
Family and sexual violence prevention minister warned of ‘declining police responsiveness'
They said police are in fact coding 7.7% more family violence events as priority one emergencies.
Chhour says the Te Aorerekura Action Plan was launched last year, to help government agencies better collaborate on the issue – enabled by a new technological platform to replace the current system.
But Labour says there is 'real alarm' among community providers, and the concerns raised in the document should alarm Chhour as Minister-in-charge.
Te Pūkotahitanga provides advice to the Minister, and Te Puna Aonui – a group designed to bring together government agencies on the elimination of family violence, including Education, Health, Police, Justice, Corrections and Oranga Tamariki.
In March it provided Chhour with a summary of a recent hui between Matatuhi, a collective of Family and Sexual Violence Māori kaimahi (workers), and police, to discuss their Risk Harm Assessment Framework.
It said Chhour had requested the summary to support her engagements with Mitchell.
It noted concerns had been raised last December 'about declining police responsiveness to family and sexual violence incidents, including high-risk situations'.
The document lists examples of 'delays and misjudgements in police responsiveness', including an assault in one provider's reception area to which police took 50 minutes to respond, and incidents of child to parent violence not being prioritised.
'It's increasingly falling to community providers to ensure whānau are made safe and kept safe in family violence situations due to slow or no police response,' it states.
'This poses a serious risk to kaimahi health and safety.'
Labour Police spokeswoman Ginny Andersen says she is also hearing from NGOs who have reported the same issue.
'They're reaching out for help for a situation, either for one of their clients, or a situation in one of their facilities, and they cannot get a police officer once it's been established it's a family violence issue.
'What we are hearing loud and clear is that people aren't coming.'
Labour's Family and Sexual Violence spokeswoman Helen White says the concerns are serious enough that the minister responsible should have intervened.
'Her job is to be a zealous advocate for the victims in this country,' she said.
'She's got to get in there and advocate strongly, she's got to go to the Police Minister and say 'that's just not good enough'.'
Mitchell says he and Chhour are 'very aligned'.
He says police are triaging differently in relation to social issues that are more appropriate for a non-police response, but will continue to respond when there is a serious offence, violence, or an immediate risk to property, life or safety.
Mitchell encouraged anyone with specific concerns to raise these directly with police.
Police Assistant Commissioner Mike Johnson said the Risk Harm Attendance pilot began in September, and was expanded across all emergency communications and dispatch workers in December.
He said requests for police attendance are assessed against criteria of severity, circumstance, attributes and need.
Johnson said if it's deemed a physical response is not required, the call is transferred to the 105 online or call taker, after which it is sent to the local Family Harm Team for assessment and appropriate action.
'Police's median response time for family harm events decreased by over three minutes in 2024 compared to 2023.'
Johnson said initial feedback suggests the framework's producing positive outcomes, and a decision about its future will be made after a full evaluation next month.
Chhour said as the Minister responsible for Te Puna Aonui, she is pleased with their work to break down siloes across the public service.
She said the Te Aorerekura Action plan, launched in December, is focused on keeping people safe through multi-agency responses, holding people to account, improving workforce capability and investing in workforces to equip people to assess risk, and share information.
'This work will be enabled by a new technological platform to replace the current family safety system, so that agencies have appropriate information for risk management and safety planning.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
4 hours ago
- Scoop
Te Pāti Māori Announces Award-Winning Broadcaster Oriini Kaipara To Contest Tāmaki Makaurau By-Election
Te Pāti Māori have confirmed the selection of celebrated broadcaster and longtime West Auckland advocate Oriini Kaipara (Ngāi Tūhoe, Ngāti Awa, Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Rangitihi) as its candidate for the Tāmaki Makaurau by-election. Oriini's deep whakapapa to Tāmaki Makaurau is grounded in her upbringing at Hoani Waititi Marae, where she was raised by her mother in a strong Māori environment. She has dedicated decades amplifying the stories of Māori communities, holding prime ministers to account and chairing nationally televised Māori electorate debates. 'Oriini brings a lifetime of leadership and advocacy, both in media and in the community. Her voice is exactly what Tāmaki needs to honour the memory of Takutai Moana and to ensure Māori voices are heard loud and clear in Parliament' said Te Pāti Māori Co-leader, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. 'She understands the deep connection between whakapapa and politics, and she's not here to play games. She will fiercely uphold kaupapa that protect our whenua, defend our whānau, and uplift our tamariki with unapologetic Māori leadership' said Te Pāti Māori Co-Leader, Rawiri Waititi. 'Māori are being attacked left, right and centre for purely existing. It's vile and it's not good enough' said Te Pāti Māori Tāmaki Makaurau Candidate, Oriini Kaipara. 'My role now is to move from covering the story to changing it.' Kaipara has pledged to tackle the cost-of-living crisis facing Tāmaki whānau, with a focus on housing, youth houselessness and skyrocketing food bills. She will champion Te Pāti Māori's Mana Motuhake policy package, including a first right of refusal for mana whenua over culturally significant private land. 'We lost a leader in Takutai Tarsh Kemp who served with ngākau mahaki and deep love for whānau. My commitment is to honour her legacy by being a fierce advocate for Tāmaki' Kaipara said. Key priorities: · Secure mana whenua firstrightofrefusal on significant private land. · Drive kaupapa Māori housing solutions to eliminate rangatahi houselessness. · Expand investment in kaupapa Māori education models such as Te Aho Matua. 'To every whānau in Tāmaki Makaurau, I am standing because our seat deserves to remain strong, grounded in te ao Māori, and guided by the voices of our people, united, determined, and unapologetically Māori' said Kaipara. This campaign is our call to action, to mobilise, to organise, to stand united to reclaim our voice and build the future our mokopuna and the people of Tāmaki Makaurau deserve.


Otago Daily Times
4 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Oriini Kaipara to contest Tāmaki Makaurau by-election
By Giles Dexter of RNZ Former broadcaster Oriini Kaipara has been chosen to contest the Tāmaki Makaurau by-election for Te Pāti Māori. Kaipara was selected at a behind-closed-doors hui at Hoani Waititi Marae tonight. The by-election has been triggered by the death of Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp, who died suddenly two weeks ago. She had been battling kidney disease. Te Pāti Māori said Kaipara (Ngāi Tūhoe, Ngāti Awa, Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Rangitihi) had dedicated decades amplifying the stories of Māori communities, holding prime ministers to account and chairing nationally televised Māori electorate debates. The party co-leaders said she would bring a lifetime of leadership and advocacy, and that she understood the deep connection between whakapapa and politics. "Her voice is exactly what Tāmaki needs to honour the memory of Takutai Moana and to ensure Māori voices are heard loud and clear in Parliament," said co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Kaipara said she was pledging to tackle the cost of living crisis facing Tāmaki whānau, with a focus on housing, youth homelessness, and skyrocketing food bills. "Māori are being attacked left, right and centre for purely existing. It's vile and it's not good enough," she said. "My role now is to move from covering the story to changing it." She said if elected, her key priorities would be securing mana whenua first right of refusal on significant private land, driving kaupapa Māori housing solutions to eliminate rangatahi houselessness, and expending investment in kaupapa Māori education models such as Te Aho Matua. Te Kou o Rehua Panapa, a former youth worker at Manurewa Marae had also sought the nomination. Hīkoi leader Eru Kapa-Kingi had earlier ruled out running. Kaipara has most recently worked as Pouwhiringa Māori culture lead for the New Zealand Olympic Committee. In 2021, she became the first wāhine Māori with moko kauae to present a mainstream news bulletin, when she fronted Newshub Live at 6pm. Labour's Peeni Henare previously held the Tāmaki Makaurau seat before being beaten by Kemp in the 2023 election by a slim margin of 42 votes. Henare had held the seat since 2014. RNZ understands Labour's internal nomination process is under way and will close on Friday. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is yet to announce the date for a by-election. However, the Speaker of the House published the notice of vacancy in the Gazette yesterday, meaning the Governor-General will issue a writ within 21 days of July 9, instructing the Chief Electoral Officer to conduct the by-election.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Former broadcaster Oriini Kaipara to contest Tāmaki Makaurau by-election for Te Pāti Māori
Oriini Kaipara. Photo: Screenshot / YouTube / Newshub Former broadcaster Oriini Kaipara has been chosen to contest the Tāmaki Makaurau by-election for Te Pāti Māori. Kaipara was selected at a behind-closed-doors hui at Hoani Waititi Marae on Thursday evening. The by-election has been triggered by the death of Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp , who died suddenly two weeks ago. Te Pāti Māori said Kaipara (Ngāi Tūhoe, Ngāti Awa, Tūwharetoa, Ngāti Rangitihi) had dedicated decades amplifying the stories of Māori communities, holding prime ministers to account, and chairing nationally televised Māori electorate debates. The party co-leaders said she would bring a lifetime of leadership and advocacy, and that she understood the deep connection between whakapapa and politics. "Her voice is exactly what Tāmaki needs to honour the memory of Takutai Moana and to ensure Māori voices are heard loud and clear in Parliament," said co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Kaipara said she was pledging to tackle the cost of living crisis facing Tāmaki whānau, with a focus on housing, youth homelessness, and skyrocketing food bills. "Māori are being attacked left, right and centre for purely existing. It's vile and it's not good enough," she said. "My role now is to move from covering the story to changing it." She said if elected her key priorities would be securing mana whenua first right of refusal on significant private land, driving kaupapa Māori housing solutions to eliminate rangatahi houselessness, and expending investment in kaupapa Māori education models such as Te Aho Matua. Te Kou o Rehua Panapa, a former youth worker at Manurewa Marae had also sought the nomination. Hīkoi leader Eru Kapa-Kingi had earlier ruled out running. Kaipara has most recently worked as Pouwhiringa Māori culture lead for the New Zealand Olympic Committee. In 2021, she became the first wāhine Māori with moko kauae to present a mainstream news bulletin, when she fronted Newshub Live at 6pm. Labour's Peeni Henare previously held the Tāmaki Makaurau seat, before being beaten by Kemp in the 2023 election by a slim margin of 42 votes. Henare had held the seat since 2014. RNZ understands Labour's internal nomination process is underway and will close on Friday. The Prime Minister is yet to announce the date for a by-election. However, the Speaker of the House published the notice of vacancy in the Gazette on Wednesday, meaning the Governor-General will issue a writ within 21 days of July 9th, instructing the Chief Electoral Officer to conduct the by-election.