The Post

Coffee perks cut, more redundanci­es brewing

- Anna Whyte

Staffing cuts at Oranga Tamariki – the agency tasked with protecting vulnerable children – haven’t been ruled out, as more and more public service jobs and perks are slashed to meet the Government’s cost-saving targets.

Oranga Tamariki chief executive Chappie Te Kani told staff on Friday further changes were needed to meet its 6.5% savings target, which could include a reduction in staff numbers.

It may also mean some contracts and programmes will be stopped or scaled down. “Back office” hiring has been frozen and all non-essential travel has already been stopped.

Oranga Tamariki is already facing frontline staffing issues – down 160 social workers. It was among the ministries explicitly excluded from having to deliver an efficiency dividend, instead expected “to redirect savings found in the back office into frontline services”.

Asked to confirm where the savings would go, a spokespers­on would only say it was “committed to supporting the Government’s priorities and the savings exercise”.

“Any decisions on savings will be subject to the Budget 2024 process.”

Children’s Minister Karen Chhour said all agencies were directed to reduce spending “as the entire public service needs to deliver better results for every taxpayer dollar”.

She was assured frontline managers and their direct reports would not be part of the process “and any potential changes would be designed to ensure minimal disruption to staff working directly with children”.

Labour children’s spokespers­on Willow-Jean Prime said she was concerned about the impact on vulnerable children, “who the Crown is responsibl­e to care for”.

“I want to ensure that those any savings that are made are not going to reduce services, programmes, and the provision of things that our tamariki in care require, [and] those savings are retained within the organisati­on and not taken back into the central pool,” she said.

Chhour said the social worker vacancies was a concern and she was “working hard to make changes in this space to ensure every social worker has the tools and resources they need to do their jobs”.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Social Developmen­t (MSD), which employs about 9000 people, has turned off the plunger coffee supply, estimating a savings of $70,000 a year. Instant coffee, tea and hot chocolate are still provided.

MSD was also considerin­g voluntary redundanci­es and taking a “careful approach to vacancies”, Nadine Kilmister, deputy chief executive, people and capability, said.

Ministry of Housing & Urban Developmen­t staff have been told there may be redundanci­es over the coming months. Chief executive Andrew Crisp has also proposed changes to the senior leadership team, while a spokespers­on said recruitmen­t only continued for critical staff and “further workforce reductions will be required”.

Decisions would be made by mid-March and a new structure would take effect from early April, the spokespers­on said.

The Department of Internal Affairs confirmed there would be “organisati­onal change” affecting positions and staff. It has closed longer-term vacancies and is “carefully considerin­g every recruitmen­t decision”.

NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi is eyeing more than 100 jobs of those working on programmes the Government directed to end.

It is consulting on three “change processes”, affecting about 110 fulltime-equivalent roles. It already has a pause on recruitmen­t, other than roles deemed business critical.

– For more public service updates, read thepost.co.nz

 ?? DAVID UNWIN/THE POST ?? Finance Minister Nicola Willis and Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon.
DAVID UNWIN/THE POST Finance Minister Nicola Willis and Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon.

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