Police officials are warning MPs the Government鈥檚 commitment to train 500 new police officers could take longer than its two-year deadline.
Police Commissioner Richard Chambers, alongside members of the police鈥檚 executive team, told members of Parliament鈥檚 justice select committee he refused to lower the quality of trained officers and as such, was open to taking longer than the November 27, 2025 deadline to train 500 extra constabulary staff.
鈥淚f it takes us a little bit of extra time ... then we鈥檒l take that,鈥 Chambers said to MPs, adding that was 鈥減robably the community expectation鈥.
One of the coalition Government鈥檚 primary law and order policies was to train 500 new officers in two years, an item agreed between National and New Zealand First.
While there had been much debate on whether the target included police vacancies, the policy promised to facilitate an increase to the police鈥檚 overall constabulary staff from 10,211 to 10,711 by November 27, 2025 鈥 two years after the coalition agreements were signed.
The timeline briefly became a source of tension within the coalition when Police Minister Mark Mitchell started referencing the 500 target being achieved in three years.
It鈥檚 understood NZ First intervened and held discussions with National before the two-year deadline was re-established.
NZ First leader Winston Peters agreed on the 500-officer target during the coalition negotiations last year. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Former Police Commissioner Andrew Coster often referred to the commitment as ambitious in public comments.
Coster鈥檚 recent replacement, Chambers, and Deputy Commissioner Chris de Wattignar today indicated it was more likely the target of 500 would be reached by mid-2026.
Answering questions from Labour police spokeswoman Ginny Andersen, de Wattignar said training numbers would be enhanced in April next year, when police began 100-person training wings.
While he acknowledged the police enjoyed a challenge, de Wattignar described the 2025 deadline as 鈥渧ery ambitious鈥 and accepted it was a 鈥渕ore accurate picture of the target鈥 to say it would be achieved by June, 2026.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 where the projections are taking us at the moment,鈥 he said.
Chambers reinforced his deputy鈥檚 position by saying the police would not compromise the quality of the officers they trained and would take longer if necessary.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to work very, very hard to do our best,鈥 Chambers said of hitting the target in two years.
鈥淲e are not going to compromise, so if it takes us a little bit of time to produce the best-quality officers ... then we鈥檒l take that.鈥
A police email on December 3, released under the Official Information Act, stated the police鈥檚 constabulary staff in mod-Novemebr numbered 10,134 鈥 meaning 576 officers would need to be trained to meet the target.
The email referenced the target being achieved by June 30, 2026.
In a statement, Associate Police Minister Casey Costello said she had received 鈥渘o indication鈥 in her regular meetings with police that the target was unachievable.
She said she understood the target was 鈥渁mbitious鈥 but cited an increase in applications to join the police, the 鈥渕ajor recruitment campaign鈥 currently under way and the upcoming increase to training wings.
Police Minister Mitchell declined to comment, referring the Herald鈥檚 request for comment to Costello.
The Herald has also requested comment from NZ First leader Winston Peters.
Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.
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