Perrottet can promise to add at least $50 Million a year to TAFE funding by undertaking to reform NSW's legal training accreditation regime - Current regime administered by the NSW LPAB has produced a number of anomalous decisions , including granting a Communist Party China linked company the right to grant Australian law degrees, and access taxpayer funded HECS and FEE HELP
by Ganesh Sahathevan
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet has been promising millions in his campaign to be re-elected on 25 March 2023.
He can add to his promises a promise to add at least $50 Million a year to TAFE funding by undertaking to reform NSW's legal accreditation training regime (see story below).
The current regime. is administered by the NSW Legal Profession Admission Board, which has among other things granted a Communist Party China linked company the right to grant Australian law degrees, and access taxpayer funded HECS and FEE HELP . That decision in favour of the Communist Party China linked Zhu Minshen and his Top Group is suspicious in itself and warrants a Federal ICAC investigation. It is also likely to have allowed Top to access millions in Commonwealth HECS and FEE HELP funding.
To Be Read With
Sacrificing TAFE while subsidising NSW's College Of Law with $50 Million a year to provide training that even lawyers consider irrelevant: Premier Berejiklian can save TAFE by addressing problems in NSW's lawyer accreditation regime, ordering a purge, audit and restructure of the NSW LPAB
The state government has appointed businessman David Gonski and former head of the federal public service Peter Shergold to review TAFE. Coming under pressure in question time from Labor about privatisation plans, Ms Berejiklian eventually ruled out any plans to sell TAFE.
"I make this commitment, the NSW government currently invests billions of dollars in TAFE and that will continue," Ms Berejiklian said.
"But if the question is whether we are open to industry making a contribution on top of that ... if industry also wants to be involved in new courses, we would be open to that."
January 03, 2020
by Ganesh Sahathevan
It has also been shown that FEE HELP financed revenues which are meant to finance the Professional Legal Training Programme, which is compulsory for anyone wishing to be admitted to practise law in NSW, now appear to have been diverted to a number of foreign ventures.
Meanwhile the Federal Government has been happy to slash $326 Million from TAFE funding, despite the shortage of skilled workers.
In short, the Government is happy to fund entry into an already over-supplied market for lawyers, but unwilling to provide funds for training in areas where there are not enough workers.
In attempt to justify the post graduate standing of what is essentially a vocational course the College's Academic Director, Lewis Patrick has informed this writer (who was once a student at the College,and completed his PLT):
Dan Tehan needs to explain his misplaced spending priorities.
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