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Malcolm Macgregor Summers

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Nationality
  
Australian

Children
  
Kim, Nick and Catriona

Died
  
September 1987

Spouse(s)
  
Betty (d. 1972)

Occupation
  
Public servant

Full Name
  
Malcolm Macgregor Summers

Born
  
1924 Queensland (
1924
)

Books
  
Report on Navigational Aid Systems, November 1974

Malcolm Macgregor Summers CBE (1924 – September 1987) was a senior Australian public servant. He is best known for his time as Secretary of the Department of Shipping and Transport from 1969 to 1972.

Contents

Life and career

Summers was born in Queensland in 1925. He joined the Commonwealth Public Service in 1941 and moved to Canberra in the early 1950s to work for the Burueau of Census and Statistics.

In March 1969, Summers was appointed Secretary of the Department of Shipping and Transport, a promotion from his position as deputy secretary of the Department of Trade and Industry. In the role, he worked to set up the Bureau of Transport Economics and brought in new funding arrangements for national highways, rail, urban transport, shipping and road safety. The department's involvement in policy issues increased substantially during the time that Summers was its secretary. In December 1972, the department was reformed as the Department of Transport and Summers was Secretary until late 1973 when then Prime Minister Gough Whitlam announced he was to become the sole Commissioner of a Commonwealth Inquiry into the maritime industry.

Summers retired in 1976 due to ill health.

Summers died in 1987, his wife Betty had died in 1972.

Awards

Summers was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in June 1976 for his public service.

References

Malcolm Macgregor Summers Wikipedia