The Chief Ombudsman has criticised Associate Health Minister Casey Costello for poor record-keeping, as she has been unable to identify the mystery author of the advice on which she based her tobacco policy.
The document she gave to health officials argued for tobacco tax cuts, and promoted the idea that 鈥渘icotine is as harmful as caffeine鈥 and argued that Labour鈥檚 smokefree generation policy was 鈥渘anny state nonsense鈥.
Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier began an investigation after receiving a complaint from RNZ about the Associate Minister鈥檚 refusal to release information on who wrote it.
Boshier said after the investigation began Costello clarified the request was refused under 18(g) of the Official Information Act, because she didn鈥檛 know who wrote or collated the notes.
The Chief Ombudsman has criticised Associate Health Minister Casey Costello. Photo / RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
The minister said she only received a hard copy of the notes that were placed on her desk and that her staff told her they didn鈥檛 know who authored the notes.
Boshier concluded Costello made reasonable efforts to try to determine who wrote or compiled the notes, and it was open to her to refuse the request on the basis she didn鈥檛 hold information about who authored the notes.
But he was concerned the Associate Minister wasn鈥檛 able to produce any records about the source of the notes.
In a statement Boshier said he taken the 鈥渞are step鈥 of notifying the chief archivist over the record-keeping issues.
The Costello鈥檚 failure to make reference to any OIA withholding ground when she refused the request was contrary to law, he said.
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He recommended Costello reviews how she handled the request and takes steps to address the identified deficiencies.
Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier. Photo / Paul Taylor
The document
In December 2023, RNZ asked the newly-appointed minister Costello to release all documents relating to tobacco and vaping policy under the Official Information Act.
She refused to hand over any information at all.
RNZ had been leaked a document on tobacco policy that her office had sent to health officials which was highly political in tone and content. It described the previous Labour Government鈥檚 smokefree policies as 鈥渋deological nonsense that no other country had been stupid enough to implement鈥 and said New Zealanders were 鈥済uinea pigs in their radical policy experiment鈥.
In February, Labour asked in a written parliamentary question who wrote the document, and Costello responded: 鈥淭here was no specific document written. A range of information was provided to officials, including material like Hansard reports, the coalition agreement and previous NZ First policy positions.鈥
RNZ sought an investigation by the Chief Ombudsman who ruled Costello had acted 鈥渃ontrary to law鈥 in withholding the information and forced her to apologise and release the documents.
In response to RNZ鈥檚 OIA request, Costello acknowledged the document existed but has said she did not know who wrote it - only that the author did not work in her office.
鈥淭he document you have referred to was not generated or collated by any members of my office and was only received as a hard copy on December 6,鈥 she wrote.
She said she still did not know who wrote the document or even who gave it to her.
RNZ also asked Costello whether she could rule out tobacco industry involvement in the mystery document if she did not know its author, and also why she would give a document to officials without knowing its origin.
She did not address specific questions but said she had no links to the tobacco industry and no involvement with it.
- RNZ
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