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Ministry considers first parent prosecutions over school absences

Author
Jaime Cunningham,
Publish Date
Fri, 10 Oct 2025, 5:00am
 Photo / Getty Images.
Photo / Getty Images.

Ministry considers first parent prosecutions over school absences

Author
Jaime Cunningham,
Publish Date
Fri, 10 Oct 2025, 5:00am

Months after announcing tougher school attendance rules, the Ministry of Education is now considering prosecutions against parents in about 15 cases - and says the threat alone is working in some instances.

Associate Education Minister David Seymour announced the tougher stance in May, targeting parents who won鈥檛 send their children to school, rather than those who can鈥檛.

Parents face fines of $30 a day, up to $300 for a first offence, and as much as $3000 for repeat cases.

It comes after an ERO report found 60% of students attended school regularly - the highest since 2020.

The Government aims to lift that to 80% by 2030.

Seymour says prosecutions will send a message to parents neglecting their legal duty.

鈥淐hildren who don鈥檛 attend school get less opportunities. In some cases it鈥檚 actually parents who are costing children their future,鈥 he said.

鈥淔or some parents, the threat of prosecution will be enough to make them take attendance seriously. For others, it will take actual prosecution.鈥

鈥淥nce the first prosecutions are made, I suspect the latter will change their minds.鈥

Ministry operations leader Sean Teddy said no cases have yet been confirmed for 2025, but several are being reviewed.

鈥淭here have already been cases where the deterrent effect of a potential prosecution has resulted in children being re-enrolled and attending school.鈥

鈥淭hese were long-running, complex and challenging cases for schools, attendance services and Ministry regional staff,鈥 Teddy added.

The Ministry鈥檚 new guidance outlines the evidence required before cases can proceed, including attendance records, school support plans and any warning notices issued.

Teddy said the Ministry鈥檚 role is to support schools and attendance services by working with families to re-engage children in education.

鈥淧rosecution is considered a last resort, used only when all other efforts have failed and there is clear evidence of parental or guardian unwillingness to comply with their legal obligation to ensure their children attend school.鈥

Teddy said the rules around prosecutions for non-attendance have not changed.

鈥淗owever, as part of our work to improve attendance, we鈥檝e received feedback from school leaders that they would like the Ministry to take a more active role in leading prosecutions for serious cases of non-attendance and/or non-enrolment.鈥

Seymour and the Ministry were unable to comment on specific prosecution cases.

Jaime Cunningham is a Christchurch-based reporter with a focus on education, social issues and general news. She joined 九一星空无限talk ZB in 2023, after working as a sports reporter at the Christchurch Star.

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