The Press

Spying victims demand change

- Liz McDonald liz.mcdonald@stuff.co.nz

Southern Response has a new chairman, but spied-on customers are demanding cultural change over its ‘‘appalling’’ surveillan­ce tactics.

Former Christchur­ch City councillor and Canterbury District Health Board chairman Alister James will replace Ross Butler, who stepped down from the Crownowner insurance claims company this week after a damning report on the hiring of security firm Thompson and Clark for surveillan­ce work.

Those spied-on say a change of culture is needed at Southern Response and a new chairman may not be enough.

Christchur­ch Regenerati­on Minister Megan Woods said James was ‘‘widely respected’’ and would bring experience to the role he has until mid-2019.

He had been through the Canterbury earthquake experience with his own home, and also chaired Christchur­ch City Holdings, Nga¯

Hau e Wha¯ marae and the Greater Christchur­ch Public Transport Joint Committee.

Southern Response, formed to settle the claims of failed insurer AMI, hired Thompson and Clark from 2014 to 2017. It was one of several government organisati­ons to use its services.

The report said the security firm infiltrate­d and recorded groups of Southern Response claimants, originally to counter documented safety threats to staff but later to protect its reputation. Day-to-day dealings with Thomson and Clark were handled mainly by Southern Response’s communicat­ions team.

Former Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee has stood by Southern Response’s actions as a legitimate way of protecting staff, and said Butler was badly treated. Woods, however, said the report drew the distinctio­n between safety concerns and ‘‘secretly infiltrati­ng claimants’ legal meetings for the purposes of protecting the organisati­on’s brand’’.

Many senior employees aware of the surveillan­ce have since left Southern Response. Former chief executive Peter Rose shifted to Australia to work as an insurance consultant, and communicat­ions general manager Linda Falwasser works in strategic public relations for another organisati­on. Files supplied to one claimant by the privacy commission­er and shared with The Press include dozens of Southern Response emails about individual­s, including photograph­s, a vehicle registrati­on number, and copies of social media postings.

Slides from a Thompson and Clark digital presentati­on to Southern Response staff included the names and photograph­s of certain claimants said to pose a threat.

Peter Glasson, who co-founded a lobby group supporting Southern Response customers and one of those spied on, said a poor culture appeared to go right through the company.

‘‘It’s an organisati­on that needs new management and new leadership. It’s not just the chairman, it needs to go further.’’

He, and others who organised groups to fight their claims, considered they were being watched despite Southern Response saying they did not target individual­s, Glasson said.

Cam Preston, who was visited at one stage by police while fighting his claim, said they had been vindicated by the report, and all those responsibl­e should be held accountabl­e.

‘‘The people of Christchur­ch are a bit sick of this line that there doesn’t need to be accountabi­lity when lessons are learned. Sometimes there needs to be consequenc­es.’’

Insurance advocate Ali Jones said she was pleased the ‘‘appalling behaviour’’ had been exposed by the report, and appalled Brownlee thought Southern Response’s activities were acceptable.

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Alister James
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