The major focus in the media was the December 2021 Cabinet list and Ministerial
responsibilities. While these are listed below for easy reference the links to the Administrative orders give a more detailed view of the restructure.
The Ministerial appointments announced were:
- Dominic Perrottet Premier
- Paul Toole Deputy Premier, Minister
for Regional New South Wales, Minister for Police - Stuart Ayres Minister for
Enterprise, Minister for Tourism and Sport, Minister for Western Sydney - Bronnie Taylor Minister for Women,
Minister for Regional Health, Minister for Mental Health - Matt Kean Treasurer, Minister for
Energy - Damien Tudehope Minister for
Finance, Minister for Employee Relations, Vice-President of the Executive
Council, Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council - Alister Henskens Minister for Skills
and Training, Minister for Science, Innovation and Technology, Leader of the
House in the Legislative Assembly - Brad Hazzard Minister for Health
- Sarah Mitchell Minister for
Education and Early Learning - Mark Speakman Attorney General
- Rob Stokes Minister for
Infrastructure, Minister for Cities, Minister for Active Transport - Victor Dominello Minister for
Customer Service and Digital Government - Anthony Roberts Minister for
Planning, Minister for Homes - David Elliott Minister for
Transport, Minister for Veterans - Natalie Ward Minister for
Metropolitan Roads, Minister for Women’s Safety and the Prevention of Domestic
and Sexual Violence - Kevin Anderson Minister for Lands
and Water, Minister for Hospitality and Racing - Dr Geoff Lee Minister for
Corrections - Natasha Maclaren-Jones Minister for
Families and Communities, Minister for Disability Services - Sam Farraway Minister for Regional
Transport and Roads - Steph Cooke Minister for Emergency
Services and Resilience - Eleni Petinos Minister for Small
Business, Minister for Fair Trading - James Griffin Minister for Environment
and Heritage - Mark Coure Minister for Seniors,
Minister for Multiculturalism - Dugald Saunders Minister for
Agriculture, Minister for Western New South Wales - Ben Franklin Minister for Aboriginal
Affairs, Minister for the Arts, Minister for Regional Youth - Wendy Tuckerman Minister for Local
Government
The Administrative Orders
When government make such changes they also produce Administrative
orders that clarify what Ministers have responsibility for what legislation,
how ministers and government agencies align with departments and staff
movements between Departments.
You can find details on Allocation of the administration of
Acts and Ministers to whom Public Service agencies responsible in the Administrative
Arrangements (Second Perrottet Ministry—Allocation of Acts and Agencies) Order
2021.
Details about who references to certain Ministers in legislation
and documents now relate to, the establishment and renaming of Public Service
agencies and the transfer of staff between Public Service agencies as well as amendment
of Government Sector Employment Act 2013 No 40 are all covered in the Administrative
Arrangements (Second Perrottet Ministry—Transitional) Order 2021
Examples relevant to Redfern Waterloo
It is in these documents that you find out for example that
the Department of Planning Industry and Environment (DPIE) gets renamed the Department
of Planning and Environment (DPE) as Infrastructure all moves out of the Planning
Cluster into Transport. Transport now includes ex Planning Minister Stokes’ new
Ministries of Cities and Active Transport as well as Infrastructure. As part of
this Greater Sydney Commission moves to the Department of Transport.
With the demise of the Minister for Water, Property and
Housing there is a new Minister for Homes role that is taken on by the Minister
for Planning Anthony Roberts. This area includes the Land and Housing
Corporation (LAHC), Aboriginal Housing Office, Teachers Housing, Community Housing and
Property NSW.
In a separate announcement on 21 December Kiersten Fishburn,
the current DPIE Secretary has been appointed the Deputy Secretary of Cities
and Active Transport and the head of the Land and Housing Corporation (LAHC) was
appointed the new Secretary of the Department of Planning and Environment (DPE)
– see SMH’s NSW’s
largest planning agency has three bosses in three months.
We have focused here on changes most relevant to planning
and Redfern – Waterloo but you can use the Administrative order links above to
work out what the current ministerial and departmental changes means for other government
areas that might be of interest.
REDWatch 22 December 2021