Taranaki Daily News

Govt OIA breaches ‘fuelling mistrust’

- Nikki Macdonald

Government media response teams are breaching official informatio­n laws and need ‘‘a fundamenta­l cultural change’’, a new report concludes.

Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier has released his follow-up to the 2015 review of the government’s Official Informatio­n Act (OIA) practices.

Overall, he concluded that the 12 government agencies surveyed were now more transparen­t, with more informatio­n proactivel­y released.

However, he found multiple law breaches in the way media questions were treated. While most government agencies have separate teams dealing with questions from journalist­s, those requests are still covered by the OIA.

But the ‘‘apparent dismissal by some agency media teams of the OIA legislatio­n which underpins their work’’ was fuelling mistrust of public agencies, Boshier found.

In multiple cases, media teams failed to specify the reason for refusing informatio­n, or let the journalist know they could complain to the Ombudsman. Questions were also ‘‘fobbed off’’ to a formal OIA process.

Boshier called for an end to overly complicate­d OIA processes that resulted in routine 20-day waits.

‘‘It is not so much the law as the process that department­s follow. Their process can be as swift as they choose to make it, or it can be as difficult and painful.’’

Boshier also raised concerns about a lack of OIA training, and found that all 12 agencies had problems with record-keeping and informatio­n management. Both were issues previously highlighte­d in former chief ombudsman Dame Beverley Wakem’s 2015 report.

‘‘There has been some improvemen­t, but the improvemen­ts have not been profound enough,’’ Boshier said. ‘‘There is a lack of appreciati­on of leadership of how fundamenta­lly important this act is.’’

The pandemic response emphasised the importance of the public knowing how decisions were made, he said.

Boshier applauded the Public Service Commission for its commitment to improving OIA compliance. However, he called for government department chief executives to be held accountabl­e for their agency’s OIA work by including OIA measures in their performanc­e criteria.

Public Service Commission­er Peter Hughes said agencies dealt with media queries in good faith and as fast as possible.

 ?? ?? Peter Boshier
Peter Boshier

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