The campaign is a community awareness campaign designed to raise awareness of Australia's quarantine laws and of the particular risks of bringing foreign items into Australia.

Independent Report on the Quarantine Matters! Campaign

To the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry

Introduction

The Government’s Guidelines on Campaign Advertising by Australian Government Departments and Agencies (the Guidelines) state that Government information and advertising campaigns can only be approved for launching by the responsible Minister where:

  • the Chief Executive of the agency undertaking the campaign certifies that the campaign complies with the Guidelines and relevant Government policies; and
  • for those campaigns with expenditure in excess of $250 000, the Auditor-General provides a report to the Minister responsible for the agency undertaking the campaign as to the proposed Campaign’s compliance with the Guidelines.

Scope

I have undertaken a review of the Quarantine Matters! Campaign (April – July 2009), administered by the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service) to enable me to report on the proposed Campaign’s compliance with the Guidelines.

The Guidelines state that campaigns should be instigated only where a need is demonstrated, target recipients are clearly identified and the campaign is based on appropriate research, and require that:

  • material should be relevant to government responsibilities;
  • material should be presented in an objective, fair and accessible manner;
  • material should not be directed at promoting party political interests;
  • material should be produced and distributed in an efficient, effective and relevant manner, with due regard to accountability; and
  • advertising must comply with legal requirements.

The criteria I have used to make my assessment of the compliance of the Quarantine Matters! Campaign (April – July 2009) with the Guidelines are the matters specified at paragraphs 11 to 24 of the Guidelines published by the Department of Finance and Deregulation in June 2008.

As of the date of this report, proposed campaign materials for the Bluetooth trial have not been produced. As such these materials are outside the scope of this review. The Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service has undertaken to provide these materials to me separately for review against the Guidelines before they are publicly released.

Responsibilities of the Department

Agencies subject to the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 must comply with the Guidelines as a matter of Government policy. The Secretary of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry has certified that the campaign complies with the Guidelines.

The Auditor’s Responsibility

My responsibility is to express, in this assurance report, an independent conclusion based on my review.

My review is conducted in accordance with the Australian Standard on Assurance Engagements ASAE 3000 Assurance Engagements Other than Audits or Reviews of Historical Financial Information, issued by the Australian Auditing and Assurance Standards Board. My review is designed to enable me to obtain sufficient appropriate evidence to form a conclusion whether anything has come to my attention to indicate that the campaign does not comply with the Guidelines.

Review methodology

I have conducted the review of the campaign by making such enquiries and performing such procedures as I considered reasonable in the circumstances including:

  • an examination of campaign materials including television commercials, magazine and outdoor presentations, and web banners;
  • a review of supporting documents and records relevant to the campaign, including related research and campaign funding approvals;
  • interviews with staff of the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service involved with the preparation of the campaign; and
  • an examination of the certification by the Secretary of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry dated 5 March 2009.

The ANAO review did not extend to an assessment of the general system controls and supporting procedures in place in the department to manage its advertising activities, but focussed on matters relating specifically to the Quarantine Matters! Campaign (April – July 2009). A review of this nature provides less assurance than an audit.

Conclusion

Based on my review described in this report, nothing has come to my attention that causes me to believe that the Quarantine Matters! Campaign (April – July 2009) does not comply with the requirements of the Government’s Guidelines on Campaign Advertising by Australian Government Departments and Agencies.

Ian McPhee
Auditor-General
13 March 2009