Investigation into employment of Madeleine Setchel
Investigation into Public Service recruitment and employment of Madeleine Setchell
The President of the Institute of Public Administration New Zealand (IPANZ), Ross Tanner, commented today on the issues raised by the reports from the State Services Commissioner and Mr Don Hunn into matters arising from the Public Service recruitment and employment of Madeleine Setchell.
IPANZ is a voluntary, non-profit organisation committed to promoting improvements in public policy and management in the public sector in New Zealand, and to increase public understanding of the work undertaken in the public sector. The Institute wrote a background paper and submission for Mr Hunn to assist him with his inquiry.
Mr Tanner commented that there were three key points made in the submission, which remain relevant:
1. “There is a balance to be found
between the need for Ministers to be advised or consulted
about certain employment matters, and the need to preserve
the political neutrality of the Public Service
- a Chief Executive must make the final call on public service employment matters
- no one – including a Minister or political advisor in a Minister’s office – should directly or indirectly solicit or endeavour to influence a Chief Executive with respect to employment matters
- if a Chief Executive requests it, a person – such as a Minister – may give information or advice, or make representations, to the Chief Executive in relation to employment matters.
The Chief Executive may in certain
situations decide that he or she should ‘consult’ the
Minister about an employment matter. If the Minister is
consulted there will be a corresponding obligation for the
Chief Executive to consider and take the Minister’s view
into account in his/ her deliberation on the decision. The
Chief Executive should initiate any such consultation and
need to be clear of its purpose before doing so.
2. “Conflicts of interest will occur in
the New Zealand context and will have to be managed
appropriately in each case
It goes without
saying that we are a small population and that the number of
people who work in the Public service and the wider State
Services are few. Conflicts of interest do and will occur
frequently in our small community. They happen from time to
time in terms of personal and family relationships. There is
however a self- regulating ethos readily apparent in the
Public Service whereby individual public servants
(particularly in senior positions) maintain strict
confidentiality and discretion in terms of their work and
business dealings, keeping them very well protected and
separated from their personal lives. This degree of trust
in individuals needs to be reinforced (with appropriate
publicity and training) but also respected. There is equally
a danger in terms of being seen to overreact to particular
incidents or situations. Above all there needs to be
guidance both available and spoken about within departments
to ensure that incoming staff understand and respect the
required code of conduct.
3. “Any consultation
with Ministers on an employment matter should be undertaken
before the decision is taken, not
afterwards
The consultation should be an
opportunity to signal an intent about a possible course of
action or likely decision, and be guided by an appreciation
as to why the consultation is necessary. To try to fix a
difficulty after a decision has been taken will inevitably
put the Chief Executive in a difficult—even
embarrassing—situation and will also likely affect the
parties to the decision. That is exactly what occurred in
the situation relating to Ms Setchell.
The Minister concerned may also be affected by poor or non-existent information and may act inappropriately, with implications for his/ her own position and reputation. That certainly appears to have happened in this particular case. There is therefore a need to restate for public service chief executives and also Ministers the available guidance on the subject and to remind them of the importance of anticipating, not having to respond after the event, to such issues”.
ENDS