logo
#

Latest news with #Māori-Crown

$1 Billion Of Māori Funding Gone
$1 Billion Of Māori Funding Gone

Scoop

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

$1 Billion Of Māori Funding Gone

The Government should hang its head in shame after a budget that takes a knife to more Māori programmes. 'In Budget 2024 more than $300 million was cut from Māori specific initiatives – Te Arawhiti, The Māori Health Authority, and Māori TV. Budget 2025 cuts even deeper with around $750 million cut from Māori Housing, Māori economic funds, Māori Education and programmes like Māori trades training,' Māori Development spokesperson, Willie Jackson said. 'Over the two budgets, Tama Potaka has now slashed more than $1 billion of Māori specific funding and that is shameful. 'Louise Upston has also made the shameful choice to stop funding Māori trade training when Māori unemployment has risen to 10.5 percent, with no plan to support Māori into meaningful jobs. 'The biggest hit is in Māori housing. Whai Kainga Whai Oranga and the whole Māori housing programme has been scrapped. In total $624 million has been wiped from the books. 'Tama Potaka is ignoring the housing data showing Māori are in the most need and has chosen to wash his hands of Māori housing. 'This government is providing a mere $3 million per year worth of new funding for Māori Wardens and the Māori Women's Welfare League – yet has increased its ministerial budget for international travel by $2 million per year. 'At the same time, David Seymour is introducing his Regulatory Standards Bill under urgency that extinguishes more Māori rights, cementing this government's lack of care towards Māori. 'This government has proven once again that it has turned its back on the Māori-Crown relationship,' Willie Jackson said.

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements
The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

Scoop

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

Article – RNZ Public organisations are treating Treaty commitments like transactions, not relationships, the Auditor-General says. The Auditor-General issued a wake-up call to MPs this week during his briefing to Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee on how poorly public organisations are fulfilling Treaty settlements. Public organisations are treating Treaty commitments like transactions, not relationships, John Ryan told Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee. 'Fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it.' The briefing follows an investigation from the Office of the Controller and Auditor-General (an independent Parliamentary watchdog), who wanted to see 'how effective the public sector arrangements for Treaty settlement commitments are'. Appearing before the Committee on Wednesday, Controller and Auditor-General John Ryan told MPs that the report, which he viewed as one of the most important in his seven year term, found that the Crown was failing to honour its legal and contractual settlement commitments, of which there are 12,000 across approximately 80 settlements. 'This is a legal compliance issue. If you just take everything else away from it, fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it as public agencies. The Auditor-General is normally a cold hearted accountant, but when I read this, I felt like we needed to act on this,' Ryan told Māori Affairs Committee MPs. The report found that most of the 150 responsible public organisations treated settlements as one-off transactions, and failed to recognise that, at their core, settlements are about resetting relationships. Relationships which should be durable and ongoing. 'The Crown, I think, has seen it like this after the treaty settlement process – as a series of transactions that needed to be managed rather than a relationship that needed to be reset.' Ryan and his team suggested that public organisations are often inclined to, at worst, just ignore commitments, and at best, treat them with a bureaucratic tick-box KPI mentality. The Treaty Settlement process has been a defining facet of Māori-Crown relations for decades. Since the first settlements in the 1990s, $2.738 billion of financial and commercial redress has been given by the Crown to Post-Settlement Governance Entities (PSGEs), the term for claimant groups, usually represented by a particular iwi. In a moment of reflection following Ryan's presentation, committee chair National MP David MacLeod suggested that a lack of personal connection could potentially be part of the problem. 'We have people that represent the Crown in negotiations, on a daily basis for a long time, they almost become emotionally tied to what the settlement is all about,' MacLeod said. 'Then post settlement, that group of people move on to the next one, and then there's a whole fresh one that actually doesn't have any of that history [and] the relationship that's being formed in that.' The Auditor-General said MacLeod's observation was probably a fair one. 'I think that's an interesting observation because I think what the public sector does once the settlement been reached, is it looks like a series of tasks to deliver rather than the bigger intent that's behind it, because as you say, there's people that go through the settlement process, I hate using the phrase, but on a journey to get to the point of settlement, legislation, deed of settlement. Then the public sector picks that up in various agencies rather than takes that intent that was formed here, and puts it in place over here.' Armed with insight from the Auditor-General's report and briefing, Māori Affairs Committee MPs may perhaps think differently (and encourage their colleagues to do the same) the next time a settlement comes through Parliament. They didn't need to wait long. The first reading of the Ngāti Hāua Claims Settlement Bill, and all stages of the Ngā Hapū o Ranginui Claims Settlement Bill were also occurring at Parliament this week. What are briefings? This meeting of the Māori Affairs Committee and Auditor-General was a briefing. Briefings are a less formal version of the inquiry function that committees can initiate. In some cases, once members have learned more about an issue through briefings they may launch an inquiry to dig deeper. There's no requirement though. Briefings give committees the chance to get the low-down of an issue from subject matter experts. This can be members of the public, a visiting overseas delegation, or as in this case, an Officer of Parliament – the Controller and Auditor-General.

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements
The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

Scoop

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

Public organisations are treating Treaty commitments like transactions, not relationships, the Auditor-General says. The Auditor-General issued a wake-up call to MPs this week during his briefing to Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee on how poorly public organisations are fulfilling Treaty settlements. Public organisations are treating Treaty commitments like transactions, not relationships, John Ryan told Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee. 'Fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it.' The briefing follows an investigation from the Office of the Controller and Auditor-General (an independent Parliamentary watchdog), who wanted to see 'how effective the public sector arrangements for Treaty settlement commitments are'. Appearing before the Committee on Wednesday, Controller and Auditor-General John Ryan told MPs that the report, which he viewed as one of the most important in his seven year term, found that the Crown was failing to honour its legal and contractual settlement commitments, of which there are 12,000 across approximately 80 settlements. 'This is a legal compliance issue. If you just take everything else away from it, fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it as public agencies. The Auditor-General is normally a cold hearted accountant, but when I read this, I felt like we needed to act on this,' Ryan told Māori Affairs Committee MPs. The report found that most of the 150 responsible public organisations treated settlements as one-off transactions, and failed to recognise that, at their core, settlements are about resetting relationships. Relationships which should be durable and ongoing. 'The Crown, I think, has seen it like this after the treaty settlement process – as a series of transactions that needed to be managed rather than a relationship that needed to be reset.' Ryan and his team suggested that public organisations are often inclined to, at worst, just ignore commitments, and at best, treat them with a bureaucratic tick-box KPI mentality. The Treaty Settlement process has been a defining facet of Māori-Crown relations for decades. Since the first settlements in the 1990s, $2.738 billion of financial and commercial redress has been given by the Crown to Post-Settlement Governance Entities (PSGEs), the term for claimant groups, usually represented by a particular iwi. In a moment of reflection following Ryan's presentation, committee chair National MP David MacLeod suggested that a lack of personal connection could potentially be part of the problem. 'We have people that represent the Crown in negotiations, on a daily basis for a long time, they almost become emotionally tied to what the settlement is all about,' MacLeod said. 'Then post settlement, that group of people move on to the next one, and then there's a whole fresh one that actually doesn't have any of that history [and] the relationship that's being formed in that.' The Auditor-General said MacLeod's observation was probably a fair one. 'I think that's an interesting observation because I think what the public sector does once the settlement been reached, is it looks like a series of tasks to deliver rather than the bigger intent that's behind it, because as you say, there's people that go through the settlement process, I hate using the phrase, but on a journey to get to the point of settlement, legislation, deed of settlement. Then the public sector picks that up in various agencies rather than takes that intent that was formed here, and puts it in place over here.' Armed with insight from the Auditor-General's report and briefing, Māori Affairs Committee MPs may perhaps think differently (and encourage their colleagues to do the same) the next time a settlement comes through Parliament. They didn't need to wait long. The first reading of the Ngāti Hāua Claims Settlement Bill, and all stages of the Ngā Hapū o Ranginui Claims Settlement Bill were also occurring at Parliament this week. What are briefings? This meeting of the Māori Affairs Committee and Auditor-General was a briefing. Briefings are a less formal version of the inquiry function that committees can initiate. In some cases, once members have learned more about an issue through briefings they may launch an inquiry to dig deeper. There's no requirement though. Briefings give committees the chance to get the low-down of an issue from subject matter experts. This can be members of the public, a visiting overseas delegation, or as in this case, an Officer of Parliament – the Controller and Auditor-General. RNZ's The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament's Office of the Clerk.

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements
The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

Scoop

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Scoop

The House: Wake-Up Call To MPs Over Building Relationships After Treaty Settlements

The Auditor-General issued a wake-up call to MPs this week during his briefing to Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee on how poorly public organisations are fulfilling Treaty settlements. Public organisations are treating Treaty commitments like transactions, not relationships, John Ryan told Parliament's Māori Affairs Committee. "Fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it." The briefing follows an investigation from the Office of the Controller and Auditor-General (an independent Parliamentary watchdog), who wanted to see "how effective the public sector arrangements for Treaty settlement commitments are". Appearing before the Committee on Wednesday, Controller and Auditor-General John Ryan told MPs that the report, which he viewed as one of the most important in his seven year term, found that the Crown was failing to honour its legal and contractual settlement commitments, of which there are 12,000 across approximately 80 settlements. "This is a legal compliance issue. If you just take everything else away from it, fundamentally, this is the law, and we should be complying with it as public agencies. The Auditor-General is normally a cold hearted accountant, but when I read this, I felt like we needed to act on this," Ryan told Māori Affairs Committee MPs. The report found that most of the 150 responsible public organisations treated settlements as one-off transactions, and failed to recognise that, at their core, settlements are about resetting relationships. Relationships which should be durable and ongoing. "The Crown, I think, has seen it like this after the treaty settlement process - as a series of transactions that needed to be managed rather than a relationship that needed to be reset." Ryan and his team suggested that public organisations are often inclined to, at worst, just ignore commitments, and at best, treat them with a bureaucratic tick-box KPI mentality. The Treaty Settlement process has been a defining facet of Māori-Crown relations for decades. Since the first settlements in the 1990s, $2.738 billion of financial and commercial redress has been given by the Crown to Post-Settlement Governance Entities (PSGEs), the term for claimant groups, usually represented by a particular iwi. In a moment of reflection following Ryan's presentation, committee chair National MP David MacLeod suggested that a lack of personal connection could potentially be part of the problem. "We have people that represent the Crown in negotiations, on a daily basis for a long time, they almost become emotionally tied to what the settlement is all about," MacLeod said. "Then post settlement, that group of people move on to the next one, and then there's a whole fresh one that actually doesn't have any of that history [and] the relationship that's being formed in that." The Auditor-General said MacLeod's observation was probably a fair one. "I think that's an interesting observation because I think what the public sector does once the settlement been reached, is it looks like a series of tasks to deliver rather than the bigger intent that's behind it, because as you say, there's people that go through the settlement process, I hate using the phrase, but on a journey to get to the point of settlement, legislation, deed of settlement. Then the public sector picks that up in various agencies rather than takes that intent that was formed here, and puts it in place over here." Armed with insight from the Auditor-General's report and briefing, Māori Affairs Committee MPs may perhaps think differently (and encourage their colleagues to do the same) the next time a settlement comes through Parliament. They didn't need to wait long. The first reading of the Ngāti Hāua Claims Settlement Bill, and all stages of the Ngā Hapū o Ranginui Claims Settlement Bill were also occurring at Parliament this week. What are briefings? This meeting of the Māori Affairs Committee and Auditor-General was a briefing. Briefings are a less formal version of the inquiry function that committees can initiate. In some cases, once members have learned more about an issue through briefings they may launch an inquiry to dig deeper. There's no requirement though. Briefings give committees the chance to get the low-down of an issue from subject matter experts. This can be members of the public, a visiting overseas delegation, or as in this case, an Officer of Parliament - the Controller and Auditor-General. * RNZ's The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament's Office of the Clerk.

Waitangi Tribunal hears evidence against another ‘dangerous' principles-based bill
Waitangi Tribunal hears evidence against another ‘dangerous' principles-based bill

The Spinoff

time15-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Spinoff

Waitangi Tribunal hears evidence against another ‘dangerous' principles-based bill

An urgent hearing into the Regulatory Standards Bill saw lawyers representing more than 18,000 interested parties argue against the legislation that some fear is as 'dangerous' as the Treaty principles bill. A soon-to-be-introduced piece of legislation has been likened to 'constitutional warfare', with the potential to be as 'dangerous' to Māori-Crown relations as the Treaty principles bill. More than 18,000 New Zealanders signalled their opposition to the Regulatory Standards Bill (RSB) by registering their support for a claim to the Waitangi Tribunal led by Toitū te Tiriti, which was heard on Wednesday, a week after the bill's architect David Seymour announced it would be taken to cabinet to be approved for introduction to parliament by Monday, May 19. Originally scheduled for June 6, the Wai 3470 claim was brought forward in an urgent hearing this week following the announcement from Seymour, the minister for regulation, that the bill would be read by cabinet sooner than expected. The tribunal loses jurisdiction to consider bills once they are introduced to parliament. After cabinet approves the bill on May 19, it will be introduced to parliament and, if passed as expected, would come into effect by January 1, 2026 – with changes expected to create a framework that would undermine the application of Treaty principles, the tribunal heard. The bill's stated aim is 'to improve the quality of regulation in New Zealand so regulatory decisions are based on principles of good lawmaking and economic efficiency'. It sets a number of regulatory principles that all regulation should comply with, with an emphasis on personal liberty and property rights. A cabinet minute on the bill was released on Tuesday, with feedback included in the document from Te Puni Kōkiri that the current proposal 'does not recognise either the rights or interests of iwi, hapu and Māori' under the Treaty, nor does it consider the importance of the Treaty – a sentiment repeated in the cabinet paper by the Ministry of Justice. The Ministry for the Environment also noted the proposals 'conflict with the principles of New Zealand's environmental and climate systems which focus on balancing short-term and longer-term interests, and collective, rather than individual, interests'. Tamaki Legal lawyer Tania Waikato, acting as counsel for Toitū te Tiriti and multiple other claimants, appeared first before the tribunal with the message that the bill 'will create one of the most fundamental constitutional shifts in our legal history by elevating the RSB principles' into a position of 'constitutionally superior law' above Treaty principles. Waikato said her claimants' core concerns with the bill came down to two 'prongs': the first being that her claimants 'are prejudiced, and likely to be prejudiced' by the bill, as it 'will alter the constitutional arrangements between the Crown and Māori under te Tiriti by stealth, and without the consent by Māori as Treaty partner'. The second prong, Waikato said, was the 'fundamentally flawed' consultation process for the bill. She said the failure to meaningfully engage with Māori was 'defective, deceptive and inconsistent with te Tiriti and the principles of te Tiriti. 'These breaches are so deeply entrenched into the fabric of the RSB, that they cannot be remedied by simply inserting a Treaty principle into the RSB,' Waikato told the tribunal. 'The entire framework as a concept … must be rejected in its entirety.' Waikato read evidence from senior law lecturer Carwyn Jones, who wrote that the Crown's actions in drafting this bill had breached the Treaty in a matter that was 'as serious and as dangerous as [the Treaty principles bill'. That bill, alongside the draft proposals being considered by the tribunal, represented a 'combined legislative pincer movement' with the proposed legislation seeking to finish 'what the Treaty principles bill started', Jones said. Otago law professor Andrew Geddis also submitted evidence read by Waikato. Geddis highlighted the bill's first principle of the rule of law, that 'every person is equal before the law', arguing that 'may cause it to be applied in order to remove legislative clauses that provide different provisions for Māori, particularly Treaty provisions'. Geddis noted that there were 'often good reasons where differential treatment under the law not only is justifiable but actually morally required', as noted by the Human Rights Commission. Evidence from Hinemoa Elder specifically pointed to the Mental Health Act, and concerns that the passing of this bill would remove Māori mental health provisions under the RSB's equality principle. Filmmaker Chelsea Winstanley also submitted written evidence outlining her concerns that this principle would affect funding for te reo Māori and Māori-specific films. Speaking on behalf of Māori health leader Lady Tureiti Moxon, lawyer Roimata Smail argued the bill would entrench a 'health system that is institutionally racist'. Lawyer Tom Bennion, representing Te Roopu Waiora Trust, told the tribunal that Seymour was 'hostile to all differential treatment for Māori'. The minister's law would have the potential to 'wipe hundreds of millions of dollars off the value of historic settlements' if the law in practice failed to acknowledge disparities for Māori, Bennion said. Whāia Legal's Jamie Ferguson told the tribunal that while the bill was concerned with equal rights, there was no provision to ensure the act would not adversely affect the rights and interests of iwi and hapū. Asked by tribunal member David Williams about his experience in representing Māori legal issues, Ferguson said he had witnessed a change from 'good faith' engagement with Māori to simple 'box ticking'. 'I personally have a malaise and melancholy about it all,' Ferguson said. 'It's a tragedy. There's no other word for it.' Crown lawyer Jason Varuhas said arguments the tribunal had so far heard 'often proceeded off an unsustainable degree of certainty as to the adverse affects' of the bill. While it was correct that the Crown had not relied on expert evidence, it did not accept the opinions relied on by claimants as 'it is in the nature of opinion evidence, not primary fact', Varuhas said. Concerns of Treaty breaches do not amount to an actual breach, Varuhas noted. He quoted former prime minister Geoffrey Palmer's description of Aotearoa as the 'fastest law-maker in the west' – New Zealand has unique legislative powers which allow parliament to pass laws more quickly than other developed countries, and the government has the authority to use these processes. On concerns of prejudice against Māori, Varuhas said the bill 'cannot be analogised' as having as much power as the Bill of Rights Act, a constitutional statute. 'The Crown's position is the Regulatory Standards Bill does not invariably, or likely lead, to breach of the Treaty,' Varuhas said, 'or likely or invariably lead to prejudicial outcomes for Māori.' Williams asked Varuhas whether the Crown had acted in good faith by bringing the bill to cabinet ahead of the hearing's original June 6 date, to which Varuhas replied the Crown had acted as directed, but acknowledged that the tribunal and claimants' need to 'mobilise in such haste has not been ideal'. 'That's good faith?' Williams asked. 'We would say, for the reasons that we've given, that the Crown has acted in good faith,' Varuhas said. Lawyer Darrell Naden of Tamaki Legal responded to the Crown's comments at the end of the hearing, dismissing the claim that the RSB 'would not confer or impose on any legal rights or duties, or affect the validity of legislation'. Naden highlighted a requirement of the RSB that all law be measured against it as evidence of its intended scope. 'Why all the effort, the expense, so on and so forth, the haste to introduce this to the House, the haste to enactment … all points to how important this legislation is to the Crown. 'The claimants, despite hearing from the Crown today … continue to maintain that what is sought here is an ending of this RSB folly for the sake of a decent society, for the sake of future relations,' Naden said. The tribunal is expected to submit its findings today.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store