DoC
announces 140 jobs to be axed
The
Department of Conservation will axe 140 jobs and reduce the number of
conservancy regions in a department-wide shake-up.
26
March, 2013
Director-General
of Conservation Al Morrison announced the cuts this afternoon after
the proposals were put to staff around the country this morning.
The
cuts include 118 regional management and administrative roles, as
well as 22 operational roles including asset management, planning and
inspection positions.
Mr
Morrison said DoC would disestablish its existing 11 regional
conservancy boundaries and replace them with six new regions.
It
would also create two new groups to deal with field work and external
relations.
The
Conservation Services Group would focus on DoC's recreational and
natural heritage field work, while the Conservation Partnerships
Group would work with iwi, local authorities, private landowners and
businesses to attract more conservation resources.
Mr
Morrison said the new structure would maintain DoC's own conservation
work while setting up the department to work more effectively with
external partners.
"DoC
must adapt if it is going to meet the conservation challenges that
New Zealand faces - even if you doubled DOC's budget tomorrow we
would still be going ahead with this proposal," Mr Morrison
said.
DoC
would continue to deliver it operational work through its existing
network of about 100 offices and locations throughout the country.
Mr
Morrison said no offices would be shut and DoC would continue to
operate with more than 1200 staff.
He
said new support hubs for activities such as asset management,
inspections and work planning would deliver efficiencies which would
allow cuts to 22 operational roles.
The
department has put a freeze on hiring new staff and was currently
holding about 160 positions which were filled with temporary staff.
The
proposal would ensure DoC met its $8.7 million savings target.
Mr
Morrison said the department had begun consulting with staff on the
proposals and no final decisions would be made until feedback had
been considered.
Any
changes would not take effect for some months.
"I
acknowledge this will mean a difficult period for many staff and we
will be making every effort to ease the impact of these proposals,"
he said.
"It
is simply too early to say what impact these proposals will have on
individuals - we will look at all options such as redeployment and
relocation to minimise redundancies."
Today's
cuts come after the Government cut $54m from DoC's budget in 2009.
Earlier,
Prime Minister John Key said the Department of Conservation was heavy
on middle management and today's staff cuts would ensure resources
were directed in the right place.
Mr
Key yesterday said the job losses would not be largely characterised
as frontline positions.
He
told TV3's Firstline this morning there had been a big build-up of
middle management and bureaucracy at DoC under the Labor government.
"And
in the leaner, harder times where the Government doesn't have a lot
of money to throw around, we don't have that much money to do that,"
he said.
"We
expect these agencies to operate in a more efficient and effective
way."
Mr
Key said DoC's managers had a responsibility to make sure resources
were directed in the right place because they were spending taxpayer
money.
"And
that's what you're going to see today. This Government has been a
government which certainly has cut management and bureaucracy, but
we've also vastly increased the numbers in frontline services."
Mr
Key did not believe the cuts would affect threatened species or have
an impact on tourism.
Green
Party conservation spokeswoman Eugenie Sage said today's cuts would
put precious plants, wildlife and landscapes at risk.
She
said the department had cut 265 jobs under National, with 96
positions axed when support services were centralised last year.
Today's
cuts come after the Government cut $54 million from DoC's budget in
2009.
Ms
Sage said there had also been an effective $8m cut because baseline
funding has not increased with inflation.
She
said the restructuring would reduce the department's capacity to do
effective conservation work on the ground.
"With
the Department already pared to the bone these latest cuts will mean
less protection of our special native plants and wildlife," she
said.
"DoC
manages more than a third of the land in New Zealand and the argument
that volunteers and a few corporate sponsors will fill in the gaping
hole these cuts and continued pressure on department spending create
is nonsense."
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