Smaller Funding Cuts a Sign Government Is Listening
Monday April 29 2013
Forest & Bird media release for
immediate use
Smaller Funding Cuts
a Sign Government Is Listening
Forest &
Bird says today’s pre-budget announcement that the ongoing
funding cuts to the Department of Conservation won’t be as
deep as planned is a positive sign. But the independent
conservation organisation warns that DOC’s annual budget
will still be millions of dollars less than it should
be.
“The community, the tourism industry, and
DOC’s staff have been telling the government for four
weeks now that the proposed cuts to frontline staff would
severely undermine DOC’s work, that is crucial to New
Zealand’s clean green brand,” says Forest & Bird
Advocacy Manager Kevin Hackwell.
“It is a good
thing that the Minister of Conservation has finally
acknowledged that.
“But while Nick Smith has
acknowledged how vital DOC is, his government’s refusal to
resource the department properly will still result in future
job cuts. For instance, under the government’s revised
scheme of funding cuts, DOC will still have to cut a further
$18 million over the next four years,” Kevin Hackwell
says.
“The latest round of 140 job cuts,
announced in March, touched a real nerve with New
Zealanders, as we saw through the widespread support for
Forest & Bird’s “Love DOC” campaign.
“While today’s announcement is a step in the
right direction, it still looks like 80 frontline staff will
lose their jobs. For the 60 who now won’t lose their jobs,
they will be operating in an even less well-resourced
department than they are now,” Kevin Hackwell
says.
Prior to the job cuts announced in March, DOC
was operating with ten per cent fewer staff than it was in
2008.
“We’re disappointed that the minister is
still trying to create the impression that frontline roles
will not be cut. But that’s not the reality of how the
department works. Project managers are frontline team
leaders who regularly get into the field.”
“The legacy of this Government’s actions will
be felt for a long time. I only hope that does not include a
disaster similar to Cave Creek, in terms of health and
safety, or perhaps the loss of an endangered species,”
Kevin Hackwell says.
ENDS