Department of Premier and Cabinet (Victoria)

The Department of Premier and Cabinet (DPC) is a government department in Victoria, Australia.[1] The department is located at 1 Treasury Place, Melbourne, Victoria, with branch offices in Ballarat and Bendigo.[2]

Department of Premier and Cabinet
Department overview
JurisdictionVictorian Government
Headquarters1 Treasury Place, Melbourne
Ministers responsible
Websitewww.dpc.vic.gov.au

Similar to other executive offices such as the federal Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet or the British Cabinet Office, the DPC provides support to the Premier and the public service, and is responsible for a number of miscellaneous matters not handled by other departments.

Ministers

edit

As of September 2023, the DPC supports four ministers in the following portfolios:[3]

Name Party Portfolio
Jacinta Allan Labor Premier
Ben Carroll Labor Deputy Premier
Tim Pallas Labor Minister for Industrial Relations
Gabrielle Williams Labor Minister for Treaty and First Peoples

Functions

edit

The DPC has responsibility over the following policy areas:

Agencies

edit

Agencies under the DPC's portfolios include:

  • Electoral Boundaries Commission
  • Family Violence Reform Implementation Monitor
  • Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission
  • Infrastructure Victoria
  • Local Government Inspectorate
  • Office of the Chief Parliamentary Counsel
  • Office of the Governor
  • Public Interest Monitor
  • Office of the Victorian Government Architect
  • Office of the Victorian Information Commissioner
  • Public Record Office Victoria
  • Shrine of Remembrance
  • Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Council
  • Victorian Electoral Commission
  • Victorian Inspectorate
  • Victorian Interpreting and Translating Service
  • Victorian Multicultural Commission
  • Victorian Ombudsman
  • Victorian Public Sector Commission
  • Victorian Treaty Advancement Commission
  • Victorian Veterans' Council

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ "vic.gov.au - Departments and Other Bodies". State Government Victoria. July 2013. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Department of Premier and Cabinet. Connect with Us". State Government Victoria. 20 September 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  3. ^ "DPC ministers". Victorian Government. Retrieved 2 January 2023.

References

edit