Managing Government Information Post Pandemic
Excel by ensuring you have the latest information & gain your CPD compulsory units from special sessions that address skills that you require as a modern government lawyer. OND223V01B_1
Description
Attend and earn 1 CPD hour in Practice Management
This program is applicable to practitioners from all States & Territories
Practice Management
Managing Government Information Post Pandemic
The pandemic has changed how government employees and contractors work, particularly working from home or other locations. These workers still need access to government databases that includes personal information, confidential information, health information and secret information.
- Consider information security controls including IT controls, contractual controls and personnel security based on issues that OVIC has encountered
Presented by Anthony Corso, Assistant Commissioner, Information Security and Bryan Wee, General Counsel, Office of the Victorian Information Commissioner; Accredited Specialist in Administrative Law
Presenters
Anthony Corso
Anthony has worked with OVIC and the former offices of the Commissioner for Privacy and Data Protection and the Commissioner for Law Enforcement Data Security (CLEDS) for the past 7 years, leading the delivery of the first information security regime for Victorian Government. This regime is more commonly referred to as the Victorian Protective Data Security Framework (VPDSF), which sets out the Victorian Protective Data Security Standards, and supplementary security guidance material>
Bryan Wee
Bryan Wee is General Counsel at the Office of the Victorian Information Commissioner (OVIC). OVIC is the primary regulator and source of independent advice about how the Victorian Government collects, uses and shares information. Before joining OVIC, Bryan previously led a legal and procurement team at the Department of Justice and Community Safety, was in private practice at DLA Piper, the Australian Government Solicitor and Russell Kennedy. Bryan has extensive experience, and is a Law Institute Accredited Specialist, in Administrative Law. He has practiced in most areas of State and Federal administrative law from legislative change, to merits and judicial review litigation and administrative inquiries. Bryan has assisted a range of Royal Commissions and government inquiries and advised Commonwealth and State government agencies about information management and decision making; ranging from drafting information sharing legislation, responding to subpoenas, AI decision-making, FOI, and privacy through contracted service providers.