Skip to content
Disability, Government Federal

Significant concerns re Salesforce and NDIA: procurement, gifts and hospitality

Parliament of Australia 3 mins read

NDIA officials failed to disclose years of secret gifts and hospitality received from global IT giant Salesforce despite the company securing lucrative government contracts and massive variations.

The Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit tabled its final report today for its Inquiry into procurement at Services Australia and the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) finding key aspects fell short of the Commonwealth Procurement Rules and ethical requirements.

The findings follow the release of the inquiry’s interim report in September 2023, which focussed on the activities of the Synergy 360 consulting firm as an advisor to the technology company Infosys in obtaining Government IT contracts.

That report raised serious questions about potential financial impropriety and improper relationships with parties receiving contracts from the Commonwealth and referred those matters to the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC).

In this final report for the inquiry, the Committee investigated the procurement of NDIA’s new customer relationship platform, known as the PACE system, from the US based global IT company Salesforce.

Committee Chair, Mr Julian Hill MP said that “it was perplexing that the value for money assessments in this procurement gave no explicit weighting to price as a key factor in scoring and ranking proposals.”

Mr Hill further stated that “the sizes of the contract variations were significant, now $135 million up from $27 million at inception … a substantial proportion was due to significant changes in scope. Other vendors were basically denied the opportunity to tender for the product ultimately being delivered.”

The most concerning issue to emerge from the evidence was what appeared to be clear breaches of NDIA’s Gifts and Hospitality policies by its officials. Mr Hill noted that “although NDIA gave evidence that no declarations of any hospitality relating to this contract were made by its staff, Salesforce subsequently provided written evidence of more than 100 instances of hospitality and/or gifts, including meals, drinks and golf outings, passing to NDIA officials over an almost five-year period. This was before and after the award of the contract, and throughout the period of contract variations.”

Mr Hill further stated: “The premise stated by NDIA for its hospitality policy is that none of its officials should accept gifts that could be seen to compromise their integrity. This was clearly not followed.”

After the interim report was tabled, the Committee learned also that Synergy 360 made an unsolicited approach to Salesforce in advance of the PACE tender process and that meetings took place between former Minister Stuart Robert, Synergy 360 and Salesforce before and after the awarding of the contract.

Mr Hill remarked that “three meetings with former Minister Robert occurred with no written records available of what was discussed or evidence that other potential vendors who were not Synergy 360 clients were afforded similar access. Ultimately Salesforce secured a major government contract and later benefited from a series of lucrative variations.”

The Committee makes five recommendations in this final report including that the:

  • Department of Finance and the Digital Transformation Agency take appropriate action to understand the extent to which inappropriate cultivation of Commonwealth officials may be occurring by major ICT vendors, and
  • Australian National Audit Office consider future audits of potential gifts and hospitality issues in the public sector to identify practices of concern.

The Chair has also written to Salesforce asking:

  • If Salesforce’s Office of Global Ethics and Integrity had approved each and all of these payments in accordance with their own corporate policy?
  • Who makes these decisions within Salesforce’s Office of Global Ethics and Integrity?
  • If Salesforce’s Office of Global Ethics and Integrity has ever declined a request to approve hospitality for an Australian Commonwealth official?
  • For Salesforce to provide a table within 3 months of the tabling of this report of all hospitality provided to all Commonwealth officials by agency for the last 3 years (names redacted) consistent with the format Salesforce helpfully provided in relation to the NDIA, and advice as to whether each item was approved by Salesforce’s Office of Global Ethics and Integrity.  

The report can be downloaded from the inquiry website.

Media inquiries

Mr Julian Hill MP, Chair of the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit
Electorate office: (03) 9791 7770
Media contact: Laura Hooper, Office of Julian Hill MP

0422 851 157; [email protected]

For background information

Committee Secretariat
02 6277 4615
[email protected]

For more information about this Committee, you can visit its website. On the site, you can make a submission to an inquiry, read other submissions, and get details for upcoming public hearings. You can also track the Committee and receive email updates by clicking on the blue ‘Track Committee’ button in the bottom right-hand corner of the page.

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 26/03/2026
  • 11:33
Hepatitis Australia

100,000 Australians cured of hepatitis C, Australia launches national telehealth service to finish elimination

Embargoed until 11:59 pm, 26 March Ten years after the Federal Government made world-leading hepatitis C medicines available to all Australians through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS), more than 110,000 people have been treated and almost 100,000 have been cured. In marking this major milestone in the fight against hepatitis C, Hepatitis Australia is launching a new national telehealth service for people at risk of hepatitis C as part of HepLink, the national hepatitis information and linkage service. This new hepatitis C telehealth service is an innovative telephone and virtual care service offering a new and easier way for people…

  • Community, Government Federal
  • 26/03/2026
  • 07:18
Climate Media Centre

MEDIA RELEASE: Health professionals, disaster survivors and families unite to back tax on big polluters

Three of Australia’s leading community climate organisations have called on the Federal Government to introduce a 25% tax on gas exports, as momentum builds ahead of the May budget for action on the soaring profits being made by gas corporations during another energy crisis. Doctors for the Environment Australia, Bushfire Survivors for Climate Action, and Parents for Climate are backing the push, calling for revenue from the tax to be directed to communities on the frontline of climate-fuelled disasters, relief for households facing soaring energy and insurance costs, and accelerating Australia's transition away from the volatile, polluting fossil fuel dependence…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 26/03/2026
  • 06:10
Australian College of Nursing

Let nurse practitioners lead Urgent Care Clinics to address staffing issues

The Australian College of Nursing is calling on the Federal Government to revise guidelines to allow nurse practitioners to lead care independently in Medicare Urgent Care Clinics (UCCs), with GP recruitment an ongoing challenge for the program. Nurse practitioners are among the most highly qualified clinicians in our health system, capable of leading UCCs, but the current Medicare Urgent Care Clinic Program Operational Guidance mandates that clinics will be GP-led, with a vocationally registered general practitioner required at a minimum. The latest evaluation of the program noted recruitment of appropriately qualified doctors remains an issue, and that Medicare Benefits Schedule…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.