Weekend Herald

Health executives rack up millions on travel

- Natalie Akoorie

Senior health executives are globetrott­ing to exotic destinatio­ns on taxpayer money, and have spent millions of dollars on travel, food, meetings and hotels in three years.

The expenses, obtained by the Weekend Herald under the Official Informatio­n Act, have been labelled “extravagan­t” and “indulgent”.

A nurses’ union is calling for the Ministry of Health to rein in the spending, saying DHB executives should be leading by example.

Cities and countries visited in the name of health included New York, Washington, Minneapoli­s, Honolulu, Rome, Milan, Geneva, Switzerlan­d, London, Shanghai, France, Canada, Australia and more.

The figures show almost $3 million was spent on flights, food and accommodat­ion between July 2014 and June last year by 207 executives across the country’s 20 district health boards.

It comes after the Herald revealed in December DHB chief executives racked up an additional $1.2m during the same three financial years.

In real terms, $4.2m could pay most of the running costs of a hospital ward for a year, buy much-needed lifesaving equipment, or pay for 123 heart bypass operations.

At the time, Health Minister David Clark said he wanted evidence the spending was worthwhile, and a former DHB chief executive called internatio­nal travel an unnecessar­y luxury.

Now the New Zealand Nurses Organisati­on has called for measures to prevent “precious health dollars being squandered” on non-core health services.

“It is concerning, particular­ly the amount spent on internatio­nal travel costs,” industrial adviser for DHBs Lesley Harry said. “It does appear on the face of it to be indulgent and we would expect that executive DHB

We would expect that executive DHB staff lead by example. Lesley Harry, NZ Nurses Organisati­on

staff lead by example.”

The Weekend Herald’s special investigat­ion into spending within DHBs also revealed last month that chief executives, their senior executive teams and board members — about 444 people — cost the country around $66m a year in salaries.

The newest figures show Counties Manukau District Health Board’s leadership team, between 10 and 12 people, spent the most since July 2014, at $550,694.

The highest average spend per executive at the DHB was $18,304 in one year, and collective­ly they spent $201,000 in the 2015/16 financial year alone.

Counties Manukau acting chief executive Gloria Johnson said expenses at the DHB were more closely scrutinise­d since mid-last year, now requiring CEO sign-off for all internatio­nal travel including transtasma­n, and as a result were markedly lower for the first half of this financial year, at $22,993.

The extra scrutiny coincided with the launch of an investigat­ion by Waikato District Health Board into its then chief executive Dr Nigel Murray, who was found to have breached travel policies when he spent $218,000 of taxpayer money in three years.

It also followed changes to Counties Manukau’s executive leadership team including the departure of chief executive Geraint Martin and four executives, whose jobs were then rolled into one position.

Johnson said the costs of domestic travel increased from 2014 because three executives were national chairs or in senior DHB leadership positions and needed to travel to Wellington regularly.

She defended internatio­nal travel, saying it enabled executives to visit and observe programmes in similar health systems.

Only one other DHB, Hawke’s Bay, spent more than $10,000 per executive each year, with an average spend of $11,394. Other DHB executives spent between $2000 and $7000 each year.

Expenses for all DHBs included domestic and internatio­nal flights, meals, accommodat­ion, conference registrati­on, profession­al associatio­n and membership fees, practising certificat­es for executives who were also health profession­als, mileage, relocation costs and equipment.

Craig Climo, a former DHB chief executive for 17 years, said there was a culture of expectatio­n among public health executives.

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