Second major care reform Bill passes first reading
Hon Anne Tolley
Minister for Social Development
13
December 2016 Media Statement
Second major care reform Bill passes first reading
Social Development Minister Anne Tolley says that a Bill enabling the second stage of major state care reforms has passed its first reading in Parliament.
The reforms are part of the overhaul of care and protection, aimed at improving the long-term life outcomes for New Zealand’s most vulnerable children and young people.
“The current system is not delivering the futures that our children deserve,” says Mrs Tolley.
“It needs to be completely transformed if the needs and safety of children and young people are to be placed at the very heart of all decision-making. The significant reforms in the Children, Young Persons, and Their Families (Oranga Tamariki) Legislation Bill provide the foundations for this new way of operating.”
Proposals in the Bill which will reform the Children, Young Persons, and Their Families Act 1989 Act, include:
• Allowing young people to remain in care
or return to care up until the age of 21, with transition
support and advice available up to 25
• Enabling
the establishment of an information sharing framework to
keep vulnerable children and young people safe from
harm
• Extending the youth justice system to
include lower-risk 17 year olds
The Bill also includes changes to the purposes and principles of the Act to:
•
place children and young people at the centre of
decision-making and consider them within the context of
their families, whanau, hapu and iwi and broader networks
and communities
• support families, whanau,
hapu, iwi and caregivers and enable them to provide a safe,
stable and loving home
• strengthen the
relationships between children and young people and their
family, whanau, hapu, and iwi, especially between
siblings.
When making decisions under the CYPF Act, decision-makers will need to consider:
• The
family, whanau and usual caregiver are strengthened and
supported to enable them to care for the child or young
person
• Wherever possible the relationship
between the child or young person and their family, whanau
and usual caregiver is respected, supported and
strengthened, and
• The family, whanau, hapu, iwi
and usual caregiver have a voice and a role in decisions
made about the child or young person.
The Bill amends the purposes and principles of the Act to give explicit recognition to key Māori concepts of mana tamaiti / tamariki, whakapapa and whanaungatanga when working with tamariki Māori.
There are specific measures to recognise and reflect a commitment to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, including a requirement for the Ministry to develop strategic partnerships with community organisations, iwi and Māori organisations, which is already underway.
The Bill also includes the establishment of enhanced complaints processes for children, young people and their families, whanau and caregivers, in addition to separate work on a transparent independent complaints body.
“The government is committed to building a care system which listens to the voice of the child,” says Mrs Tolley.
“Every decision that is made must be in the best interests of the child or young person. Their safety, and their right to have a loving and stable home must always come first.
“It is important that the public, professionals, and most importantly young people with experience in care have an opportunity to have their say on this Bill. That’s why alongside the Select Committee process, I will be continuing to actively engage and meet with communities, iwi, and Maori organisations.”
Notes to editors:
A new operating model for state care,
under the new Ministry for Vulnerable Children, Oranga
Tamariki is being developed, to begin in April 2017. It will
be focused on prevention, intensive intervention, care
support, youth justice, and transition support into
adulthood, with a much greater emphasis on harm and trauma
prevention and early intervention.
Initial reforms have
already passed into law which:
• Extend the age of
state care and protection to a young person’s 18th
birthday
• Ensure the views of children and young
people are taken into account as part of decision making at
an individual level and in the development of services and
policy
• Support the establishment of an independent
youth advocacy service, and
• Enable the broader range
of professionals with specialist skills who will widen the
expertise within the new model to perform some functions
under the Act. Social workers would still be the main
professionals responsible for carrying out these
functions.