Don Hunn Explained

Don Hunn
Office:Chairman of the State Services Commission
Term Start:1986
Term End:1987
Primeminister:David Lange
Predecessor:Roderick Deane
Office2:Chief Commissioner of the State Services Commission
Term Start2:1988
Term End2:1988
Primeminister2:David Lange
Office3:State Services Commissioner
Term Start3:1989
Term End3:1997
Primeminister3:David Lange, Geoffrey Palmer, Mike Moore, Jim Bolger
Successor3:Michael Wintringham
Birth Date:1934 12, df=yes
Order4:High Commissioner
Term Start4:1976
Term End4:1979
Predecessor4:Paul Cotton
Successor4:Rod Gates

Donald Kent Hunn (born Wellington 26 December 1934) is a senior New Zealand diplomat and civil servant. Hunn is the son of Sir Jack Hunn, a former Secretary of Defence, Maori Affairs, and Justice.

Education

Hunn attended Wellington College and Victoria University of Wellington, where he earned a Master of Arts in History. He worked initially at the Public Trust.

Diplomatic career

Hunn joined the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1957. During the 1960s and 1970s, he had diplomatic postings in Washington, D.C., Suva, Kuala Lumpur and Brussels, and opened New Zealand's embassy in Chile. In 1976, Hunn became New Zealand's first resident High Commissioner to the Kingdom of Tonga. In 1980, Hunn was appointed Deputy High Commissioner to Canberra.

State Services Commissioner

Hunn returned to New Zealand in 1982 as a State Services Commissioner. At the time, the State Services Commission comprised the Chairman, and three commissioners. In 1986, Hunn succeeded Roderick Deane as chief commissioner, and head of New Zealand's public service. In 1989, after a change in the legislation (specifically the State Sector Act 1988), Hunn became the sole commissioner.

During his time as SSC, Hunn was responsible for a major reorginatisation of the public service with the introduction of the State Sector Act 1988. This involved transforming the State Services Commission into the organisation responsible for selecting, employing, and managing the performance of government departmental chief executives, and providing oversight for the performance of the state sector as a whole.

In 1990, Hunn was awarded the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal.[1] He retired from the public service in 1997. In the 1997 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services as State Services Commissioner.[2]

Retirement

In his retirement, Hunn was appointed Chairman of New Zealand on Air. He also conducted a range of consulting assignments for foreign governments, as well as the New Zealand government,around state sector reform.

Hunn has been appointed to chair numerous New Zealand government reviews and inquiries, including the 1999 review of the activities of the Department of Work and Income, a review of "leaky building syndrome", the review of the 1999 General Election, the review of the organisation of Defence Services in New Zealand, among many others.

Hunn is presently a Fellow of the Victoria University School of Government, and a fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Public Administration. He served on the board of the Royal New Zealand Ballet for a period until February 2012.[3]

In August 2007, State Services Commissioner Mark Prebble appointed Hunn to investigate the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Madeleine Setchell from the Ministry for the Environment, following allegations that Environment Minister David Benson-Pope used political influence to have her removed from her position.

Personal life

Hunn married Janine Tattersfield in the 1960s, and the couple went on to have two children.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Taylor . Alister . Coddington . Deborah . Alister Taylor . Deborah Coddington . Honoured by the Queen – New Zealand . 1994 . New Zealand Who's Who Aotearoa . Auckland . 0-908578-34-2 . 194.
  2. Web site: New Year honours list 1997 . 31 December 1996 . Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet . 15 December 2019.
  3. Web site: Charities Commission. Charities Services. 28 November 2019.