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NZCulture4 days ago

'A risk to life': Social workers called out for no-shows on keeping kids safe

The chief victims advisor, Ruth Money, has criticized Oranga Tamariki (OT), New Zealand's child protection agency, for failing to attend critical interagency meetings aimed at safeguarding vulnerable children. Money claims this absence poses a direct risk to children's lives, as OT holds essential information needed for effective risk planning. The issue has resurfaced multiple times, with gaps between agencies linked to incidents of child harm. Despite previous complaints to the Children's Ministry, Money states that OT's response has been inadequate, prompting her to consider escalating the 

The chief victims advisor is calling out Oranga Tamariki (OT) for not sending social workers to critical meetings for keeping abused children from harm.

Ruth Money says it is infuriating and a threat to children's lives .

"I think it is devastating for the community and children at risk that Oranga Tamariki are not at the table having these discussions around the risk planning. It literally can be a risk to life."

RNZ's inquiries show Money first complained to the Children's Ministry last year about non-attendance at meetings where she, OT, police, health and education agencies make plans to safeguard specific children.

"You cannot do that well, you can't do it at all, if you're not looking at all the pieces of the puzzle and OT are the only ones that hold that information," said Money.

Gaps between agencies have been implicated again and again in the killing and harm of children. A child is killed by their caregiver on average every two months, and thousands of children and teenagers are assaulted or sexually assaulted every year.

'It is an operational matter' - minister

Documents show that in April this year the chief adviser complained again. She told RNZ it had got better but then got worse again.

Money told RNZ OT's response to her had been "underwhelming" and she would escalate it to the minister.

The minister both of children and for preventing violence Karen Chhour referred RNZ to OT saying, "It is an operational matter."

Oranga Tamariki deputy chief executive tamariki and whānau services Thomas Ronan.

Supplied / Oranga Tamariki

Deputy chief executive tamariki and whānau services Thomas Ronan said being at the meetings was one of the agency's priorities and it was actively working to improve attendance.

Staffing constraints was one of many factors that could be affecting attendance he said.

It did not count if social workers actually went to meetings - only whether they intended to go, as sometimes they were called away urgently to ensure the immediate safety of tamariki and whānau.

Ronan said in most cases when a social worker was unable to attend, the agency could find someone else to take their place. However, this was not always possible, especially at much smaller sites.

If they did not go they still sent in OT's information on a case - but Money said it was the roundtable discussion that produced the "gold".

The only comparable figures provided came from Waikato, where out of seven meetings a week social workers were going to just one or two. Rotorua was trialling weekly not daily attendance. South Auckland had four social workers fulltime at the meetings.

Thomas Ronan said the Waikato figures were not representative of all regions and it was actively putting in place extra roles to improve attendance.

Others worried too

But Money said no-shows were widespread.

"Up and down the country I'm getting feedback that often Oranga Tamariki are not attending these hui."

The Centre for Family Violence and Sexual Violence Prevention - part of the Justice Ministry - said community stakeholders had raised similar concerns, and the centre had raised them with OT.

In some places they'd been resolved, it said, adding discussions were going on across its executive board to improve multi-agency responses.

In April 2026, Money wrote to senior Oranga Tamariki leaders, saying, intended attendance clearly did not address this significant issue.

"Attendance is required and is critical to the safety of those children and whanau who come before the [meetings] - that after all is the entire point these multi-disciplinary teams exist.

"OT are the only agency that hold vital information specific to ... the tamariki, and so non-attendance (unless there is an absolute emergency) can be a risk to life - literally."

Karen Chhour, the minister of children and for preventing violence.

RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Hobbling investigators

RNZ revealed in April that the new Child Protection Investigation Unit at OT has been unable to pursue some investigations of serious harm due to agencies not sharing information.

Agencies failed to share vital information when Malachi Subecz was murdered by his caregiver in 2021.

"Malachi's interests were not given priority" by agencies, said a coroner in February this year. A 2022 investigation ordered the gaps be fixed. But the coroner this year said OT had been too slow fixing systems faulted in Subecz's murder.

Independent child watchdog Aroturuki Tamariki found shortcomings in December, saying the multi-agency setup and meetings were helping but "not yet closing the gap" identified in the 2022 Subecz investigation.

Meetings varied in regularity. "Mostly" the joint agencies decided how to act "but we were told there is significant variation ... and in some cases, the risk and action is decided by a single person in one organisation", said the watchdog.

Money told RNZ, "The government moved years ago to ensure that these agencies could share relevant information in these meetings, but Orang…

Read the full article at RNZ (Radio New Zealand)
Source document: Chief Victims Advisor Ruth Money

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RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicCenter4 days ago
'A risk to life': Social workers called out for no-shows on keeping kids safe

The chief victims advisor, Ruth Money, has criticized Oranga Tamariki (OT), New Zealand's child protection agency, for failing to attend critical interagency meetings aimed at safeguarding vulnerable children. Money claims this absence poses a direct risk to children's lives, as OT holds essential information needed for effective risk planning. The issue has resurfaced multiple times, with gaps between agencies linked to incidents of child harm. Despite previous complaints to the Children's Ministry, Money states that OT's response has been inadequate, prompting her to consider escalating the 

Bias read (Center): The article presents the concerns raised by Ruth Money without overtly favoring any political side. It includes direct quotes from Money and references her interactions with the Children's Ministry, providing balanced context. There is no evident editorializing or biased language that leans toward a

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  • government Chief Victims Advisor Ruth Money
  • government Children's Ministry

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  • governmentChief Victims Advisor Ruth Money
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