Seven Health NZ roles in BOP made redundant

Nineteen roles at Te Whatu Ora Hauora a Toi Bay of Plenty had been disestablished since July 1, 2022. Photo / Mead Norton.

Almost $400,000 has been paid out to seven Te Whatu Ora Health NZ employees whose roles were made redundant due to the health reform.

It comes as the Ministry of Health is proposing to cut 134 roles to meet Government expectations to cut spending.

On July 1, 2022, the 20 former district health boards were abolished and replaced by two new national healthcare entities - Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand and Te Aka Whai Ora Māori Health Authority.

The Māori Health Authority has since been disestablished by the new coalition government.

Seventeen Te Whatu Ora roles in the Lakes have been disestablished since July 1, 2022. Photo / Andrew Warner.

Information received under the Official Information Act showed Te Whatu Ora paid $394,000 in redundancy payments to four Bay of Plenty staff and three Lakes staff.

The document said 19 roles in the Bay of Plenty and 17 roles in the Lakes had been disestablished since July 1, 2022. This included redundancy and redeployed roles.

Roles were disestablished in the departments of people and communication, finance, data and digital, commissioning, service improvement and innovation, and the office of the chief executive.

Redundancies had occurred in the departments of people and communications, service improvement and innovation, data and digital, and finance.

In the Bay of Plenty, 13 people were redeployed and two were “still in process with impacted staff”.

In the Lakes region, 11 people were redeployed and three were “still in process with impacted staff”.

Nationally, more than 500 staff had been made redundant as of February and were paid out a total of more than $9 million.

Ministry of Health cuts

The NZ Herald reported last Thursday the Ministry of Health has been searching for 6.5 per cent cost savings, with the final sign-off to be made by Public Service and Finance Minister Nicola Willis, in relation to the Budget.

All agencies have been directed to look for ways to cut back on costs of between 6.5 and 7.5 per cent on average and slash the use of contractors and consultants.

Ministry of Health workers were told about 270 positions would be disestablished, with roughly 130 restructured into new roles.

An internal document, sent to Public Service Association union members, seen by NZME, described 18 per cent of jobs were proposed to go.

In addition, the ministry was proposing withholding remuneration increases for some above a salary midpoint.

Megan Wilson is a health and general news reporter for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post. She has been a journalist since 2021.

- Megan Wilson, Bay of Plenty Times

2 comments

Hmmm

Posted on 09-04-2024 11:15 | By Let's get real

So not a single "hands-on" position was disestablished if I understand the ridiculous reporting (far too many unrelated numbers) but it seems that only seven have been paid out (presumably close to retirement, and I would have been in line as well in that regard) and for the rest, they're mostly all still employed. Presumably, the vast majority of the redundancy payment would have gone to "the office of the chief executive."
Where is the story...? Or is it a beat-up...?
And, where are the savings, if the majority are being redeployed...?
One of my many employment positions was with a hospital board and let me assure you that at that time there was as much golf and fishing happening in the management system as there was actual work.
Lazy, entitled managers who couldn't be bothered. They were basically just firefighters and not particularly good at that.


@ Let's get real

Posted on 10-04-2024 21:04 | By Yadick

Not a bad comment. A great ending. I get really annoyed with entitled managers and you put it very well.


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