Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment explained

Agency Name:Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment
Nativename:Te Kaitiaki Taiao a Te Whare Pāremata
Picture Width:300px
Picture Caption:New Zealand's first three Parliamentary Commissioners for the Environment (from left): Helen Hughes (1987–1997), Dr Morgan Williams (1997–2007), Dr Jan Wright (2007–2017)
Jurisdiction:New Zealand
Headquarters:Reserve Bank Building, 2 The Terrace, Wellington, New Zealand
Budget:Total budget for 2019/20[1]
Vote Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment
$3,771,000
Minister1 Name:Gerry Brownlee
Minister1 Pfo:Speaker of the House of Representatives
Chief1 Name:Simon Upton
Chief1 Position:Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment

The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment (Te Kaitiaki Taiao a Te Whare Pāremata in Māori) is an independent Officer of the New Zealand Parliament appointed by the Governor-General on the recommendation of the House of Representatives for a five-year term under the Environment Act 1986.[2] The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment replaced the Commission for the Environment, a Government agency which was formed in 1972.

Role

The Commissioner is one of three officers of Parliament (the Ombudsmen and the controller and auditor general) who are independent of the executive and who may review activities of the executive government and report directly to Parliament.[3]

The Commissioner's role is to review and provide advice on environmental issues and the system of agencies and processes established by the Government to manage the environment.[4] The primary objective of the office is to contribute to maintaining and improving the quality of the environment in New Zealand through advice given to Parliament, local councils, business, tangata whenua, communities and other public agencies.

The Commissioner may:

Commissioners

Commissioners for the environment

Parliamentary commissioners for the environment

NamePortraitTerm of office
align=center 1Helen Hughesalign=center 1987–1996
align=center 2Morgan Williamsalign=center 1997–2007
align=center 3Jan Wrightalign=center 2007–2017
align=center 4Simon Uptonalign=center 2017–present

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Total Appropriations for Each Vote. Budget 2019. The Treasury. 8 June 2019.
  2. Web site: Environment Act 1986 No 127 (as at 01 August 2008), Public Act – New Zealand Legislation. 1 August 2008. New Zealand Government. 1 May 2012.
  3. Web site: 6. The state sector and Crown entities – Nation and government . John . Wilson . Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand . 31 October 2011. 6 October 2012.
  4. Statistics New Zealand (1996). New Zealand Official Yearbook 1996. Statistics New Zealand, Wellington.
  5. Book: Who's Who in New Zealand, 1991 . Lambert . Max . 1991 . 12th . Octopus . Auckland. 9780790001302 . 41.