❓ Question on Notice regarding outstanding creditor payments for the Department of Industry and Resources. The response details reasons for potential payment delays, referencing a previous answer for specific figures.
AnsweredQoN 5196Legislative Council
QuestionView source ↗
(1) The amount and number of creditors outstanding for greater than 120 days, as at 30 June 2007?
(2) What measures, if any, have been taken in the period between 1 July 2006 and 30 June 2007 to expedite payments to creditors?
(2) What measures, if any, have been taken in the period between 1 July 2006 and 30 June 2007 to expedite payments to creditors?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
25 September 2007
Responded by
Leader of the House representing the Minister for Resources
Response time
28 days
The Minister for Resources has been provided with the following response:
The Department of Industry and Resources advises:
(1) Please refer to part (e) of question on notice LA 2558 for the answer to this question.
(2) The Department of the Industry and Resources makes every effort to pay creditors within 30 days as the Department's Financial Management Information System is set up for invoices to be automatically paid within 30 days of the date of the invoices. However, there are circumstances under which this is not possible as follows:
·
Late invoices
Some creditors do not submit invoices until well after the goods or services are supplied. The date recorded in the finance system is the date of the invoice (not the date the invoice is received) and therefore such invoices will appear as outstanding even if they are paid on the day they are received.
·
Early Invoices
Some creditors submit invoices prior to goods or services being fully provided.
·
Accounts in dispute
Accounts are not approved for payment until any dispute is resolved.
·
Grant payments
Some grant payments are not made until the department is satisfied that milestones have been met. This can cause delays in payment.
·
Misdirected invoices
Payment can be delayed if invoices are incorrectly addressed.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
The Department of Industry and Resources advises:
(1) Please refer to part (e) of question on notice LA 2558 for the answer to this question.
(2) The Department of the Industry and Resources makes every effort to pay creditors within 30 days as the Department's Financial Management Information System is set up for invoices to be automatically paid within 30 days of the date of the invoices. However, there are circumstances under which this is not possible as follows:
·
Late invoices
Some creditors do not submit invoices until well after the goods or services are supplied. The date recorded in the finance system is the date of the invoice (not the date the invoice is received) and therefore such invoices will appear as outstanding even if they are paid on the day they are received.
·
Early Invoices
Some creditors submit invoices prior to goods or services being fully provided.
·
Accounts in dispute
Accounts are not approved for payment until any dispute is resolved.
·
Grant payments
Some grant payments are not made until the department is satisfied that milestones have been met. This can cause delays in payment.
·
Misdirected invoices
Payment can be delayed if invoices are incorrectly addressed.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.