Department of Science (1975–78)

The Department of Science was an Australian government department that existed between December 1975 and December 1978. It was the second so-named Australian Government department.

Department of Science
Department overview
Formed22 December 1975[1]
Preceding Department
Dissolved5 December 1978[1]
Superseding agency
JurisdictionCommonwealth of Australia
HeadquartersCanberra
Minister responsible
Department executives

Scope

Information about the department's functions and/or government funding allocation could be found in the Administrative Arrangements Orders, the annual Portfolio Budget Statements and in the Department's annual reports.

According to the National Archives of Australia, at its creation, the Department was responsible for:[1]

  • Science and technology, including research, support of research and support of civil space programs
  • Meteorology
  • Ionospheric Prediction Service
  • Analytical laboratory service
  • Weights and measures

Structure

The Department was an Australian Public Service department, staffed by officials who were responsible to the Minister for Science, James Webster.[1]

The Department was headed by a Secretary, initially Hugh Ennor (until October 1977) and then John Farrands.[1][2]

Controversy

In December 1975, a task force of the Royal Commission on Australian Government accused the department of questionable logic, misinterpretation of facts and faulty data.[3]

gollark: As far as I know, the only person who is likely to have actually worked out how my compressor works is Olive, but I assure you that it's moderately weird.
gollark: That and the giant binary blobs.
gollark: LyricLy claims that it was obviously mine because of the formatting and use of numpy. This is wrong and ridiculous. The real reason it was obviously mine is that it does the usual gollark thing of just implementing a weird algorithm and not doing much else.
gollark: They scheduled it for 24 hours, bee.
gollark: Anyway, since LyricLy is done lyricing, it is time for me to ramble incoherently about my entry (#7±5).

References

  1. CA 1962: Department of Science [II], Central Office, National Archives of Australia, retrieved 12 December 2013
  2. Cranston, Frank (6 October 1977). "'Eager beaver' went on to become science head". The Canberra Times. p. 8. Archived from the original on 12 March 2014.
  3. Juddery, Bruce (29 December 1975). "Department of Science: Strong reaction on abolition call". The Canberra Times. p. 3. Archived from the original on 20 March 2014.


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