Oversight of the Public Interest Disclosures Act 2022 Annual Report 2023–24, tabled in Parliament today

Date posted:

The NSW Ombudsman tabled the Oversight of the Public Interest Disclosures Act 2022 Annual Report 2023–24 in Parliament on 11 December, 2024.  

The report provides a snapshot of voluntary public interest disclosures made between 1 October 2023, when the Public Interest Disclosures Act 2022 (PID Act) commenced, and 30 June 2024.  

The PID Act is the public sector whistleblower protection legislation in NSW, providing a framework for public officials to speak up and report serious wrongdoing. These are called voluntary public interest disclosures, or PIDs. The Act provides certain protections when someone reports a PID, and it requires agencies to take some form of action when they receive a report. 

The report shows that: 

  • 1,242 agencies (which include departments and other public sector agencies, statutory bodies, local councils, and universities) submitted returns for the 9-month period.  
  • In total, 1,330 voluntary PIDs were received, and agencies reported they finalised 735. 

Serious wrongdoing was found in 81 matters. Where serious wrongdoing was found to have occurred:  

  • in 23% of the cases, agencies took corrective action associated with the public official’s employment (pursuant to section 69(4) of the Government Sector Employment Act 2013), and 
  • in 37% of the cases, the agency responded with some form of training and education, and/or improvements to procedure and/or policy. 

The report also talks about our office’s work under the PID Act. 

Since the Act commenced, the NSW Ombudsman has focused on raising awareness to support agencies with understanding and implementing their obligations under the Act. We have provided guidelines, fact sheets, eLearning modules, and different forms of video content. Staff from our office have also provided advice in person, over the phone and by email on a range of issues, and have conducted awareness sessions with senior leaders and those responsible for implementing the Act.  

Of those agencies who submitted returns: 

  • 95% reported they had done something to raise awareness of the Act among their staff 
  • 85% reported that their head of agency, all disclosure officers, and/or all managers had received training on the agency’s PID policy and on their responsibilities under the Act 
  • 85% of agencies reported actively promoting a ‘speak up’ culture.  

The agencies that have not reported doing so, tend to be the smaller and more specialised agencies with few staff and limited resources. The NSW Ombudsman continues efforts to support those agencies, including by providing guidance and training material.   

Information and resources on the PID Act are availablehere. 

Download the full media release.

Download the report 

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Journey Together artwork

We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land on which we work and pay our respects to all Elders past and present, and to the children of today who are the Elders of the future.

Artist: Jasmine Sarin, a proud Kamilaroi and Jerrinja woman.