Transmittal letter
Ordered to be published
VICTORIAN GOVERNMENT PRINTER May 2018
PP No 392, Session 2014–18
President
Legislative Council
Parliament House
Melbourne
Speaker
Legislative Assembly
Parliament House
Melbourne
Dear Presiding Officers
Ordered to be published
VICTORIAN GOVERNMENT PRINTER May 2018
PP No 392, Session 2014–18
Dear Presiding Officers
Figure B1
Legislation impacting the sale and management of surplus land
Act |
Purpose |
---|---|
Sale of Land Act 1962 |
Regulates the sale of freehold land. |
Transfer of Land Act 1958 |
Establishes the system of land titles. |
Land Act 1958 |
We have consulted with DTF, DELWP, DET, DHHS and VicTrack, and we considered their views when reaching our audit conclusions. As required by section 16(3) of the Audit Act 1994, we gave a draft copy of this report, or relevant extracts, to those agencies and asked for their submissions and comments. We also provided a copy of this report to the Department of Premier and Cabinet.
Responsibility for the accuracy, fairness and balance of those comments rests solely with the agency head.
Responses were received as follows:
Each year, the government sets targets for the sale of surplus land. If agencies meet their targets, they can access up to 10 per cent of the proceeds. This system aims to provide an incentive for agencies to release land for sale in a timely manner.
The sale of surplus government land provides a range of possible benefits, including:
For government to plan strategically and make good decisions about how to make the best use of surplus government land, it needs accurate information. Each year, departments report to DTF on their landholdings. As part of this process, agencies are required to:
This process does not apply to DoH and VicTrack, as they own and manage their own assets.
The need for governments to own land changes in response to population growth and shifting demand for public services. As needs change, government land may become surplus to requirements. The sale of public land generates significant revenue for government and attracts strong community interest. Over the past 10 financial years, the Department of Treasury and Finance (DTF) has sold 695 properties, generating over $928.7 million of sales revenue for the state.
Governments own land for a variety of public purposes, including for housing, health, education, police services, and for community activities, sport and recreation. Governments also own land to protect its environmental or heritage value in the form of national and state parks or reserves.
The need for government to own land changes over time, in response to demand for public services, population change or new policy priorities. As a result, there will always be some land that becomes surplus to government needs.
DEDJTR | Department of Economic Development, Jobs, Transport and Resources |
DELWP | Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning |
DET | Department of Education and Training |
DHHS | Department of Health and Human Services |
DJR | Department of Justice and Regulation |
DoH | Director of Housing |
DTF | Department of Treasury and Finance |
Ordered to be published
VICTORIAN GOVERNMENT PRINTER March 2018
PP No 380, Session 2014–18
Dear Presiding Officers
Our Data Dashboards are interactive visualisation tools summarising the financial statement data for all Victorian public hospitals. They have been grouped into the following cohorts: