Agency Name: | Department of Internal Affairs Te Tari Taiwhenua |
Formed: | 1840 |
Preceding1: | Colonial Secretary's Office |
Jurisdiction: | New Zealand |
Headquarters: | 45 Pipitea Street Thorndon Wellington 6011 |
Employees: | 2,381 FTE staff (30 June 2020)[1] |
Budget: | Vote Internal Affairs Total budget for 2019/20 $721,026,000[2] |
Minister1 Name: | Hon Brooke Van Velden |
Minister1 Pfo: | Minister of Internal Affairs |
Chief1 Name: | Paul James |
Chief1 Position: | Chief Executive and Secretary for Internal Affairs Secretary for Local Government Government Chief Digital Officer |
Child1 Agency: | Archives New Zealand |
Child2 Agency: | New Zealand Lottery Grants Board |
Child3 Agency: | Local Government Commission |
Child4 Agency: | National Library of New Zealand |
Child5 Agency: | Office for the Community & Voluntary Sector |
Child6 Agency: | Charities Services |
The Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) (Maori: Te Tari Taiwhenua) is the public service department of New Zealand charged with issuing passports; administering applications for citizenship and lottery grants; enforcing censorship and gambling laws; registering births, deaths, marriages and civil unions; supplying support services to ministers; and advising the government on a range of relevant policies and issues.
Other services provided by the department include a translation service, publication of the New Zealand Gazette (the official government newspaper), a flag hire service, management of VIP visits to New Zealand, running the Lake Taupō harbourmaster's office (under a special agreement with the local iwi) and the administration of offshore islands.
The Department of Internal Affairs traces its roots back to the Colonial Secretary's Office, which from the time New Zealand became a British colony, in 1840, was responsible for almost all central government duties. The department was the first government department to be established in New Zealand, and it became the home for a diverse range of government functions providing services to New Zealanders and advice to Ministers of the Crown.[3] A former Minister of Internal Affairs, Michael Bassett, wrote a history of the department, The Mother of All Departments, the title of which reflects this status.[4] The department's role has changed over time as new departments and ministries have been formed.
The Colonial Secretary was the chief aide of the governor of New Zealand. Until 1848 his office dealt with all correspondence between the governor and his employees, and between officials and the public. Other early functions included inspecting sheep, running prisons, supervising government printing, licensing auctioneers, registering births, deaths and marriages, collecting statistics, and responsibility for gambling, fire brigades, constitutional matters (including running elections) and citizenship. Some of these functions are still duties of the modern department, which gained its present name in 1907, but other functions eventually grew into standalone government agencies. As the department's functions have changed over time, there has become a growing acknowledgement that it carries responsibility for all government functions which are not substantial enough to justify a standalone organisation or do not fit well into any other existing departments.
From 1853 the Colonial Secretary's Office coordinated the relationship between central government and provincial government and, when the provinces were abolished in 1876, took on responsibility for the new system of local government.
Over the twentieth century the department's functions would include cultural affairs, civil defence, a translation service, conservation, tourism, sport and recreation, support for ethnic communities, and support services for government ministers. Several new government departments have been formed by establishing new agencies around former Internal Affairs services. The electoral office moved to the Department of Justice in 1950 before becoming an independent Electoral Commission in 2010. The Ministry of Industries and Commerce took over the statistics function in 1931;[5] an independent Department of Statistics was created in 1957. The Department of Conservation was established in 1987 by merging the department's wildlife service with other smaller entities.[6]
The National Library of New Zealand and Archives New Zealand were separated from the department in the late 1990s but merged back in 2011.[7] [8] [9] A standalone Ministry of Cultural Affairs (now the Ministry for Culture and Heritage, which in the present day also has responsibility for the sport and recreation portfolio) was established in 1991.[10] The department briefly held responsibility for tourism from 1998 until 2000, when this was combined with other former Ministry of Commerce functions in the new Ministry of Economic Development, now the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.[11]
The National Emergency Management Agency, which had been a business unit within the department since before World War II, was transferred to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet in 2009.[12] The Office of Ethnic Communities, originally a single part-time position within the department, became the new Ministry for Ethnic Communities in 2021.[13]
The department has also gained responsibilities that previously belonged to other agencies. In 2009 the department took responsibility for government technology services from the State Services Commission.[14] [15] The Office for the Community and Voluntary Sector was transferred to the department from the Ministry of Social Development in 2011.
In December 2021, Parliament passed the Births, Deaths, Marriages and Relationships Registration Act 2021 (BDMR) . As a result of this bill, on June 15th 2023, the ability of people to change their sex on their birth certificate changed.[16] Previously people were required to go through the Family Courts in order to do this, and provide information alongside their application with the Court that they had taken medical treatement that aligned with the sex they wished to change on their birth certificate.[17] With the BDMR bill, the process moved under the Department of Internal Affairs. It now only requires a statutory declaration in front of a qualified individual, and either a photo ID or an identity referee declaration, which is then sent to the Registrar-General and given approval. Children 16-17 can also apply, with their guardians consent, or alternatively a letter from a third party. Those under 16 need a guardian or parent to apply on their behalf.[18]
The Births, Deaths, Marriages and Relationship Registration Act 2021 also added the option of a 'non-binary' marker for birth certificates, so non-binary individuals do not have to identify themselves as male or female.
In mid-April 2024, the department experienced a backlog in processing New Zealand passport applications due to the installation of computer system upgrades in March 2024 and increased seasonal demand. Standard passport processing took eight weeks while urgent passport processing took three days. The number of passports processed dropped from 38,000 in February 2024 to half that number in March 2024.[19] On 14 May 2024, the department apologised for delays in wait times for processing passport applications.[20]
The head of the department holds concurrent roles as Chief Executive, Secretary for Internal Affairs, Secretary for Local Government and Government Chief Digital Officer.
As at 7 July 2022:[21] [22] [23]
The department provides secretariat support for several entities including:
The department serves 7 portfolios and 5 ministers. In addition, the department also has responsibilities to the Minister of Finance in relation to community trusts and to the Minister of Foreign Affairs in relation to the Peace and Disarmament Education Trust and the Pacific Development Conservation Trust.[24]
Officeholder | Portfolios | Other responsibilities | |
---|---|---|---|
Lead Minister (Department of Internal Affairs) Minister of Internal Affairs | |||
Rt Hon Christopher Luxon | Minister Responsible for Ministerial Services | ||
Hon Simeon Brown | Minister of Local Government | ||
Hon Judith Collins | Minister for Digitising Government | ||
Rt Hon Winston Peters | Minister for Racing |