Select Committee Business 26 Jan - 2 Feb
SELECT COMMITTEE BUSINESS
From 26 January to 2 February
2001
Committee meetings
There were seven committee
meetings, all held in the parliamentary complex. Two were
meetings of subcommittees.
Reports presented
(9)
Commerce
* 1999/2000 financial review of
Television New Zealand Limited
Education and Science
*
1999/2000 financial review of the Ministry of Education
*
1999/2000 financial review of the National Library of New
Zealand
* 1999/2000 financial review of the Ministry of
Research, Science and Technology
* 1999/2000 financial
review of the Education Review Office
Law and Order
*
1999/2000 financial review of the Serious Fraud
Office
Local Government and Environment
* 1999/2000
financial review of the Parliamentary Commissioner for the
Environment
* 1999/2000 financial review of the
Department of Conservation
* 1999/2000 financial review
of the Ministry for the Environment
Bills referred to
select committees
The New Zealand Guardian Trust Company
Limited Amendment Bill was referred to to Commerce
Committee. This is a private bill.
The Taranaki Regional Council Empowering Bill was referred to the Local Government and Environment Committee. This is a local bill.
Standing Order 275 provides for private and local bills to be introduced and referred to select committees during an adjournment.
Committee notes
(for further
information on an item, please contact the committee staff
noted in italics)
Commerce (Alan Witcombe,
SC-Commerce@parliament.govt.nz)
The committee presented
it report on the 1999/2000 financial review of Television
New Zealand Limited.
The committee reported on the following matters:
* net surplus after tax for the
1999/2000 year was $43.1 million
* the Minister of
Broadcasting has released a draft TVNZ charter
* TVNZ
has announced details of its digital television plans
*
concern that TVNZ did not disclose its digital television
plans at the hearing of evidence to enable proper
parliamentary scrutiny of them
* additional amounts have
been written-off in respect of TVNZ’s earlier digital
television proposal
* some concerns about governance
procedures at TVNZ, in particular the operation of the Audit
Committee and the need for more information about the
Remuneration Committee in TVNZ’s annual report
* there
were significant “unadjusted audit differences” at year-end
and the external auditor and TVNZ disagreed on the
application of the policy for amortising programme costs
* staff salaries have continued to rise despite efforts
to reduce them with 14 more staff earning over $100,000 than
last year
* legal fees concerning the abandoned appeal of
the Hawkesby settlement were nearly $140,000
* advice
from the Chief Executive in respect to a complaint about a
Holmes programme led to concern about the robustness of
TVNZ’s complaints procedure.
“Two issues, the company’s digital television plans and complaints procedure, could have been fully disclosed to the committee utilising parliamentary procedures to hear evidence in private or secret, but were not,” the Chairperson said in a media statement.
Education and Science (Louise Gardiner,
SC-ES@parliament.govt.nz)
The committee has just
presented its reports on the 1999/2000 financial reviews of
National Library, Ministry of Research, Science and
Technology, Education Review Office and Ministry of
Education.
Finance and Expenditure (Graham Hill,
SC-FE@parliament.govt.nz)
The Chairperson (Mark Peck MP)
and Annabel Young MP will attend the Sixth Australasian
Council of Public Accounts Committees in Canberra from 4 to
6 February 2001. The Chairperson will present a paper on
New Zealand's experience with accrual accounting and its
impact on accountability measures in the public
sector.
Health (Kia Paranihi,
SC-Health@parliament.govt.nz)
The committee met this week
and considered a variety of business including the financial
review of the Ministry of Health, the Child Mortality Review
Board Bill and two bills being considered together, Criminal
Justice (Compulsory Care) Amendment Bill (No 7) and
Intellectual Disability Bill.
The committee also considered its programme of hearings on its inquiry into health strategies relating to cannabis use. This programme is likely to be publicised before the end of the month.
Financial reviews of hospitals are to begin this month and hearings will be open to the public. This information will be released in due course.
Justice and
Electoral (Wendy Proffitt, SC-JE@parliament.govt.nz)
The
committee next meets on 14 February.
Submissions on the Bay of Plenty Regional Council (Maori Constituency Empowering) Bill close on 12 February. The committee will consider travelling to the Bay of Plenty to hear evidence if it gets sufficient submissions from that area. The bill allows the Bay of Plenty Regional Council to establish Maori wards, in addition to its current general wards, for the election of councillors. The number of Maori wards will depend on the number of people on the Maori roll.
Law and
Order (Tracey Rayner, SC-LO@parliament.govt.nz)
The
committee met on Thursday, 1 February to consider the
1999/2000 financial review of the Serious Fraud Office. The
committee presented its report on that financial review on 2
February 2001.
The committee next meets on Thursday, 15 February from 10.00 am to 1.00 pm, to consider the Arms Amendment Bill (No 2).
Local Government and Environment
(David Bagnall, SC-LGE@parliament.govt.nz)
The committee
met in the morning and afternoon of Wednesday, 31 January.
Most of this time was spent considering the Resource
Management Amendment Bill.
Reports were presented on the financial reviews of the Department of Conservation and the Ministry for the Environment.
In its report on the financial review of the Department of Conservation the committee states a number of conclusions, including the following:
* It is important for full and open information
to be provided as new pest control tools are developed.
*
Both the department and the Ministry of Agriculture and
Forestry should conduct their fight against biosecurity
threats to New Zealand’s ecological health with more
urgency.
* The committee would be concerned if
accumulating deferred maintenance led to a loss of
facilities in the backcountry.
Overall, the committee commends the Department of Conservation for the important work it is doing and the improved quality of its outcome measurement.
The report on the financial review of the Ministry for the Environment also includes a number of conclusions, such as:
* Given the existing and emerging
information on the risks of organochlorines to human health,
ecosystems and primary production trade, the committee
emphasises the urgency of the completion of standards,
performance indicators and an action plan to eliminate
organochlorines from the environment.
* It is of concern
that the delay in the decontamination of the Fruitgrowers
Chemical site at Mapua has been prolonged for the last five
years given that the ministry has considered such work a
priority. The committee expects to see progress on the
ground in the clean-up of this site.
* The ministry
should set itself some clear goals for its work in
monitoring and assisting councils to implement the Resource
Management Act 1991. The ministry should then report on the
achievement of these goals in terms of both improved
processes and environmental outcomes.
The committee is not meeting next week.
Currently, the committee is receiving submissions on its interim report on the inquiry into the role of local government in meeting New Zealand’s climate change target (closing date 15 March 2001). The report is available from Bennetts Bookshops or at the following website address: http://www.gp.co.nz/wooc/whatsnew/ipapers.html. Closing dates for two bills before the committee are set out below.
Social Services (Tim Cooper,
SC-SS@parliament.govt.nz)
The committee will next meet on
Wednesday, 21 February.
Closing dates for
submissions
Committees are receiving submissions on the
following items with the closing date
shown:
Commerce
Electricity Industry Bill (14 February
2001)
Education and Science
Education Amendment Bill
(No 2) (14 March 2001)
Finance and Expenditure
New
Zealand Superannuation Bill (9 February 2001)
Public
Trust Bill (2 February 2001)
Foreign Affairs, Defence and
Trade
International Treaties Bill (31 March
2001)
Government Administration
Cigarettes (Fire
Safety) Bill (31 March 2001)
Civil Defence Emergency
Management (28 February 2001)
Health
Inquiry into
health strategies relating to cannabis use (7 February
2001)
Medical Practitioners (Foreign Qualified Medical
Practitioners) Amendment Bill (31 March 2001)
Justice and
Electoral
Bay of Plenty Regional Council (Maori
Constituency Empowering) Bill (12 February
2001)
Prostitution Reform Bill (26 February
2001)
Local Electoral Bill (26 February 2001)
Victims’
Rights Bill and Supplementary Order Paper No 112 (12 March
2001)
Local Government and Environment
Auckland
Improvement Trust Amendment Bill (8 February 2001)
Local
Government (Elected Member Remuneration and Trading
Enterprise) Amendment Bill (19 February 2001)
Inquiry
into the role of local government in meeting New Zealand’s
climate change target (15 March 2001)
Social
Services
Housing Corporation Amendment Bill (23 February
2001)
Transport and Industrial Relations
Injury
Prevention and Rehabilitation Bill (23 March 2001)
Civil
Aviation Amendment Bill (2 March 2001)
General
You can find further information about select committees on our website at www.clerk.parliament.govt.nz. If you require additional information or have any feedback on the contents, please contact:
Compiled in the Select Committee
Office, Office of the Clerk, 2 February 2001