John Barilaro given 24 hours by Labor to explain why his office intervened in bushfire grants
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John Barilaro has been given 24 hours to explain his office’s involvement in a $100m bushfire recovery grants scheme before the New South Wales opposition leader, Chris Minns, refers the matter to the corruption watchdog.
Minns said on Friday morning the former deputy premier needed to disclose why his office created new rules for a fast-tracked black summer recovery grant scheme that in effect saw Labor electorates miss out entirely, as revealed in a scathing auditor general’s report.
“If we don’t get answers today, and I mean in the next 24 hours, I do believe it needs to be referred to the Icac to determine what happened here,” Minns said on 2GB radio on Friday.
“It’s a basic fact of Australian life that if you’re in a disaster zone, and you need help from your own government, it will come – it doesn’t matter which party you voted for at the last election.”
The call comes after the Sydney Morning Herald reported that Barilaro has put himself forward as the potential new head of ClubsNSW after Josh Landis was sacked earlier in the week over offensive comments about premier Dominic Perrottet’s “conservative Catholic gut”.
Barilaro will again be in the news on Monday as the parliamentary inquiry into his controversial appointment to a New York trade role is expected to hand down its report. Barilaro, the former trade minister, has insisted he did nothing wrong but withdrew from the role citing undue media attention.
The auditor general, Margaret Crawford, found the $541.8m bushfire recovery grants scheme lacked transparency and that although there was no designated role for Barilaro in handing out the grants, his office introduced a $1m threshold for projects, denying funding for anything less than that amount.
The Department of Regional NSW gave the then deputy premier’s office a list of 35 projects to be funded in a fast-tracked first round in 2020, listing their electorates. The introduced threshold effectively ruled out projects in areas held by the Labor party, the audit found.
The report said it was unclear why the department listed the electorates as they did not form part of the selection process, and that the role of Barilaro’s office’s in implementing a threshold “deviated from the guidelines”.
The program was jointly funded by the state and federal governments and administered by the state to pay for projects in bushfire-ravaged communities to create jobs and protect against future disasters.
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Facing an election in less than two months, Perrottet denied suggestions the grants were examples of pork barrelling but said he would consider making improvements to grant schemes.
“I know from my time as premier dealing with the flood response we’ve ensured that every community across NSW got back on their feet as quickly as possible,” he said on Thursday.
“That’s been my focus – and previously during the bushfires – to allocate as much funds as possible to provide assistance.”
Barilaro had earlier rejected claims of pork-barrelling during a 2021 parliamentary inquiry into the bushfire grants program, saying the first round focused on destroyed buildings, 90% of which were in Coalition seats.
Barilaro has been contacted for comment.
– Australia Associated Press contributed to this report