
More than 100 roles are set to be cut from the聽聽and Department of Internal Affairs in the latest sweep of聽.
The Public Service Association, the union representing public servants, states 79 roles are proposed to go from Customs, with 41 on the chopping block at the Department of Internal Affairs; a number of the roles are called 鈥榗ritical鈥 and 鈥榝rontline鈥 by the PSA.
According to the union, which gets consulted on the proposals, 11 staff at the Department of Internal Affairs鈥 Digital Safety Group will go, including investigation and advisory roles in child exploitation and countering violent extremism.
The DIA鈥檚 proposal would also see the anti-money laundering group slashed from 51 people to 30, with 24 roles set to be disestablished and three to be created for investigations.
The union describes the roles set to be chopped as being under a team supervising more than 5,000 financial institutions, including casinos, law firms, accountants, and real estate agents.
The Auckland team would lose six staff, with Wellington proposed to lose four, and a number of other jobs on the chopping block in service design and practice.
DIA鈥檚 strategy and capability group is proposed to be disestablished entirely.
Job cuts at Customs include a plan to remove 22 roles from the trade, revenue, and compliance service delivery team - a majority of which in Auckland and Christchurch. This proposal would see 11 out of 15 roles in the assurance team slashed, with the Christchurch assurance group disestablished in its entirety.
12 jobs in border operations at customs are on the line, six in Auckland, five in Christchurch, and one in Wellington.
The PSA states the plan includes disestablishing Christchurch鈥檚 supervising customs officer role, meaning staff based in Christchurch would be required to report to a specialist in Auckland, rather than someone locally.
- Class warfare: Education Ministry cuts 'strike at heart', Govt promises to reinvest
- Where public sector job cuts are coming from so far
- Public sector cuts: Tertiary Education Commission and Crown Law to slash roles
Meanwhile, seven jobs under 鈥榦perations, intelligence, investigations, and enforcement鈥 are said to be on the line, including the Chief Customs Officer and two out of three detector-dog training positions in Auckland.
5 roles dealing with maritime customs operations would be cut, one each from Auckland, Whangarei, Gisborne, Timaru, and Invercargill.
The PSA said in a statement 鈥渢his will remove the daily Customs presence from Whangarei, Gisborne, Timaru and Invercargill ports and transfer the work to Opua, Napier, Lyttleton and Dunedin ports respectively.鈥
The announcements come on the back of 33 Customs staff accepting voluntary redundancy or early retirement in recent months.
The agency had previously confirmed it had been identifying and implementing ways to bring down costs, including travel, accommodation, contractor and consultant spends.
Customs is one of many agencies urged to find 6.5 per cent cost-savings in its books, in relation to the聽Government鈥檚 directive to find savings across the public sector. For many other agencies, the scramble to find 6.5 per cent savings has led to聽job reduction proposals.
Customs confirmed staff are being consulted on 鈥渇urther proposed organisation changes鈥 to meet the Government鈥檚 asks on cost savings and future cost pressures 鈥渨hile ensuring Customs retains the ability to deliver frontline border services and critical supporting functions as well as delivering on Government priorities鈥.
鈥淔inal decisions will be made once the consultation process has been completed and feedback has been assessed,鈥 the agency said in a statement, adding final decisions will be provided聽by the end of May.
In a prior statement to 九一星空无限, Customs confirmed further options were being considered, including reviewing existing vacancies.
Staff are being informed that consultation begins this afternoon.
Under the tab 鈥渨hat we do鈥 on the New Zealand Customs website, the agency describes its main purpose as 鈥渢o stop any dangers, hazards and threats entering New Zealand鈥.
鈥淭his includes everything from illegal weapons, objectionable material and drugs, to dangerous people and hazardous substances - anything that might threaten New Zealanders and their livelihoods,鈥 the agency says in its own description, adding it also helps 鈥減rotect and nurture鈥 our economy.
鈥淲e collect duties, excise taxes and the goods and services tax (GST) due on imports and exports. We protect New Zealand businesses against illegal trade and copyright infringements, and we enforce import and export restrictions,鈥 the agency adds, describing itself as 鈥淣ew Zealand鈥檚 gatekeepers鈥.
Last Wednesday saw the Ministry of Education and children鈥檚 ministry聽Oranga Tamariki聽announce proposals that would see more than 1,000 jobs culled from the two agencies alone.
It was called a聽鈥渂rutal day鈥澛燽y those opposing the cuts, including the Public Service Association.
Azaria Howell is a Wellington-based multimedia reporter with an eye across the region. She joined 九一星空无限 in 2022 and has a keen interest in city council decisions, public service agency reform and transport.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE