The Hawke's Bay Practice Review
Oranga Tamariki released the findings of the Hawke’s Bay Practice Review in Nōema 2020, and made immediate changes to ensure greater scrutiny on how tamariki are taken into care and strengthen how we work with others.
The Hawke's Bay Practice Review found that:
- safety concerns for the pēpi meant Oranga Tamariki were right to get involved, but we made mistakes in how we worked with the whānau and other partners
- we didn’t try hard enough to build good relationships with whānau members
- we didn't explore options to place the pēpi with wider whānau
- too much reliance was placed on historical information about the whānau instead of their current situation
- the systems in place to check decisions didn’t work.
We accepted all the findings and recommendations and apologised to the whānau at the heart of the case.
We also made immediate changes to our practice to strengthen how we work with others. These include:
- providing the right planning and support for parents and whānau at the earliest opportunity
- making sure whānau are more involved – unless there is a clear need to protect a tamaiti from immediate and imminent danger, all custody applications are made ‘on notice’, so whānau know what’s happening and are involved in the court’s decision
- better training and greater supervision for whānau group conferences
- when kaimahi need to act fast to keep a tamaiti safe, every section 78 ‘without notice’ application will go through additional checks to ensure it's the right action.
Published: November 5, 2019