❓ Question on Notice regarding Department of Premier and Cabinet approval of expenditure on the "Bigger Picture" campaign for various departments and agencies. The answer reveals approved expenditure for the Metropolitan Redevelopment Authority and WA Health.
AnsweredQoN 5198Legislative Assembly
QuestionView source ↗
I refer to Department of Premier and Cabinet (DPC) approval of department and agency expenditure, or additional expenditure, on promotions and advertising associated with the "Bigger Picture" campaign, and ask: (a) has DPC approved any expenditure by departments or agencies since 20 August 2015; and (b) if yes to (a): (i) for which departments or agencies has expenditure been approved; (ii) what is the amount of the approved expenditure for each department or agency; and (iii) what is the term of the approved expenditure for each department or agency?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
10 May 2016
Response time
56 days
As at 15 March 2016:
(a) Yes
(b)
(i) Metropolitan Redevelopment Authority and WA Health;
(ii) $854 000 and $71 033 respectively;
(iii) from 27 October 2015 to 26 October 2016 and from 13 October 2015 to 30 June 2016 respectively.
(a) Yes
(b)
(i) Metropolitan Redevelopment Authority and WA Health;
(ii) $854 000 and $71 033 respectively;
(iii) from 27 October 2015 to 26 October 2016 and from 13 October 2015 to 30 June 2016 respectively.
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.