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Public Service Commission (New Zealand)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand public service department

This article needs to beupdated. The reason given is: Has not been updated to reflect all the changes set out in the public service act 2020. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(October 2022)

Public Service Commission
Te Kawa Mataaho (Māori)
Map
Agency overview
Formed1913
Preceding agency
  • State Services Commission
JurisdictionNew Zealand
HeadquartersLvl 10, Reserve Bank Bldg,
2 The Terrace,
Wellington
WELLINGTON 6140
Annual budgetVote Public Service
Total budget for 2019/20
Decrease$62,787,000[1]
Minister responsible
Agency executive
Websitewww.publicservice.govt.nz

ThePublic Service Commission (PSC;Māori:Te Kawa Mataaho), called theState Services Commission until 2020, is the central public service department of New Zealand charged with overseeing, managing, and improving the performance of thestate sector of New Zealand and its organisations.

The PSC's official responsibilities, as defined by theState Sector Act 1988,[2] include:

  • appointing and reviewingPublic Service chief executives,
  • promoting and developing senior leadership and management capability for the Public Service,
  • providing advice on the training and career development of staff in the Public Service,
  • reviewing the performance of each department,
  • providing advice on the allocation of functions to and between departments and other agencies,
  • providing advice on management systems, structures, and organisations in the Public Service andCrown entities,
  • promoting, developing, and monitoring equal employment opportunities policies and programmes, and
  • any other functions with respect to the administration and management of the Public Service, as directed by thePrime Minister.

The role of PSC, as described in the four year plan, is "to work with leaders across the State Services to change the way agencies think, organise and operate".[3]

Commissioner

[edit]

ThePublic Service Commissioner is the chief executive of the commission and has a range of responsibilities for thepublic service, the State Services and the widerstate sector.[4] The position has previously been known as the Public Service Commissioner, Chairman of the Public Service Commissioner, Chairman of the State Services Commission, and Chief Commissioner of the Public Service Commission. The current Public Service Commissioner is Brian Roche.[5]

Modern role

[edit]

The State Services Commissioner plays a central role in New Zealand's public service. One of the Commissioner's most visible roles is in the employment, supervision and dismissal of senior executives in individual Government departments; by preventing Ministers of the Crown from becoming personally involved in employment decisions, this acts as a safeguard against politicisation of the public service. The Commissioner also has power to issue codes of conduct for parts of the public service, to investigate Government departments, and to advise the Government on the organisation of the public service.

The Commissioner has a statutory duty to act independently of Ministerial direction, except in matters concerning the appointment and dismissal of Departmental chief executives.

Regarding the appointment of Departmental chief executives, the Commissioner plays a key role. The Commissioner is responsible for:

  • Notifying the responsible Minister or Ministers of the vacancy;
  • Advertising the position;
  • Assembling an interviewing panel which includes, at minimum, the Commissioner and his or her Deputy; the Commissioner may invite others in consultation with the Minister;
  • Recommending the preferred candidate to the Minister, who will then refer the recommendation to the Governor-General in Council.

The Governor-General in Council may override the Commissioner's recommendation by appointing a different person to the vacant executive post.

A chief executive may not be appointed for any longer than five years. Under the State Services Act, the Commissioner negotiates terms and conditions of employment with each Departmental chief executive, subject to the approval of the Prime Minister and the Minister of State Services. The Commissioner may also recommend that a given chief executive be reappointed when the executive's contract expires, though the Government is free to ignore such a recommendation.

The Commissioner is empowered, with the agreement of the Government, to dismiss a Departmental chief executive, "for just cause or excuse". That is, the Government is by law forbidden from firing any chief executive or instructing a Commissioner to do so, but has the power to retain a chief executive against the Commissioner's advice.

Appointment, dismissal and term of office

[edit]

The position of State Services Commissioner is one of the few positions in New Zealand's public service where Ministers are directly involved.

The appointment and dismissal procedures and the term of office are set forth in the State Sector Act 1988, as amended from time to time. Section 3 of the Act specifies that the Commissioner is to be appointed by theGovernor-General in Council on the recommendation of thePrime Minister. Section 13 limits the term of office to five years, though this term may be further reduced in theOrder in Council in which the appointment is made.

Section 17 of the Act lists a small number of circumstances in which the Commissioner is deemed to have resigned. Otherwise, the Commissioner is well protected. The Governor-General has no power to dismiss the Commissioner. The Governor-General may suspend the Commissioner under Section 16 for misbehaviour or incompetence, but must then explain why to theHouse of Representatives within seven sitting days; and even then the Commissioner is safe in his position unless the House resolves within three weeks after receiving the Governor-General's explanation to remove him or her from office. Otherwise, the Commissioner is restored to office.

History of the role

[edit]

At the end of the first decade of the twentieth century, New Zealand'spublic sector was widely considered to be inefficient and wasteful. The incomingMacKenzie administration launched the Hunt Commission on the civil service. The Hunt Commission recommended the establishment of a Board of Management underCabinet to have 'absolute and undisputed power' in 'all matters relating to the control and management of the Service – ... appointments, salaries, promotion, suspensions, dismissals, and indeed everything affecting officers – '.

Public Service Act 1912

[edit]

The Hunt Commission and its recommendations lead to the Public Service Act 1912 and the role of the Public Service Commissioner. The Act and the new Commissioner removed Ministers' direct involvement in appointments and personnel administration, separating the 'political' and 'administrative' functions, both in conduct of the Government's business and in management of the Public Service itself.

State Services Act 1962

[edit]

The State Services Act 1962 replaced the Public Service Commissioner with a multi-member Commission comprising a chairman and Commissioner. This point also marked a culture change towards a focus on political neutrality.

State Sector Act 1988

[edit]

TheState Sector Act 1988 reverted to having a single State Services Commissioner, adding the position of Deputy State Services Commissioner. Ministers were granted some role in the appointments of departmental chief executives. There was some concern at the time that this would revert the system to a pre-1912 state.

Following theReview of the Centre in 2001, the State Sector Amendment Act (No 2) 2004 and theCrown Entities Act 2004 extended the role of the Commissioner beyond the Public Service to the wider State Services (such asCrown entities, but notCrown Research Institutes), and beyond State Services to the wider state sector.[6]

List of commissioners

[edit]
NamePortraitTerm of office
As Public Service Commissioner
1Donald Robertson19131919
2William R. Morris19201923
3Paul Verschaffelt19231935
4John H. Boyes
(joint appointment)
19361938
5Thomas Mark
(joint appointment until 1938)
19361941
(4)John H. Boyes19411946
As Chairman of the Public Service Commission
6Dick Campbell19461953
7George T. Bolt19531958
8Leonard A. Atkinson19581962
As Chairman of the State Services Commission
(8)Leonard A. Atkinson19631966
9Adrian G. Rodda19671970
10Ian G. Lythgoe19711974
11Robin Williams19751981
12Mervyn Probine19811985
13Roderick Deane19851986
14Don Hunn19861987
As Chief Commissioner of the State Services Commission
(14)Don Hunn19881988
As State Services Commissioner
(14)Don Hunn19891997
15Michael Wintringham19972004
16Mark Prebble20042008
17Iain Rennie20082016
18Peter Hughes[7]20162020
As Public Service Commissioner
(18)Peter Hughes20202024
19Sir Brian Roche[8]2024incumbent

Deputy Commissioner

[edit]

The State Sector Act establishes the position of Deputy State Services Commissioner, who is appointed on the same terms and conditions as the Commissioner.

NamePortraitTerm of office
Deputy State Services Commissioner
Rebecca Kitteridge[9]2023incumbent

Ministers for the Public Service

[edit]
Key

  National  Labour

No.NamePortraitTerm of OfficePrime Minister
As Minister of State Services
1Keith Holyoake20 December 19639 February 1972Holyoake
2Jack Marshall9 February 19728 December 1972Marshall
3Bob Tizard8 December 197210 September 1974Kirk
4Arthur Faulkner10 September 197412 December 1975Rowling
5Peter Gordon12 December 197513 December 1978Muldoon
6David Thomson13 December 197826 July 1984
7Stan Rodger26 July 19849 February 1990Lange
Palmer
8Clive Matthewson9 February 19902 November 1990
Moore
9Bill Birch2 November 199029 November 1993Bolger
10Paul East29 November 199316 December 1996
11Jenny Shipley16 December 199612 September 1997
(10)Paul East12 September 19978 December 1997
12Simon Upton8 December 199710 December 1999Shipley
13Trevor Mallard10 December 199919 October 2005Clark
14Annette King19 October 20052 November 2007
15David Parker5 November 200719 November 2008
16Tony Ryall19 November 200813 December 2011Key
17Jonathan Coleman14 December 20118 October 2014
18Paula Bennett8 October 201426 October 2017
English
19Chris Hipkins26 October 20176 November 2020Ardern
As Minister for the Public Service
(19)Chris Hipkins6 November 202025 January 2023Ardern
20Andrew Little1 February 202327 November 2023Hipkins
21Nicola Willis27 November 202324 January 2025Luxon
22Judith Collins24 January 2025present

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Total Appropriations for Each Vote".Budget 2019. The Treasury.
  2. ^"State Sector Act 1988".New Zealand Legislation. Parliamentary Counsel Office.
  3. ^"Four Year Plan 2015-2019". State Services Commission. 22 June 2015.
  4. ^State Services Commissioner – the Office, Public Service Commission, Last updated 28 June 2002 (appears to have been updated more recently though)
  5. ^"Te Kawa Mataaho - Our leaders". Retrieved26 March 2024.
  6. ^Role of the State Services Commissioner, State Services Commission, Last updated 31 March 2008
  7. ^Kirk, Stacey (3 May 2016)."Education boss Peter Hughes named as new State Services Commissioner". Retrieved30 September 2016.
  8. ^"Sir Brian Roche named as new public service commissioner".RNZ News. 14 October 2024. Retrieved14 October 2024.
  9. ^Cite error: The named reference:2 was invoked but never defined (see thehelp page).

External links

[edit]
New Zealand public service departments
Departments
Departmental agencies
Interdepartmental executive boards
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
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