Here is my take. I am not an expert, but during my reporting of public housing lockdown in July, both observed the DHHS at work and developed good contacts throughout bureaucracy.
The DHHS has been in trouble for years, and the cracks are now very evident. Work (such as cleaning of public housing towers, but also other public health work) was outsourced and the department became a manager of contracts, while losing the contact with community ...
... that would allow it to know whether or not work being done in its name was being properly performed. Just one example: It had no idea who actually lived in those towers! Entirely lost contact with its tenants. Cleaning contractors underpeforming without being held to account.
Meanwhile a fairly toxic internal culture developed. Upward managers at senior levels (meaning the ministers did not necessarily have a handle on problems) and good ppl
..in middle management running for the doors. And resources repeatedly cut. Meanwhile ppl with experience in managing crises and emergencies were sidelined through being scapegoats internally for hotel quarantine problems, probably unfair. We will find out from inquiry.
We've all worked in organisations like that, right? So the Andrews Government cannot escape responsibility for this. It has been in power long enough, and should be held accountable. So too previous governments. These are long term problems.
Ministers should be alert for problems they are not told about by upward managers. But while voters might want to keep it in mind, and journos should also, it tells us nothing about how to address the situation we are now in for the short and medium term.
And, while I am no expert, the article I linked to, which IS by an expert, seems to me to be a useful take that addresses the issue of contact tracing without the political point scoring.
Meanwhile, journalists should ask the Victorian Opposition for their alternative plan. And I imagine, as @normanswan said on #coronacast today, the NSW health ppl are v nervous at the PM boosting them so much.
What will he and they say if they have a surge? The experts know this is entirely possible with a bit of bad luck. Andrews seems to be addressing the immediate problems with DHHS and there are signs that what one MP for the public housing area described to me as
"institutional somnambulence" has come to an end. Heaps of good people there working very hard, supported by quality public health NGOs and others who know the problems very well indeed, and now getting the resources they need.
There will be lessons here for government in the long term. But that doesn't mean the short term response, and conservative opening up, is necessarily wrong.

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More from @MargaretSimons

12 Aug
Reporters have told me that they are beseiged during these press conferences. Those who have their mobile numbers txt. Includes the boss, colleagues from i/state. colleagues from Canberra Press gallery wanting them to pursue a federal angle, suggestions and sometimes attacks from
..their contacts, which yes can include LNP members but also doctors, medical professionals etc. Then on top of that there is the pressure on Twitter, which they do watch. This is what I mean about the moral issues not being clear cut. People can be pressuring them to ask..
..questions for multiple reasons. Or for bad reasons that seem good at the time. Or they might be trying to help a colleague who wants a line for a different story. The pressures are multiple. Winnowing out when a line has been crossed is not simple.
Read 7 tweets
10 Aug
Now the atmosphere around media in Vic is slightly less shouty, I'm going to say something about it. Perhaps we can now move beyond the binary of "all journalists suck" on the side of the critics and "don't tell us how to do our jobs, plebs" from the more arrogant journos
The Twitter storm was provoked largely because many people are watching the @DanielAndrewsMP media conferences live, and so are seeing how the news sausage is made. Normally, they just get the finished sausage
It isn't pretty. Of course it isn't - inherently adversarial. And I would never defend every question asked by every journo. And yes, some questions are silly and showy. And there is bias. And even good questioners can be repetitive
Read 25 tweets
18 Jul
People have been asking me, both in public on Twitter and privately, for clarity on what is happening with COVID +'ve cases in the towers, and their close contacts, not being relocated, and why I think this is of concern.
Is it that people don't want to be relocated, or is it that the offer is not being made? And does it matter so long as people are self-isolating. Well, some of all that, and different in different cases.
This thread contains as much detail and clarity as I have been able to muster from various sources, in the absence of clarification from @VicGovDHHS to whom I have had questions waiting for answer since yesterday morning.
Read 18 tweets
17 Jul
Here is a Drobox link to the audio of an interview I just did with the @VicOmbudsman Deborah Glass.
dropbox.com/s/ej57j5h55yw9…
Main points not covered in her media release (already tweeted) include:
- her investigators have already been on site last weekend and were involved in the issue of the erection of the cage/fence by @VicGovDHHS "I think the lessons from that have already been learned."
- "this will not be a normal Ombudsman's investigation" in that she will be seeking to share lessons learned ASAP, rather than through report to parliament, since it is likely this may happen again.
Read 7 tweets
13 Jul
Meanwhile, I have been fact checking yesterday's @VicGovDHHS statement, because there were some - tensions - between what I was being told by residents and their advocates, and what was said in the statement. First, availability of medication...
the @VicGovDHHS statement said @cohealth_au was providing. Community advocates said while things were much improved, there were still problems. So who is right? Here is what seems to be going on, based on an interview this morning with a @cohealth_au spokesperson
.@cohealth_au is indeed providing, and has been since the early days of the lockdown, though as we all know in those first few days there were a lot of problems with getting things into the flats, but ...
Read 13 tweets
13 Jul
A couple of reflections to kick off the day regarding language. The journalists following this thread may find this interesting. Others may tune out ...When @DanielAndrewsMP announced the hard lockdown of public housing, he described them as vulnerable communities.
Every journalist since then, including me, has used that word or similar words to describe them. And they aren't entirely wrong, of course. Awareness of the history of the Flemington estates in particular with police,...
...for example, is one of the reasons I started reporting this "beat" as we journalists say. And anyone locked up and forced to depend on bureaucracy for basic needs is vulnerable. But the residents themselves, such as Ahmed Dini, hate the term, and very rightly...
Read 12 tweets

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