The finer details of government contracting don’t tend to grab headlines, but when you’re dealing with some of society’s most vulnerable individuals — people in detention — how those details play out on the ground can have a huge impact. And in the case of the Nauru detention centre, bureaucratic requirements might have contributed to underreporting of abuse.
Under-reporting to avoid fines
Psychologist Paul Stevenson, who went on 12 deployments to Nauru, told The Guardian it was common for incident reports — for issues such as sexual assault and threats of self-harm — to be downgraded due to financial concerns.
“The reporting arrangement is such that if they don’t adhere to the strict guidelines that are set under their contract, they face enormous fines,” Stevenson said. “For example, if there’s a critical incident and it takes four hours to report it, Wilson could lose $80,000 in a fine because it hasn’t respected its reporting arrangements.”
The Department of Immigration and Border Protection contracts the running of the centre out to Broadspectrum (formerly known as Transfield Services), which subcontracts security to Wilson Security. The treatment of incidents (and whether they need to be escalated) depends on whether they are classified as “critical”, “major” or “minor” on information reports.
There are rules about how different incidents should be classified, and Wilson has been accused of claiming incidents are less serious than they are.
Stevenson says the threat of fines for non-compliance with escalation requirements — critical incidents have to be verbally reported within half an hour and in writing within three hours — led to systematic downgrading of incident reports:
“So what we find is that mostly there are very, very few reported as critical. They de-escalate to majors, and the majors de-escalate to minors, and there’s a whole number of incidents that de-escalate to no particular incident, so they’re not classified as anything at all. All along the line, incidents are de-escalated for the purpose … of avoiding extremely heavy fines under their contract,” he explained.
The department sees the published evidence differently. Last week it released a statement clarifying that many of the incident reports reflected unconfirmed allegations, not statements of proven fact:
“The documents published today are evidence of the rigorous reporting procedures that are in place in the regional processing centre — procedures under which any alleged incident must be recorded, reported and where necessary investigated.”
Nonetheless, DIBP is examining the matters further to ensure service providers have reported appropriately and consistently with the policies and procedures.
“The Department currently has no evidence to suggest that service providers have under-reported or misreported incidents in Nauru.”
The full statement on the DIBP website explains the support offered to the government of Nauru.
A common problem
This is not an isolated example but has been seen in other countries with similar contracting out of facilities, says Melbourne School of Government professor of public management Janine O’Flynn.
Although she hasn’t seen the Nauru contract herself — such things are, of course, difficult to obtain — it fits a pattern of similar agreements.
“There’s a perverse incentive because if we don’t classify it as critical we don’t get a fine,” she said. “The contract is trying to make sure critical incidents don’t happen, but it also creates a perverse incentive.”
There are echoes of both Nauru and Don Dale (which, it should be noted, is state-run) in an incident in the UK earlier this year. G4S is in hot water for misreporting what was happening at Medway, a youth detention centre with “high” levels of violence — there are allegations of staff assaulting inmates, as well as inmates assaulting each other and attacking staff.
G4S is accused of falsifying reports to avoid paying fines. Video footage aired on TV shows staff discussing how to misreport an incident to avoid a fine. The company is fined if it “loses control” of the centre, which is defined as more than two young people being in a fight.
“If we have an incident with four kids, it will get split up into two separate incidents, so they — G4S — don’t get fined,” the footage shows guards saying.
The way reporting arrangements often work in practice is different to what the government that creates them might expect.
“There’s something about the way the contracts are structured which on the face of it looks like they would encourage reporting, but in the day to day running of something like that it creates a disincentive to report incidents, because too many critical incidents means you’re not running it properly,” O’Flynn explained.
Apart from moral questions, such incidents create broader risks for government. The scandal led to G4S pulling out of the sector — making what is already a very small pool of potential providers even smaller. The government has taken over management of Medway itself.
Australia could end up with similar problems finding contractors to run its asylum detention centres — the owner of Broadspectrum has indicated it intends to get out of the business — making it difficult to run competitive tenders and get value for money.
And there are similar examples of perverse incentives impacting on lives in the United States private prison system, O’Flynn adds. Cost-cutting by companies has meant inmates go without medical treatment — and die. Payment per prisoner creates incentives to stuff the facility with as many people as the legislation allows, another common problem.
*This article was originally published at The Mandarin
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.