The
Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce said yesterday that he would
need his concerns about official snooping to be allayed before he supported
the legislation. The question was how "a bad government in the future"
could be stopped from over-intruding into people's private lives", he
said", and "A proposal to include optional personal medical information
on the card's chip has been criticised by MedicAlert. The
non-profit organisation said it would undermine its position as the only recognised
symbol of emergency body-worn protection in Australi"
- 13 March – ID
card that's not turns into a hot potato, The Australian IT Section,
incl. "The latest card carrier is Chris Ellison, who knows all about
big, bad IT projects, having presided over the Customs $200 million cargo
management software mess. Ellison has less than nine months to drive the card
forward before there is an election, which a resurgent Labor Party stands
a chance of winning - for the moment"
- 9 March – Access
your areas, The Sydney Morning Herald (Mark Metherell), incl.
"[Liberal Senator Brett Mason, Chair of the Senate Committee]
told the committee several times his reservations are grounded in two dilemmas:
the potential of the database to widen the risk of intrusive and unreasonable
use of information about individuals; and the failure of government officials
to persuade him of the need for a photograph, signature and individual number
to be printed on the card surface", "Mason took exception to [ASIO's]
O'Sullivan's assurance that the legislation did not change ASIO's access.
That failed to recognise the position, Mason said, that the access card would
create "some very powerful intelligence, for example potentially a photographic
database of every Australian … that is far, far more powerful",
"The prospect of a qualified report from the Mason committee is likely
to further unsettle Government senators already nervous about a reprise of
the public response to the Australia Card"
- 9 March – Queries
over ASIO access to data card, The Sydney Morning Herald (Mark
Metherell), incl. "The chairman of the committee, the Liberal senator
Brett Mason, this week pressed police and intelligence chiefs to explain what
access they would have to the card system's store of 16.5 million photographs
... it is likely that a majority of its members will suggest the photograph
be optional or axed" [Mason is trying the 'Gareth Evans' tactic:
get everyone to focus on just one small element, give in on that, and then
everyone forgets about the other problems and passes the Bill], "The
first tranche of legislation for the card has passed the House of Representatives,
but it is looking vulnerable in the Senate, with all Opposition parties against
it and at least one Coalition senator, Barnaby Joyce, signalling he
could vote against the bill"
- 6 March – Ellison
gets smartcard keys, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne
and Ben Woodhead), incl. "The minister who presided over Customs'
disastrous cargo system re-engineering project has been handed the keys to
the controversial Access Card project as part of a ministerial reshuffle.
Prime Minister John Howard today announced that Senator Chris Ellison will
replace Senator Ian Campbell as federal Minister for Human Services. ... The
whole project blew out by more than 600 per cent, from an initial estimate
of $30 million, to over $210 million, and a woeful list of failures was documented
in an Australian National Audit Office review published in January ... The
proposed Access Card is the largest IT project ever to be undertaken by the
Australian Government - a $1.1 billion program to link key health and welfare
agencies and issue smartcards to more than 16 million people by 2010. The
enabling legislation has been under sustained attack this week at Senate inquiry
hearings in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra over privacy, technology and legal
concerns. Privacy lobbyists regard Senator Ellison's credentials with
suspicion - the Australian Privacy Foundation last year nominated him as the
Worst Public Official in its annual Big Brother awards for the "Abolition
of Financial Privacy legislation, masquerading as the Anti-Money Laundering
and Counter-Terrorism Financing Bill. "This legislation turns thousands
of bank tellers and other employees into amateur spies – with a legal
obligation to report anyone who may be ‘acting suspiciously’,"
APF judges said."
- 6 March – Chris
Ellison takes over Access Card reins, ZDNet, incl. "Back
to the future: Critics of the government ... have swooped on the Ellison appointment,
claiming his responsibility for the Australian Customs Service's Cargo Management
Re-engineering (CMR) debacle raised questions about his ability to manage
large-scale projects. The botched introduction of the system for importers
and customs brokers in late 2005 caused cargo to pile up at ports around the
country as brokers struggled to gain clearances. ... The Labor Party's
Shadow Customs and Justice Minister Joe Ludwig told ZDNet Australia
today that Ellison's oversight of the CMR project raised questions about his
ability to administer the Access Card project. "There's been an incredible
reluctance it seems, at least on his part, to acknowledge what went wrong,
so that you can have confidence that he's actually learnt from his mistakes"
Ludwig said
- 6 March – Labor
would scrap card scheme, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "If we come into government, we certainly won't proceed with the
card in its current form," she said. "We believe the Government's
proposal is simply a national identity card in disguise, and we're not about
to introduce a national ID card" [says Tanya Plibersek, shadow
minister for human services], and "Ms Plibersek said the Access
Card would be an election issue. "It may not be on the radar for many
yet, but it will be as people realise every single Australian will have to
attend an interview, be photographed and provide original documents they will
have to apply for and pay for," she said. "When people realise the
hoops they're going to have to jump through, as well as the potential for
the information they provide to be lost or stolen, or misused, I think they'll
be very anxious"
- 6 March – Govt
'misled' card inquiry, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The Australian Government has "seriously misled" a Senate
inquiry into the Access Card Bill, says legal expert Graham Greenleaf
in a devastating critique of the proposed regulatory framework. "I think
the Government should be required to withdraw its submission and correct the
document," Professor Greenleaf has told the inquiry. "It should
be required to explain to the committee why it has provided such misleading
information about the Bill", Access Card No Way co-ordinator
Tim Warner told the inquiry ... "The proposal is a ridiculous
imposition to solve administrative failings of the Human Services department
and Medicare Australia", and "Given that all taxpayers fund the
Medicare system, it is disingenuous of the Government to suggest the Access
Card is not compulsory," the [Festival of Light movement]
says. "It is only 'not compulsory' to someone who is willing to forego
entirely a service for which they are taxed." The FoL said it was not
clear what percentage of fraud was due to the use of false identities, compared
to claims under a correct identity to benefits to which a person was not entitled.
"An Access card could only help reduce the latter if it is linked to
tax, employment and banking information."
"If fraud is suspected, we recommend that efforts be made to find those
defrauding the system, without calling in 16 million 'suspects' for a 15-minute
interview." said
- 5 March – Democrats Media Release (Senator Natasha Stott-Despoja),
incl. "The Government wants the bill through the Senate before March
29 yet, this portfolio is about to gain its third Minister in as many months.
Surely, this is a signal this bill must be scrapped. This is complex public
policy. It straddles technological, medical, race and legal divides. It should
not be legislated in such a piecemeal fashion"
- 5 March – Greens Media Release (Senator Kerry Nettle),
incl. "The new Minister will not be across the massive complexities of
card and should put the process on hold until they are up to speed ... Now
that the current Minister in charge of the card has gone, it is
time to put a halt to this hasty and dangerous process"
- 5 March – 'Access
Card' is a Cane Toad, Liberty Victoria Media Release,
incl. "the card, like the cane toad, may be introduced with good intentions
to deal with a serious problem and to save money. However, like the cane toad,
the so-called "Access Card" would become a pest and do more harm
than good by turning into a national ID card"
- 4 March – Access
Card chief falls on sword, ZDNet, incl. "Just over a month
into the job, Human Services minister and Access Card champion Ian
Campbell resigned on Saturday after being caught in Brian
Burke's influential tentacles"
- 2 March – Access
card built for banks?, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The Bill is silent on how the smartcard infrastructure may be
used by business, yet the chief technology architect is due to tell an industry
summit how the card could become the 'common railroad' for retail," [No
ID Card campaign director Anna Johnston] said. " ... the immediate
impact will be the diversion of at least $1 billion from real services into
the hands of the IT vendors, lawyers, consultants and advertising agencies
feeding off this project"
- 1 March – ID
Card - Is Big Brother Stalking You?, Diffusion Science Radio / 2SER
- 1 March – Haste
needed on card, says govt, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The Coalition yesterday defeated four amendments proposed by Labor
intended to "protect Australians from the worst fraud and privacy invasions"
associated with the card. Shadow Minister for Work and Family Tanya
Plibersek sought to delay card registrations until the Document Verification
Service database is operational in 2010; to reduce ministerial power over
the collection and sharing of personal information; provide that Australians
are not required to carry the card at any time, and give the option not to
put your number and signature on the face of the card", "Meanwhile,
Human Services Minister Ian Campbell may "scrub" space on
the card for information voluntarily loaded by consumers, following the revelation
that highly sensitive health or emergency data could be read by anyone with
an approved reader", and "Democrat Senator Natasha
Stott-Despoja has called on the Government "to guarantee that
no-one will ever be denied access to emergency treatment either on the basis
of information contained on their card, or if they are not able to produce
their card".
- 1 March – Smart
card privacy laws promises made, [Melbourne] Herald Sun, incl.
"[Campbell said] experience showed that people who exploited their position
by inappropriately using other people's personal details usually got caught"
[!!??] "He said around 100 of Centrelink's 38,000-strong workforce had
been sacked after being caught", and "Democrats senator Natasha
Stott Despoja said the guidelines were not strong enough as they
could be changed by the human services minister at any time. "If the
access card is to go ahead, young people's entitlement to it should be enshrined
in law, and any future proposed changes to the age limit must be debated in
Parliament," she said.
- 28 February – 'ID
card' moves closer, The Age, incl. "Legislation setting
up the card, which will be needed to access government services like Medicare
and Centrelink, passed the lower house today after five Labor amendments were
defeated. Two amendments related to the recommendations made by Professor
Allan Fels in a report on the privacy aspects of the card", and "Ms
Plibersek said government backbencher Gary Hardgrave had
enthused about police carrying portable card readers. Another Liberal,
Steve Ciobo, had hit the nail on the head when he'd described it
as a "Trojan horse for a national ID card"
- 28 February – Full
Access card face for Muslim women, [Sydney] Daily Telegraph / AAP,
incl. "Muslim women who wear headscarves will have to make sure their
face is fully visible when they have a photograph taken for the Government's
new access card"
- 27 February – Golden
noose tied to cards, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "The first two access-card contracts come with a golden noose attached,
as successful bidders must lodge financial guarantees - understood to be more
than $100 million - against project delays, breaches and failure to meet agreed
services levels. Contractors will also bear "unlimited liability"
for damages, including payments for every day a project is delayed. If a problem
is not fixed within five days, the Department of Human Services has the right
to terminate the contract and call on the financial guarantee. The Office
of the Access Card declined to confirm the size of the financial guarantees,
which were "commercial in-confidence" [BUT only because the Government
made them so!]", and "Meanwhile, Australian Privacy Foundation spokesman
David Vaile said there was a risk that any contracts negotiated prior to the
passage of all three proposed access card bills would be negated if they were
inconsistent with the final legislation. "If I was a tenderer, I would
be seeking advice on this risk," he said"
- 27 February – Trivial
benefits not worth danger of abuse: Liberal, The Australian IT Section,
incl. "Liberal Party supporters are preparing to mobilise against the
health and welfare access card before the federal election, prominent
Victorian Liberal Tim Warner has warned. Convenor of Access Card
No Way, Mr Warner says the Bill before Parliament would create "a massive
infrastructure for future governments" to abuse. "The trivial and
overstated benefits of the access card do not outweigh the dangers of such
a card," he said last week at a Liberty Victoria forum. "The assembly
and centralisation under one key of the most minute details of an ordinary
Australian's daily activities should be a cause of serious consternation.
Who will be watching all the uses to which Big Brother will be putting this
information about all of us?"
- 27 February – Teenagers
'could be denied medical care', The West Australian / AAP, incl.
"The federal government Tuesday released guidelines that allow people
aged under 18 to access its proposed Smartcard, but has chosen not to include
the guidelines in the legislation currently before parliament [because it
was scrambled through] in a bid to appease coalition MPs divided over the
issue", and AMA president Dr Mukesh Haikerwal said:
"It's not acceptable".
- 27 February – Smart
card to pass parliamentary hurdle, The West Australian / AAP,
incl. "The government promised Tuesday that teenagers under 18 would
be able to access the card but refused to put the policy into legislation.
Instead it released guidelines outlining the change", "Doctors and
some government MPs are concerned the guidelines will have little legal protection
and could easily be changed by a future minister", and "Liberal
MP Mal Washer, a medical doctor, said it would be a "crime against
humanity" if children were prevented from accessing medical help because
they could not talk to their parents about their problem. But Nationals
Senator Barnaby Joyce has flagged concerns about giving teenagers
access to the card, an issue he plans to raise when the laws reach the Senate.
- 27 February – Smartcards
are not that smart, zone-h, incl. "according to Adrian McCullagh,
researcher at the Queensland University of Technology's Information Security
Institute, it is already possible to identify a vulnerability in
smartcard technology ... The problem is un the fact that the access card will
store personal details in two parts of the chip. ... These two parts have
to communicate with each other. This link represents a high-risk vulnerability,
as Mr. McCullagh said. "It is possible to exploit the open or non-secure
section to get into the secure section,” he declared. "You would
probably start looking at the communications channel between the non-secure
and the secure because that's where the vulnerability will be"
- 27 February – Too
soon to deal smart card, The Australian, incl. "Labor human
services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said Labor did not oppose
the card but was concerned about security. "This card is the Australia
Card on steroids," she said, referring to an attempt by the Hawke government
to create an identity card in the 1980s"
- 27 February –
Access card will be forged, says MP, Australian IT Section, incl.
"Labor's human services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek
said a censored report from accounting firm KPMG showed the government was
unlikely to meet its target. "The government says that it will save $3
billion over 10 years and they keep claiming this figure, although the KPMG
report that they've released in a highly censored version, says that it "could"
save between $1.6 billion and $3 billion over 10 years," Ms Plibersek
said in parliament today. "If the figure is actually $1.6 billion they'd
save more money by putting the $1.1 or $2 billion that they're going to spend
in the bank and collecting the interest"
- 27 February – Govt
concedes age limit on access card, ABC News, incl. "Nationals
Senator Barnaby Joyce has other concerns and he is also being
lobbied by the Human Services Minister. "Senator Campbell's office have
come around to say g'day ... If it comes to light that it's a 1987 Australia
card I certainly won't be supporting it," he said. While Liberal backbencher
Steve Ciobo says he will support the access card, he warns
it will not stop fraud. "The notion that in some way this card is unable
to be forged is wrong," he said.
- 22 February – Smart
Card Medical Data Builds on Privacy Concerns, IDM, incl. "A
Consumer and Privacy Taskforce has offered a warning to Australians: Consider
the privacy implications of the proposed storage space for personal and medical
data on the Access Card. ... Overall, the Taskforce found the majority of
consumer submissions were in support of embedding emergency health and medical
data into a consumer controlled area of the access card. But it’s what’s
stored and how it is accessed that is concerning ... The Taskforce
recommends that blood type ... be kept well away from the card"
- 20 February – Crucial
ID card systems lagging, The Australian IT Section (Karen Dearne),
incl. "No decisions about which identity documents will meet the tough
standards for an Access Card have been taken", "the Document Verification
Service will not be operational until 2010", "No system was capable
of weeding out all fraud", [Attorney General's Department deputy secretary
Miles Jordana] said, "While it appears ASIO will have
access, it's not clear under what circumstances," [Greens NSW Senator
Kerry Nettle] said. "We still don't know what information
will be on the database. We're very concerned that this proposal is setting
up infrastructure open to abuse by future governments, which may spy on the
community" and "Some technical details have been revealed. The use
of a proprietary system has not been ruled out, and contract specifications
identify the features required without prescribing any particular system.
Card readers will be available in agency offices so cardholders can check
the details stored on the chip" [Wow. So now we know everything we need
to evaluate the scheme???]
- 19 February – ASIO to access smartcard data, The
Australian Financial Review (Julian Bajkowski), incl.
"The secretary of the federal Department of Human Services, Patricia
Scott, told a Senate estimates hearing on Friday that authorised agencies
such as the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation and police would
be allowed to use facial-matching technology on the smartcard's central database
registry to reveal a person's identity solely from photographs" [False,
in that facial recognition technology is completely incapable of supporting
1-to-many identification tasks], and "benefits could flow from facial
matching. One example was the prevention of mix-ups such as the infamous Cornelia
Rau incident, in which a mentally ill Australian citizen was wrongly thrown
into an immigration detention centre. "Having a biometric photo will
dramatically improve situations," Ms Scott said. "If Cornelia Rau
had been registered and had a [welfare smartcard] we would have been able
to find her in our system" [Entirely False, for the reason outlined]
"Ms Scott told the hearing that the facial-matching system would work
by authorised agencies providing a warrant and photo of a person they wanted
identified to DHS, whose staff would then attempt to match the photograph
on the smartcard's photographic registry" [Seriously Misleading, because
some agencies do not need judicial authority]
"existing overriding legislation" that governed the powers of police
and security agencies gave them access to biometric data contained within
the smartcard's registry" [i.e. any privacy protections that may have
been mooted have been undermined before the draft legislation even reaches
Parliament]
- 14 February – ALP
wants more smartcard privacy, The Australian, incl. "Opposition
human services spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek said the
[Labor] party did not oppose the smartcard in principle, but was
worried the proposal had been rushed through."We think the use of smartcard
technology in both health and social security has great potential," she
said. "But we think this bill and this plan has significant flaws"
and "Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce confirmed yesterday
he would reserve his support for the plan and would consider the concerns
raised by Coalition and Labor MPs before voting. "I never agreed with
the 1987 Australia Card," he said. "I will be having a yarn with
people who have been strongly involved in the debate before I vote. I'd hate
to think I voted for Australia's next compulsory ID card. That is not on.
The quiet enjoyment of my privacy is something that's important to me. I don't
want people keeping tabs on me for the sake of it. Unless I've done something
wrong, I want to be left alone"
- 14 February – Doubts over new card, The Sydney Morning Herald
– "The potential for the Government's controversial access card
to be blocked in the Senate has increased with Labor threatening to oppose
the legislation. The Opposition's spokeswoman on the issue, Tanya
Plibersek, says Labor agrees with the card in principle
but that the first tranche of legislation to be debated today is sloppy on
privacy safeguards. Labor also wants to be convinced that the $1.1 billion
cost of the cards is justified"
- 14 February – Michael
Pierce SC: Your ID? It's on the card, The Age, Opinion Piece,
by the vice-president of Liberty Victoria
- 12 February – Jim
Nolan: Heading for an identity crisis, The Australian, Opinion
Piece, by a Sydney barrister and former Executive Officer of the NSW Privacy
Committee
- 11 February – Access
Card guarantees 'won't protect us', The Age, incl. "Julian
Burnside, president of Liberty Victoria, said it was inevitable the
State Government would tap into the opportunities presented by the new Federal
Access Card ... "It will become a universal ID card; that's the bottom
line of it."" and ""The Australian Government is working
with the states and territories, including the Victorian Government, to explore
opportunities for state involvement in the roll-out of the Smart Card,"
Senator Campbell said in a written statement"
- 10 February – High-tech
headaches on the cards, The Australian Health Editor, incl. "The
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners went [warned
last year] that the card risked "undermining the trust between patients
and their general practitioner/general practice", and that despite its
name, might also restrict rather than enhance patients' access to care",
and "ambulance officers are among the many health workers – alongside
physiotherapists and podiatrists as well as doctors – who are expected
to have the readers necessary to access [organ donor status, blood type and
"health alerts" – such as dangerous allergies]", but
"the Australian Medical Association warned that the
"usefulness of the information is related to the reliability of the source"
and a patient was "not always a reliable source of information on allergies""
- 9 February – Access
for whom?, The Age
- 8 February – Labor,
Muslims pan smart card, The Australian, incl. "prominent
National Party senator Ron Boswell joined at least three
other Coalition MPs in protesting against the smart card ...", "The
Australian Medical Association voiced strong opposition, arguing that powers
handed to the Government under legislation introduced into parliament yesterday
would allow almost any information to be added to the list of uses for the
card", "Tanya Plibersek, indicated Labor might
oppose the card legislation because of inadequate protection" and "Muslim
community spokesman Keysar Trad said government requirements that headscarves
be pushed back to expose the forehead, cheeks and chin for 3D biometric photographs
on the cards could present difficulties for some women who wore hijabs. Some
Muslim women would want privacy when photos were taken and if personal identification
was needed, he said. But Mr Trad said his main fear was the potential use
of the smartcard. "The microchip on future versions of the card could
be used to locate individuals, so they know exactly where you are," he
said"
- 8 February – Access
card 'won't identify ethnicity', The Melbourne Age, incl. "Liberal
MP Steve Ciobo said he was worried about the bill's apparent
discrimination between people who were able to prove their identity fully
and those who could only partly prove it. "Given it makes no difference
to provision, why then is there a need to have it on the card?" he said"
and "Backbenchers told The Age they were worried after
Prime Minister John Howard apparently told the Coalition party meeting this
week that the community's attitude to identity cards had changed largely because
of the advent of terrorism.
"There's no link between terrorism and the access card and it's concerning
that it was used as a justification," one said"
- 8 February – Public
locked out of their own national cards, Sydney Morning Herald,
incl. "the Government's bid to reassure the public that the scheme was
not a national identity card was hit by a conflicting message from the Australian
Federal Police Commissioner, Mick Keelty, who hailed its potential
to counter identity document fraud", "The Australian Medical
Association president, Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, said ...actively disguises
the fact that the individual does not own the information contained on the
card"
- 7 February – Real
debate about Real ID, GCN (US), incl. "The government has
made a public relations effort to convince people that the new card will be
benign and not pose a threat to privacy", attributed to Marie Johnson
of the Office of Access Card
- 7 February – 'Rushed' Access Card Bill raises suspicions, ZDNet, incl. "Senator
Natasha Stott Despoja ... called for support for a Senate
inquiry ... The concerns of organisations such as the Australian Medical Association
and Australian Privacy Foundation must be listened to and addressed"
- 7 February – Keelty
backs 'smart card' in ID fraud battle, ABC News, incl. "Commissioner
Keelty says the card will become a tool to fight the growing
crime of identity fraud. "We have to do something, we can't keep going
along thinking that people's identity cannot be counterfeited," he said.
"The way it's transported across the Internet and the way counterfeiting
is occurring across the Internet, we have to do something.""
- 7 February – Smartcard
open to abuse, Ruddock admits, The Australian, incl. "No
government can bind its successors, it's never been asserted that you can
legislate now and that a new government can't amend it", Ruddock
said
- 7 February – Smartcard
may be exploited, govt says, The West Australian, incl. "No
government can bind its successors, it's never been asserted that you can
legislate now and that a new government can't amend it," Mr Ruddock
said. "I would hope that those who seek office, if they have in mind
changing legislative measures, would outline what they have in mind - in other
words they get a mandate for it", and more Keelty quotes
- 7 February – Government
'sneaking through ID card', Sunday Herald-Sun
- 7 February – Smart
card laws in Parliament, ABC News, incl. Bronwyn Bishop:
"Although the legislation says you may not be obliged to carry the card
and produce it when asked for it, it's only a line in an act of parliament
and a future government of whatever persuasion could change that and make
it an identity card"
- 7 February – Coalition
MPs raise smart card concerns, ABC News, incl. "four Coalition
MPs, including Bronwyn Bishop, have raised concerns during a joint party room
meeting about whether it could eventually become the equivalent of a national
identity card" – who is the fourth Coalition MP?
- 7 February – Coalition
MPs attack proposed ID card, The Australian, incl. "revolt
among government MPs - led by Mrs [Bronwyn] Bishop and fellow
Liberals Chris Pyne and Steve Ciobo - revives
debate over privacy and potential abuse of a multi-use government card".
Mrs Bishop "told partyroom colleagues that the question had to be asked
whether such a card would have assisted the Nazis in their goal of exterminating
the Jews"
- 7 February – Campbell on AM (RealAudio
Format), ABC Radio, incl. acceptance of another very minor recommendation
of the Task Force, so that appearance of title and date of birth on the card
will be optional (wow, democracy is saved!)
- 6 February – Public
gets say on access card crush, The Australian IT Section, incl.
"The department is yet to finalise a number of details for the registration
process". So the 'say' that the public is going to get is limited to
the few 'details' that DHS didn't manage to finish before publishing the 'discussion'
paper
- 3 February – Government
dubs Labor 'friends of fraudsters', Computerworld, incl. "Shadow
[Attorney-General], Kelvin Thomson, said the government is
attempting to ask taxpayers to foot a billion dollar bill without producing
any evidence showing the extent of fraud, or exactly how the Access Card will
solve the problem. Thomson said the Labor party is supportive of any measures
to reduce health and welfare fraud, but only if they are cost effective. "This
is the real issue for the Access Card and the government: whether the process,
timetable and design proposed by the government is the best answer to fraud,"
Thomson said. "Until the government explains how the registration process
will counter existing problems with document authentication and proof of identity
processes, Labor remains skeptical of the government's claims"
- 30 January – Interview
on 'Life Matters', ABC Radio. Hockey departs,
attempting to popularise / trivialise / misrepresent the 'Access Card' as
"a mini Ipod for everyone"
- 30 January – Doing
the numbers on e-health, The Australian IT Section, incl. acknowledgement
of convergence between the national id scheme and health: "We're working
with Medicare, particularly on individual identifiers"; and "[rather
than consent,] our preferred option is a legislative solution"
- 30 January – Clock
ticking for access card, The Australian IT Section, incl. "Campbell
has inherited responsibility for a health card steeped in controversy over
privacy and cost concerns" and "concerns raised in the submissions
would [not] be addressed [until] the second round of legislation, later this
year"
- 24 January – Card
could deny teen girls pill, news.com/AMA
- 24 January – Joe
Hockey, sometime butt of jokes, now Howard's IR front man, The Age,
incl. "Mr Hockey has managed the slashing of hundreds of jobs, as well
as the selling of the Government's health-and-welfare Access Card to a public
jittery about privacy"
- 23 January – Cabinet
reshuffle: Access Card project gets new head, ZDnet
- 23 January – ID
card to target Medicare, The Australian IT Section
- 23 January – National
access card 'too personal', The Age
- 23 January – Access
card holds too much info: Labor, The Age
- 23 January – AMA,
privacy task force concerned over Access Card, ABC News
- 23 January – Banks
thawing on smartcards to lift security, The Australian IT Section
- 22 January – ID
card in disguise, by Tanya Plibersek, ABC News Online
- 17 January – Some
valid concerns remain about the Government's new social services card,
Editorial, The Age
- 17 January –