Pages

Saturday, February 27, 2016

Code of Ethical Conduct

All NSW public servants, and in particular those who work directly with the public like Housing or DoCS workers, are governed by a beautifully written document titled Code of Ethical Conduct.

It is 29 pages long the core principles are Integrity, Trust, Service and Accountability.
[Okay, stop laughing now]
You can just tell that it took a back room team a year to write it and then an additional year to have it peer reviewed and then many more months to get the legal language correct. All this so that it can sit in the public servant's bottom drawer and be ignored.

And what happens if they breach it?
Well, they get investigated. Not by an independent team or an outside body - they get to investigate themselves. I wonder how often they find themselves guilty? 

So next time you are heading down to the Housing office, print out the list below and score when they comply with the code. Offer the staff member a report card or better still - offer to send their report card to their Team Leader. 

Integrity 
• Consider people equally without prejudice or favour 
• Act professionally with honesty, consistency and impartiality 
• Take responsibility for situations, showing leadership and courage 
• Place public interest over personal interest. 

Trust 
• Appreciate difference and welcome learning from others 
• Build relationships based on mutual respect 
• Uphold the law, institutions of government and democratic principles 
• Communicate intentions clearly and invite teamwork and collaboration 
• Provide apolitical and non-partisan advice. 

Service 
• Provide services fairly with a focus on client needs 
• Be flexible, innovative and reliable in service delivery 
• Engage with the not-for-profit and business sectors to develop and implement service solutions 
• Focus on quality while maximising service delivery. 

Accountability 
• Recruit and promote staff on merit 
• Take responsibility for decisions and actions 
• Provide transparency to enable public scrutiny 
• Observe standards for safety 
• Be fiscally responsible and focus on efficient, effective and prudent use of resources.




6 comments:

  1. GOLD!!!
    That's exactly what I'm going to do.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh I had tears rolling down my face reading that list.
    I had a CSO tell me last week that because I didn't have any witnesses, she was going to deny that she swore at me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I put in a complaint about a Senior CSO. The following week she was promoted to Team Leader and had to investigate the complaint about herself. No wonder us tenants have no respect for the staff.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I complained about a centerlink officer making a ruling based on incorrect information, after I was told by a center link call centre operator that the criteria had just changed. It was reviewed and even though they admitted that the criteria had changed, the incorrect ruling would stand because noone else was able to reverse it. Lol.

    ReplyDelete
  5. NSW Housing is so corrupt.
    I reported a CSO for misconduct and provided the names of the witnesses.
    I got a letter a week later saying it had been "thoroughly investigated" and found to be baseless. They DID NOT contact any of the witnesses - not even a phone call.

    ReplyDelete
  6. HOUSING nsw Miranda would have to be the most corrupt,indifferent ,dismissive office in Sydney The are rude antagonistic and inept to the point that I've requested to move across to Community HOUSING.

    ReplyDelete

Feel free to leave a comment. Maximum 100 words.

PLEASE ENTER YOUR NAME - just a first name will do, you don't have to register... but just write a name instead of "anonymous".

All comments are reviewed before publishing - if your comment is:
too long, contains foul language, contains names of DoH employees, or is simply irrelevant...

then expect your comment to DISAPPEAR INTO THE ETHER.
If you are not a tenant, then kindly declare it.

And remember - SpellChecker is your friend!!!