PUTTING THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE
Fran O’Sullivan has an excellent commentary in today’s New
Zealand Herald setting out aspects of the ACC fiasco that the rest of the media
has largely ignored.
While journalists and the government’s political opponents
focus on shortcomings within ACC – and can claim the scalps
of former ACC minister Nick Smith and now ACC chair John Judge as well – it’s clear
that a huge part of the problem, right from the outset, has been the determination
of claimant Bronwyn Pullar and her advocate, former National Party
president Michelle Boag, to exploit their political connections to advance
Pullar’s case.
Some of those connections, notably Smith and ACC deputy
chair John McCliskie, whom O’Sullivan says unwisely agreed to intervene on
Pullar’s behalf, have exacerbated the affair by getting involved when they
should have seen the danger signs – Pullar might as well have had a flashing
red light surgically implanted in her skull – and stayed well clear. But their
bad judgment shouldn’t be allowed to obscure the fact that Pullar and Boag have
used their contacts, inside knowledge and media savvy to pull every
string they can in order to extract a settlement on the most advantageous terms.
These women take no prisoners. Pullar clearly has a highly
developed sense of entitlement and isn’t content to take her place in the ACC queue
along with the hoi-polloi. She and Boag have used a repertoire of sophisticated
tactics not available to run-of-the-mill ACC claimants, and while they have
presumably operated entirely within the law, I don’t buy the spin that Pullar
is the helpless victim that she has been made out to be. O’Sullivan’s piece
helps put the whole malodorous affair in perspective.
Meanwhile, the old forces of the Left have seized the moment
and are seeking to exploit the ACC crisis by pushing for a complete cleanout of
the corporation’s board and a return to a more “client-focused” culture.
Lawyer Hazel Armstrong, an accident compensation specialist
who previously served on the ACC board herself and has deep connections with the union
movement, urged on Morning Report this morning that a revamped board should
include union representatives. Well, she would say that, wouldn’t she? Unions have
wielded powerful influence over the ACC in the past – the Labour government made
Ross Wilson chairman after he resigned as head of the Council of Trade Unions –
and would like nothing more than to regain control. But unions represent less
than 18 percent of the labour force; why should anyone assume that union
officials speak for ACC claimants?
Armstrong talks about rebuilding trust, but I suspect that
what the unions and union-friendly accident compensation lawyers really want is a return to
the soft, benign ACC culture of the past. It may well be that the ACC is in need of
a tune-up, and that some of its staff need reminding that claimants shouldn’t be
seen as the enemy. But we shouldn’t forget that when National came to power in
2008, ACC was a financial basket-case. As O’Sullivan reminds us in her article
this morning, that has since been remedied.
The Left gripes that under the present ACC regime, the
bottom line is all that matters. The problem is that under previous
administrations, it sometimes didn’t seem to matter at all.
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