Updating Results
Menu

Services Australia

3.5
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

Sustainability at Services Australia

5.6
5.6 rating for Sustainability, based on 40 reviews
Please comment on your company's efforts in this area.
I have not seen any commitment
Graduate, Sydney
I believe they take it seriously.
Graduate, Canberra
no idea
Graduate, Adelaide
I don't really know enough about what we're doing to achieve this
Graduate, Adelaide
I am unsure about this.
Graduate, Adelaide
There seems to be occasional messaging about this, but I honestly do not know.
Graduate, Adelaide
I am not aware of any.
Graduate, Perth
It's okay I guess? Our new building, terrible as it is, is apparently environmentally friendly which is nice, but due to servicing remote areas it's quite hard to reduce our environmental footprint. The APS is hardly the most polluting type anyway, outside of Defence.
Graduate, Adelaide
Fairly high - reducing office footprints, need for service centres etc. Newer buildings with higher energy ratings.
Graduate, Adelaide
I have no idea
Graduate, Brisbane
We're telling service recipients to use online forms I guess?
Graduate, Perth
Not in a position to comment
Graduate, Canberra
Sorry, I'm not sure about this.
Graduate, Melbourne
I would need to do further research to be able to offer relevant feedback in this regard.
Graduate, Other (Please specify) - Tweed Heads
I don't know this information. From a new persons perspectives, there are recycle bins on every floor and promotional material surrounding the misuse of paper and how to correctly recycle materials - I'd say they do a good job.
Graduate, Brisbane
Very little, so many offices are sitting empty with people working from home. We can afford to lose some buildings.
Graduate, Canberra
Throttle back the digital and data focus/drive - apart from the growing cyber threat to our privacy and the digital service channel could be absolutely compromised by robust, illegal digital IDs (won't change the underlying DEMAND for our services however) - digital also hurts the environment as they are power hungry and use coal, gas or nuclear power (O/S data flows to say, the USA). AND unlike private enterprise, the government holds both employment and welfare so any "productivity gains" (e.g. A.I. that leads to loss of employment that directly benefits profit maximising organisations) so what govt doesn't pay as wages, it will pay as welfare as there is an implicit minimum wage and that is the cost of survival in our economy > so Govt can afford to throttle back the digital drive.
Graduate, Melbourne