Helen Williams AO | |
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Secretary of the Department of Human Services | |
In office 7 May 2007 – 2009 |
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Secretary of the Department of Communications, Information Technology and the Arts | |
In office 23 November 2001 – 7 May 2007 |
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Commissioner of the Australian Public Service | |
In office 1998–2002 |
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Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs | |
In office 11 March 1996 – 5 February 1998 |
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Secretary of the Department of Tourism | |
In office 14 June 1993 – 11 March 1996 |
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Secretary of the Department of Education | |
In office 14 January 1985 – 24 July 1987 |
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Personal details | |
Born |
Helen Rodda Williams 21 March 1945 Adelaide, South Australia |
Nationality | Australian |
Spouse(s) | Baron Frederick von Reibnitz (m. 1979) |
Children | Anna |
Occupation | Public servant |
Helen Rodda Williams AO (born 21 March 1945) is a retired Australian senior public servant. She was the first woman in the Australian Public Service to be appointed as a Secretary of an Australian government department.
Helen Williams was born in Adelaide, South Australia on 21 March 1945, the daughter of academics Sir Bruce Williams and Roma Williams.
Early in her public service career, Williams joined the second division in the Department of Finance in 1979, her employment was controversial at the time due to her being a woman.
When she was promoted to Deputy Secretary in the Department of Education and Youth Affairs in 1983, she became the first woman to hold a deputy secretary position in the Australian Government sphere. She was Acting Secretary of the Department of Education and Youth Affairs for a short time in 1984, and was later promoted to Secretary of the Department of Education in 1985, serving in the role until 1987 Her appointment as Secretary of the education department was the first time a woman had been appointed to head an Australian Government department of state.
Williams told The Canberra Times in 2006 that in 1987 she was criticised by some women's groups and the senior public service bureaucracy when she took six months maternity leave after having her baby. Her daughter, Anna von Reibnitz, had been born in December 1986.
Williams returned to work from maternity leave in 1987 on the day that a reorganisation of the public service was complete, with 28 departments cut down to just 18. Williams was not one of the previous secretaries who was given a department and was instead appointed Associate Secretary in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. While Associate Secretary, she headed the arm of the department responsible for Commonwealth-state relations during Prime Minister Bob Hawke's push for "New Federalism", which saw the break-ups of functions between different layers of government under review.