Bland was born in Randwick, Sydney on 28 December 1909, the son of
Francis Bland. Bland's mother died from septicaemia soon after he was born. In 1925 and 1926, Bland attended
Sydney Boys High School. He studied law at the
University of Sydney, graduating with honours, and was admitted as a solicitor of the NSW Supreme Court in 1935. In 1940 and 1941, he was official secretary to the NSW Agent-General in London, and acted as Agent-General himself for some months. On return to Australia he advised the NSW and Commonwealth governments on civil defence. Bland commenced his
Australian Public Service career in 1942, as Principal Adviser to the Director-General of Manpower. In 1946 he was appointed Assistant Director of Employment in the
Department of Labour and National Service. Between 1952 and 1967, Bland was
Secretary of the Department of Labour and National Service. In the role, he was the main architect of the Commonwealth Employment Service. During his short time as head of the department, Bland initiated a broad and intense program of administrative reform, In 1971-2, he undertook a review of land transport in Victoria for the state government, which resulted in the
Bland Report recommending closure of many Victorian Railways branch lines and passenger services. In July 1976 Bland was appointed Chairman of the
ABC, a position in which
Dr. Earle Hackett had been acting since the death of Prof Richard Downing in November 1975. He resigned after only five months, following clashes with both staff (who resented his appointment as what they called "
Malcolm Fraser's hatchet man") and the Fraser government itself, which backed down on its intention to remove the position of Staff Commissioner on the ABC Board. The position was held by
Marius Webb, who had been at loggerheads with Bland from the start. ==Awards==