Cost Recovery - Cabinet Paper on Regulations
This Cabinet paper has been prepared by New Zealand Police.
It seeks Cabinet’s approval for the policy content of regulations to set fees for the use of the Police Vetting Service.
On 19 October 2016, the Cabinet Committee on State Sector Reform and Expenditure Control approved the Cabinet paper. This decision was subsequently confirmed by Cabinet.
Redacted information is withheld under section 9(2)(f)(iv) of the Official Information Act 1982.
Annual report on Police data quality (September 2016)
Recording and coding of crime and incident reports by Police staff is subject to constant scrutiny. In addition to local assurance checks, key dimensions of data quality are regularly monitored at the national level, as part of a focus on ensuring consistent application of New Zealand Police’s National Recording Standard and case management process. Specific audits of crime recording and coding decisions are also undertaken as part of a comprehensive, national, Data Quality Audit Plan.
This report highlights findings from the 2015/16 Data Quality Audit Plan, covering the period from July 2015 to June 2016.
Revised School Traffic Safety Team Manual
November 2016
A revised edition of the School Traffic Safety Team Manual was launched recently by the NZTA. All schools that have School Traffic Safety Teams (i.e. school patrols, school wardens or bus wardens) are being sent a hardcopy. The manual is also available online on the NZTA Education Portal.
Commission of Inquiry quarterly report - July to September 2016
This report is an update on the progress made in implementing the Police-related recommendations from the 2007 Commission of Inquiry into Police Conduct (COI). Police is responsible for implementing 47 of the COI’s 60 recommendations. In line with Cabinet requirements, an update on COI progress is provided every three months.
The report categorises Police’s progress depending upon whether recommendations have been actioned, solutions implemented (with ongoing monitoring), or fully completed. The intention is to ensure each of the Police-related recommendations are fully embedded, and are having the desired effect, by March 2017.
Annual Report 2016
In this Annual Report you will read what Police planned to do and what we actually did. Highlights in the year 2015 /16 included:
- Continuing to transform policing through Policing Excellence: the Future and the four underlying work programmes: Safer Whanau, Service Delivery Model, Evidence Based Policing, and the Police High Performance Framework.
- Real strides have been made in identifying and embedding solutions to the Commission of Inquiry (COI) recommendations and Police is well on track to deliver the required cultural and other changes identified in the COI report.
- During the year Police delivered a number of major operations to protect New Zealanders, visitors and the country’s reputation as safe and secure place to visit and conduct business.
- Police are continuing to put prevention at the forefront , and victims at the heart , of everything we do. We are also maintaining a high level of public trust and confidence.
- Police continue to work in collaboration with partner agencies and will continue to contribute to a number of cross-government initiatives to improve the lives of New Zealanders.
- Police has continued to equip its staff with tools and technology that enable them to spend less time behind a desk and more time out in their communities, where they can make the biggest difference in preventing crime.
- Police also made further progress in ensuring that the demographic profile of its staff reflects that of the communities it polices .