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Seymour claims teachers took lunches off students, demands investigation

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Fri, 13 Sep 2024, 11:44am

Seymour claims teachers took lunches off students, demands investigation

Author
Jamie Ensor,
Publish Date
Fri, 13 Sep 2024, 11:44am

Act leader David Seymour says he has asked the Ministry of Education to look into reports that teachers are taking lunches off students.

Speaking to reporters in Auckland today, Seymour said the allegations had originated from one school in South Auckland, where teachers had taken lunches over several weeks from pupils who were members of one family.

He said the allegation concerned the pupils going home hungry. Seymour said the pupils had tried to call their parents but their phone was taken off them, given the Government鈥檚 phone ban at school.

Given he was the Associate Education Minister responsible for the free school lunches initiative, Seymour had asked the Education Ministry to look into the allegations.

鈥漌e don鈥檛 think this is acceptable.鈥

At the press conference, which followed the release of a government notice requiring public services to be delivered by need, not race, Seymour argued the new policy was 鈥渕uch less divisive鈥.

He said the release of today鈥檚 circular to the public service put an end to the need to contract a certain amount of public services with M膩ori providers.

Asked about the beneficial impact of having more M膩ori GPs which encouraged M膩ori to access healthcare, Seymour said the point of the circular was to look all the reasons why people might not present to healthcare services before classing people by ethnicity.

鈥淚t鈥檚 only when you can show clear evidence that it鈥檚 acceptable,鈥 Seymour said of curating public services based on race.

Asked about his position on bowel screening being available for M膩ori earlier in life, Seymour said it was important to assess whether there were any other factors influencing worse bowel cancer rates for M膩ori and if race was the only factor, then he believed such priority was warranted.

鈥淗ealth is the primary area where this is true, education might be one too,鈥 Seymour said of where he鈥檇 seen the majority of services being delivered by race.

The release of the circular was late, according to the coalition agreement between National and Act. Seymour said it was more important to get it right than meet the deadline.

NZ Herald鈥檚 political correspondent Audrey Young yesterday criticised Seymour鈥檚 actions concerning the Treaty Principles Bill and his view of the assessment of the bill from Justice Ministry officials.

Asked to respond, Seymour said Young was entitled to her view as an experienced journalist but he said Act disagreed with how the public service had been interpreting the Treaty鈥檚 principles and therefore didn鈥檛 value the ministry鈥檚 critique of the bill.

Earlier today

The Government has formally laid out its expectation that听public services should be delivered听based on 鈥渢he needs of all New Zealanders鈥, fulfilling a coalition agreement secured by Act and New Zealand First that 鈥渘eed鈥 should be prioritised over 鈥渞ace鈥.

The Cabinet Office on Friday issued a circular 鈥 essentially a formal notice 鈥 setting out the Government鈥檚 expectations for 鈥渉ow the targeting, commissioning, and design of public services should be based on the needs of all New Zealanders鈥.

Both Act and New Zealand First鈥檚 coalition agreements with the National Party include similar provisions to issue such a Cabinet Circular saying public services 鈥渟hould be prioritised on the basis of need, not race鈥.

While the coalition agreement with NZ First said that should be done 鈥渁s a matter of urgency鈥, the Act document said the notice should be issued 鈥渨ithin the first six months of Government鈥. The coalition missed that self-imposed deadline, with the six-month anniversary being May 27.

The circular says all New Zealanders 鈥渞egardless of ethnicity or personal identity鈥 should have access to public services 鈥渢hat are appropriate and effective for them鈥 and 鈥渟ervices are not arbitrarily allocated on the basis of ethnicity or any other aspect of identity鈥.

鈥淭he Government is concerned that in the absence of clear expectations, agencies may use ethnic identity or other forms of personal identity as a proxy for need, and therefore a justification in itself for targeted services. The requirements in this circular aim to address this concern.鈥

It says Cabinet expects when agencies may be considering proposals to target specific population groups, they should engage with their responsible ministers.

They would need to have a 鈥渟trong analytical case for targeted investment鈥, including 鈥渨hy general services are not sufficient鈥 to deal with any disparity between the target group and the general population. The agencies should also provide an assessment of any potential opportunity costs in terms of servicing the needs of all New Zealanders.

Agencies would also need to 鈥渞egularly review services targeted to specific population groups to ensure they remain necessary to achieve their original objectives鈥.

鈥淐abinet expects agencies will recognise that there are many variables that can be used to identify and assess need, and that all variables should be considered before ethnic identity is automatically used to determine need.鈥

Act leader David Seymour is welcoming the move. Photo / Mark Mitchell.Act leader David Seymour is welcoming the move. Photo / Mark Mitchell.

In a statement on Friday, Act Party leader David Seymour said the notice saying public services should be delivered 鈥渁ccording to need rather than race鈥 鈥渉onours universal human rights鈥 and reflected 鈥渢he values that Act campaigned on鈥.

鈥淧olicies like ethnicity-based surgical waitlists and university admission schemes are corrosive to an inclusive multi-ethnic society,鈥 Seymour said. 鈥淭hey take the lens of ethnicity, and look through it before any other.

鈥淭he circular is sophisticated. It draws on the International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination, to which New Zealand is a signatory. The convention forbids racial discrimination unless it is necessary, and even then it must be temporary.鈥

He said the circular highlighted the Government鈥檚 concern about the public service 鈥渦sing race as a proxy for need鈥.

鈥淚t says that, in establishing racial discrimination is necessary, it must consider all other variables before automatically using ethnicity to target services.

鈥淎 colourblind public service is far better placed to direct its resources toward eliminating hardship and overcoming hardships that face individual New Zealanders.鈥

The Government鈥檚 focus on need, rather than race, was evident this week when听Health Minister Shane Reti intervened听over OurHealth Hawke鈥檚 Bay, Health New Zealand鈥檚 regional arm, offering some free healthcare services to M膩ori and Pasifika. Act, which drew attention to the matter, said 鈥渢argeting services based on race is lazy and divisive鈥.

Reti said on Monday that his听Government Policy Statement on health听put need as the highest priority for service delivery and officials hadn鈥檛 鈥渞ead the room鈥.

Earlier this year, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said the delay with the circular was down to ministers focusing on other policy priorities and that she and Seymour were 鈥渂roadly鈥 on the same page.

Seymour at the time said he told National he would rather get the policy right than hit what he admitted was an arbitrarily decided deadline.

鈥淚 love working with Nicola Willis, I think she is one of the most professional and collegial people in the Government, but at the same time that doesn鈥檛 mean you nail everything on the first round.鈥

Jamie Ensor is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team based at Parliament. He was previously a TV reporter and digital producer in the 九一星空无限hub Press Gallery office.

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