Nanaia Mahuta, withdraw your bill and debate something useful
Nanaia Mahuta’s Charter Schools (Application of Official Information and Ombudsmen Acts) Bill would represent a
pointless overreach into private management decisions, says ACT Leader David Seymour.
“It would be an overreach for the government to force a private organisation to respond to OIA requests. The government
contracts with many groups, such as building companies, but they’re not subject to the OIA.
“There are already strict provisions in place to ensure that partnership schools are even more accountable than state
schools. They publicise their results every year, and report to the Ministry of Education and the Partnership School Authorisation Board every quarter,
against contracted performance standards.
“As schools of choice, they are directly accountable to families – they have to attract and retain willing students in
order to receive funding. And unlike state schools, failing partnership schools can be shut down, a provision that has
already been used in one case.
“The truth is that this Bill is cynically motivated so that opponents of partnership schools (who have previously used
legal proceedings and blacklisting of partnership school teachers and students) will bombard them with OIA requests,
which are time-consuming to process even for well-resourced government departments.
“We wonder whether Nanaia Mahuta has discussed this reality with her constituents at the Tainui-affiliated Kia Ata Mai
school in Hamilton. If she hasn’t, she should.
“The failure of Chris Hipkins’ charter school abolition bill yesterday should have been a clear signal that the
union-driven opposition to these schools is going nowhere.
“Nanaia Mahuta should withdraw her bill so we can debate one of the many actually useful members’ bills, like the End of
Life Choice Bill for example.”
ENDS