Otago Daily Times

Police money management slammed

- PHIL PENNINGTON

WELLINGTON: Police have been providing unreliable informatio­n to Parliament about spending of tens of millions of dollars on contractor­s and consultant­s.

The weakness of police systems — until mid2020 at least — have been revealed in an internal report withheld by police from RNZ for more than a year.

The Government ordered agencies in 2018 to be much more transparen­t about the spending after controvers­y erupted in 2017.

But two years later, police processes were ‘‘unstructur­ed, inefficien­t and also fairly subjective’’, the April 2020 report said.

The report — newly released under the OIA — said without a clear and coordinate­d process ‘‘it was difficult to identify and verify the completene­ss and accuracy of police’s C and C [contractor and consultant] use and costs’’.

Police were not counting their spending on fixedterm or temporary contractor­s to backfill or support existing roles, which cost almost $7 million in 201819. If they had, their total C and C spend that year would have been $51 million, not the $44 million they reported to a parliament­ary select committee.

In 201920, they reported spending $61 million on contractor­s and consultant­s, and $52 million last year.

Back in 201718, the reported bill was just $34 million. Controvers­y broke out that year about reliance on contractor­s by the wider public service, which led to the tougher guidelines. But the report found the police still lacked any coordinate­d way to decrease their use.

‘‘There may be pockets of effort, specific initiative­s and isolated work to address this, however there is poor informatio­n available to progress any improvemen­t — as evidenced by a lack of reporting on the total cost of people, procuremen­t and contract management activities.’’

Police withheld the 2020 report from RNZ for a year on the grounds that ‘‘the integrity and effectiven­ess of the internal audit and assurance process’’ was at stake.

They knocked back RNZ’s requests twice, saying they needed to ensure staff gave frank feedback, and that releasing the report would hinder that.

RNZ appealed to the ombudsman, arguing it was in the public interest to know what police spending processes were like.

Police then reconsider­ed and ‘‘with the passage of time’’ have now released the report.

They did not initially comment at all on the report’s findings that their processes were weak.

Asked what they had since done about the shortcomin­gs, they issued a twoline statement:

‘‘Since the 2020 Contractor­s and Consultant­s Assurance review was received, work is under way to consolidat­e how Police procures, manages and reports on contractor­s and consultant­s.

‘‘These activities are reviewing the current systems, identifyin­g any technical constraint­s, and streamlini­ng and futureproo­fing our processes in alignment with our longer term investment strategies.’’

RNZ has regularly reported the contractor­s and consultant­s spending at major agencies since 2018 on the understand­ing the figures were now more accurate because they followed the Public Service Commission guidelines.

Core agencies must follow the guidelines; noncore ones, like police, can choose to.

The 2020 report showed police were not following them, and knew by late 2018 they had to pay more attention to contractin­g.

Police gave the nod to government rules around accountabi­lity and valueformo­ney but in practice did not follow them much; only 14% of spending on external resources in 201819 used purchase orders, which are the most robust way of ensuring accountabi­lity and value for money.

Police knew their system was weak but had not sought any feedback from the PSC or Treasury on it. — RNZ

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