Australian Capital Territory Emergency Services Agency

A.C.T. Emergency Services Agency
Agency overview
Formed 2004
Jurisdiction Government of the Australian Capital Territory
Annual budget A$66.794m[1]
Agency executive
Parent agency ACT Department of Justice & Community Safety
Child agencies
Website www.esa.act.gov.au

The Australian Capital Territory Emergency Services Agency (ACT ESA) was established by the Emergencies Act 2004 (ACT), which came into effect on 1 July 2004.[2] The mission of the ACT ESA is to protect and preserve life, property and the environment in the ACT.

The ACT Emergency Services Agency (ESA) is the ACT Government organisation charged with providing emergency management services to the Canberra community.

The ESA Mission is “We work together to care and protect through cohesive operations, collaborative management and a unified executive”.

The ESA workforce profile includes over 2500 full time and volunteer personnel.

Structure

ESA Structure August 2008

The Commissioner, ESA reports to Director-General of the Justice & Community Safety Directorate (JACS), who is responsible to the Minister for Police and Emergency Services. The ACT ESA comprises: four emergency service agencies and several support areas, including: People and Culture, Governance and Logistics, Risk & Planning Services, Emergency Media and Broadcasting Services. The four operational agencies are:

Commissioners

Budget

Year Government Payment for Outputs
2017/18 A$141.531m[3]
2008/09 A$66.794m[4]
2007/08 A$60.421m[5]
2006/07 A$59.157m[6]
2005/06 A$53.495m[7]
2004/05 A$44.813m[8]

History

1993–2004 Emergency Services Bureau

Prior to 1 July 2004, emergency services in the ACT were delivered by the Emergency Services Bureau, an agency of the ACT Department of Justice and Community Safety.

2004–2006 Emergency Services Authority

The Emergencies Act 2004 (ACT) established the ESA as a statutory authority.

2006– now Emergency Services Agency

In the 2006-07 Australian Capital Territory budget, the ACT Government announced that the ESA would again be subsumed by the ACT Department of Justice and Community Safety, effective 1 July 2006.

See also

References

  1. ACT Government Budget 2008/09 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2008/files/paper4/12jacs.pdf
  2. http://www.legislation.act.gov.au/a/2004-28/default.asp Emergencies Act 2004 (ACT)
  3. ACT Government Budget 2017/18 – Budget Paper D: https://apps.treasury.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/1069370/D-Budget-Statements.pdf
  4. ACT Government Budget 2008/09 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2008/files/paper4/12jacs.pdf
  5. ACT Government Budget 2007/08 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2007/files/paper4/12jacs.pdf
  6. ACT Government Budget 2006/07 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2006/html/paper4.htm
  7. ACT Government Budget 2005/06 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2005/html/paper4.htm
  8. ACT Government Budget 2004/05 – Budget Paper 4: Budget Estimates, http://www.treasury.act.gov.au/budget/budget_2004/htm/paper4.htm
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.