The New Zealand Herald

Police fight for better pay impacts us all

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numbers supplied to RNZ through the Official Informatio­n Act (OIA) have revealed that police abandoned 572,037 of the cases reported to them last year. That is more than half of all cases reported to police. The numbers in the OIA also give insight into the volume of work police do in New Zealand and how that volume is trending upwards: in total, police received 962,521 emergency calls and reports in 2023, up 50 per cent from 2019. The OIA also showed that, of the cases reported last year, 179,957 were closed without any investigat­ion at all.

Another 244,312 cases were abandoned after all “reasonable” avenues of inquiry were exhausted, meaning police had done everything they could but had not identified a suspect. The remaining 147,768 cases were abandoned at police discretion: police decided not to pursue the investigat­ion despite there still being avenues. A total of 15 per cent of cases were closed at police discretion in 2023, doubling from 7.5 per cent in 2019.

At the same time, police officers in New Zealand are locked in lengthy negotiatio­ns over wage increases, with no agreement in sight. Last month, the Government made an offer including a $5000 wage increase backdated from November 1, 2023, and a 5.25 per cent in allowances. That would have been followed by a general wage increase of 4 per cent from September 1, 2024, with an allowance increase of 4 per cent, followed by another pay rise of 4 per cent from July 1, 2025, accompanie­d by an allowance increase of 4 per cent.

One officer labelled the offer as “insulting”. Struggling to make ends meet, some officers rely on the kindness of the public. In Canterbury, police officers are collecting food donations for colleagues “struggling” with the cost of living.

“The Government should be embarrasse­d that cops need food donations to live. No one I know joins a job to go into a food bank queue,” a serving officer said.

The fight for better pay has also reached a new level with it receiving support from an unlikely source: a senior Black Power member.

Denis O’Reilly — a lifetime Black Power member — has publicly backed the country’s sworn police officers to be recognised for the work they do, and the dangers they face, by being rewarded with a pay rise.

O’Reilly told the Herald he feared that if officers didn’t receive the pay bump they deserved, it would make the job increasing­ly unattracti­ve and could lead to a drop in the quality and integrity of recruits.

Last month, the Herald revealed that dozens of frustrated frontline police are waiting for sign-off to head to Australia for higher-paying jobs, thousands of dollars in tax-free sign-on fees as well as relocation costs of up to $25,000.

New Zealand’s police force is already under a lot of pressure, as these latest numbers show, and the issue has a direct impact on the lives and safety of everyone in New Zealand.

If we lose officers because they move to Australia or decide to change careers, the thin blue line will only get thinner.

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