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Supreme Court declares government's gag clause invalid
Sacked Australian teacher wins significant victory
By Linda Tenenbaum
15 December 1999
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Sacked public high school teacher Geraldine Rawson has won
a political victory with significant implications for hundreds
of other teachers hounded out of Victoria's schools by the former
Kennett Liberal government. The Victorian Supreme Court has upheld
part of Rawson's challenge to Teaching Service Order 140 (TSO
140), promulgated by the Kennett government in 1993. Last Thursday,
Justice Philip Mandie ruled that Clause 3.7 of TSO 140, was ultra
vires (beyond the power of) the Teaching Services Act, and
thus invalid.
While Justice Mandie's decision was narrowhe ruled that
Clause 4.19, also challenged by Rawson, was valid and threw out
her argument that both clauses infringed the implied right to
freedom of communication in the federal constitutionhe ordered
the Education Department to pay Rawson's legal costs. In response
to objections from the Department's barrister, Mandie noted that
a partial victory was, in relation to the awarding of costs, a
victory.
Clause 3.7 is one of three gag provisions contained in TSO
140 that were specifically designed to silence dissent over deep-going
cuts to the public school system.
Justice Mandie described the clause as a sweeping prohibition
on teachers disclosing any information gained in the course of
their employment.
There is no attempt to define the kinds of information
intended to be covered which might provide some nexus with employment
matters or enable the clause to be read down within reasonable
confines. As it is expressed it covers all information whether
relevant to the organisation and management of the school or the
school system or the interests of the students or other educational
matters or not...
Geraldine Rawson, represented by David Grace QC, brought the
Supreme Court action with the assistance of the Committee to Defend
Public Education, formed by the Socialist Equality Party in 1995
to fight the cuts to public education. She was sacked from Buckley
Park High School in Melbourne's western suburbs in 1998, after
being charged two years earlier under TSO 140 for failing
to perform her official duties with reasonable skill, care and
diligence and for breaching Clauses 3.7 and 4.19the
so-called confidentiality clauses of the Order.
Her victory constitutes a blow, not only for the former Kennett
government, but also even more revealingly for the incoming Bracks
Labor government. Only six weeks earlier, following the shock
electoral defeat of the Liberals, Bracks formed a minority Labor
government on the basis of agreeing to a number of demands made
by three Independent MPs who hold the balance of power in the
state parliament. Among other things, Bracks pledged to repeal
all the gagging provisions of TSO 140.
With a great deal of public fanfare, the new Education Minister,
Mary Delahunty declared, two days before Rawson's court case was
due to begin, that she was about to honour that pledge. On November
30, the first day of the hearing, Delahunty sent an unprecedented
email to every state school teacher informing them that Clause
3.12 of TSO 140 had been repealed. That clause prohibits teachers
from making public comment on the policies of the government or
the Education Departmentbut is considerably narrower in
scope than Clause 3.7. Meanwhile, inside the Supreme Court the
Labor government was vigorously defending the other two clauses.
Moreover, it retained the services of the same Liberal law firm
used by the Kennett government, Minter Ellison, as well as those
of the well-known conservative QC, Dr Chris Jessup.
Speaking for the three defendantsthe Deputy Secretary
and Director of Schools and the Minister for EducationJessup
invoked legal precedents harking back to the nineteenth century
to argue that the relationship between teachers and the Department
of Education was akin to that of master and servant.
... a servant is bound to obey the directions of the
master, and... failure to do so is a basis for summary dismissal,
he insisted.
Referring to the issue of confidentiality, Jessup raised that
differences of opinion could emerge between employee and employer
as to exactly what information should be regarded as confidential.
Your Honour, he submitted the matter can be
resolved quite simply by the employer saying `these are the range
of facts and information that I wish to have kept confidential.'
And 3.7 in effect is saying that.
The point we make is that an employer can by its direction
make something confidential, whatever it is, whether it is inherently
confidential or not... It's not for the employee to make the judgment
that the particular fact or matter wouldn't be of any consequence,
of any harm or interest to the employer.
Jessup went on to stress that, in the opinion of the three
defendants, public school teachers had an even greater onus on
them to observe strict confidentiality than their counterparts
in the private school system. It is taxpayer education after
all, he said, implying that because they are funded by the
state, public school teachers should be obliged to accept stringent
limitations on their right to freedom of speech.
Contrary to its carefully cultivated public profile, the new
Labor government demonstrated in the course of the two day hearing
that it agrees, at the most fundamental level, with both the repressive
measures of its predecessor and the philosophy underpinning them.
The hearing also provided a damning exposure of the role of
the Australian Education Union (AEU), the organisation ostensibly
responsible for representing public school teachers. Throughout
the seven years of the Kennett government AEU officials steadfastly
refused to mount any industrial, legal or political challenge
to the gagging provisions of TSO 140.
Maintaining that teachers charged and sacked under its provisions
had no alternative but to abide by the law, the union oversaw
the dismissal of some 600 teachers and the forced retirement,
through intimidation and harassment, of many more.
In Rawson's case, the union responded with undisguised hostility.
Had its leaders wanted to fight TSO 140, here was the perfect
opportunity. Rawson had taken a stand and publicly defied TSO
140's confidentiality provisions. A test case could have been
mounted, with the union summoning its considerable membership,
financial and legal resources, not to speak of its connections
in the media, to publicly expose the government's anti-democratic
measures and defeat them.
Those Labor politicians, then in opposition, who demagogically
raised the issue of TSO 140 in state parliament on a few rare
occasions, would have been required to back their words with action.
In the event, the AEU not only refused to defend Rawson, it
actively sought to undermine her attempts, and those of the Committee
to Defend Public Education, to inform other teachers and union
branches about her case and mobilise their support.
The politics guiding the union and the Labor party are now
crystal clear. Behind their feeble public protests about TSO 140,
they collaborated intimately with the Liberals, creating the conditions
for the far-reaching attacks on teachers and the public education
system as a whole to proceed. Rawson's case, conducted entirely
independently of the official Labor and union apparatus has demonstrated
incontrovertibly that it was possible to fight Kennett and TSO
140. The Labor and union leaders chose not to. The latter became
Kennett's enforcers, while the former have now been caught out
publicly defending, as the new government, TSO 140's most notorious
provisions.
See Also:
New Labor government defends Kennett's
gagging laws in the Supreme Court
[15 December 1999]
Australia: Victorian government
fails to stop sacked teacher's legal challenge
[18 June 1999]
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