Police Withdrawal
Lauren Doocy made this Official Information request to Matt Doocey
Currently waiting for a response from Matt Doocey, they must respond promptly and normally no later than (details and exceptions).
From: Lauren Doocy
Dear Matt Doocey,
Police withdraw from providing mental health responses on Monday 4th November 2024.
Provide:
- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist.
Yours faithfully,
Lauren Doocy
From: Matthew Doocey (MIN)
Matt Doocey
Please note that this acknowledgement is an automatically generated email.
Thank you for contacting Hon Matt Doocey, Minister for ACC, Minister for
Mental Health, Minister for Tourism and Hospitality, Minister for Youth,
Associate Minister of Health and Associate Minister of Transport.
Hon Matt Doocey considers all correspondence important and appreciates you
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o Latest information from the Beehive can be found
here: [1]https://www.beehive.govt.nz/
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local mental health crisis team.
o A full list of numbers is available
here: [2]https://www.health.govt.nz/your-health/s...
Thank you for taking the time to write.
Ngā mihi,
Office of Hon Matt Doocey
Minister for ACC | Minister for Mental Health | Minister for Tourism and
Hospitality | Minister for Youth | Associate Minister of Health |
Associate Minister of Transport.
Freepost: Private Bag 18 888 |Parliament Buildings |Wellington 6011
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2. https://www.health.govt.nz/your-health/s...
From: Matthew Doocey (MIN)
Matt Doocey
Dear Lauren,
Thank you for your email of 2/11/2024 in which you submitted an Official Information Act request as follows:
"- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist."
Minister Doocey is considering your request in accordance with the Act, and you can expect a response by 29/11/2024.
Yours sincerely
Office of Hon Matt Doocey
Minister for ACC | Minister for Mental Health | Minister for Tourism and Hospitality | Minister for Youth |
Associate Minister of Health | Associate Minister of Transport
DDI: 04 817 6812
Email: [Matt Doocey request email] Website: www.Beehive.govt.nz
Private Bag 18041, Parliament Buildings, Wellington 6160, New Zealand
-----Original Message-----
From: Lauren Doocy <[FOI #29028 email]>
Sent: Saturday, 2 November 2024 10:43 PM
To: Matthew Doocey (MIN) <[email address]>
Subject: Official Information request - Police Withdrawal
Dear Matt Doocey,
Police withdraw from providing mental health responses on Monday 4th November 2024.
Provide:
- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist.
Yours faithfully,
Lauren Doocy
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This is an Official Information request made via the FYI website.
Please use this email address for all replies to this request:
[FOI #29028 email]
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From: Matthew Doocey (MIN)
Matt Doocey
Dear Lauren
Thank you for your request under the Official Information Act 1982 (the Act) to the Office of Hon Matt Doocey received on 2 November 2024 for:
- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist.
In order to provide you with the information requested, could you please clarify the time frame of the scope of your request in order for us to scope the request and respond appropriately.
Please respond by 24 November in order for us to complete your request.
We look forward to receiving your response.
Yours sincerely
Office of Hon Matt Doocey
Minister for ACC | Minister for Mental Health | Minister for Tourism and Hospitality | Minister for Youth |
Associate Minister of Health | Associate Minister of Transport
DDI: 04 817 6812
Email: [Matt Doocey request email] Website: www.Beehive.govt.nz
Private Bag 18041, Parliament Buildings, Wellington 6160, New Zealand
-----Original Message-----
From: Matthew Doocey (MIN) <[email address]>
Sent: Monday, 4 November 2024 8:03 AM
To: Lauren Doocy <[FOI #29028 email]>
Subject: Official Information request - Police Withdrawal
Dear Lauren,
Thank you for your email of 2/11/2024 in which you submitted an Official Information Act request as follows:
"- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist."
Minister Doocey is considering your request in accordance with the Act, and you can expect a response by 29/11/2024.
Yours sincerely
Office of Hon Matt Doocey
Minister for ACC | Minister for Mental Health | Minister for Tourism and Hospitality | Minister for Youth | Associate Minister of Health | Associate Minister of Transport
DDI: 04 817 6812
Email: [Matt Doocey request email] Website: www.Beehive.govt.nz Private Bag 18041, Parliament Buildings, Wellington 6160, New Zealand
-----Original Message-----
From: Lauren Doocy <[FOI #29028 email]>
Sent: Saturday, 2 November 2024 10:43 PM
To: Matthew Doocey (MIN) <[email address]>
Subject: Official Information request - Police Withdrawal
Dear Matt Doocey,
Police withdraw from providing mental health responses on Monday 4th November 2024.
Provide:
- The minister's plan to adequately resource mental health and ambulance services, including the breakdown of additional budget allocation for personal protective equipment, training and education, additional funding for increased workload, and funding assigned to legal protection and aid for ambulance workers.
- Briefings the minister has received concerning ambulance and mental health services preparedness.
- Confirm whether you as Minister for Mental Health, are in agreement with the Minister of Police with this withdrawal going ahead without publicly available plans for how mental health and ambulance services will manage the unilateral withdrawal from police.
- Confirm whether your public statements have been based on advice or reflect your own views on the matter.
- Confirm whether ambulance services have agreed to a protocol for transfer of the service from police to ambulance services, and provide that protocol.
- Release minutes and briefings related to advice the minister has received concerning preparedness, including any policy impact statements.
- Release any minutes or briefings from either Te Whatu Ora or the Ministry of Health, which raise concerns about the safety of patients or workers, including any PCBU risks.
- Provide any advice ACC has given concerning PCBU risks in the context of the police withdrawal.
- Release any risk assessments undertaken by the Ministry of Health, Te Whatu Ora, ACC or Ambulance Organisations concerning the likelihood of excess mortality arising from both the withdrawal itself and also how the police have decided to withdraw.
- Release any consultation documents developed with ambulance services and workers, including Hato Hone St John, Life Flight and Wellington Free Ambulance.
- Explain the absence of any such documents, and why there wouldn't have been such a document produced before implementation if one doesn't exist.
Yours faithfully,
Lauren Doocy
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This is an Official Information request made via the FYI website.
Please use this email address for all replies to this request:
[FOI #29028 email]
Is [Matt Doocey request email] the wrong address for Official Information requests to Matt Doocey? If so, please contact us using this form:
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://fyi....
Disclaimer: This message and any reply that you make will be published on the internet. Our privacy and copyright policies:
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://fyi....
If you find this service useful as an Official Information officer, please ask your web manager to link to us from your organisation's OIA or LGOIMA page.
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________________________________
hide quoted sections
From: Lauren Doocy
Dear Matthew Doocey (MIN),
The timeline of the police mental health withdrawal is very current, so the timeframe relates to this. The questions are reasonably specific and this is quite a significant government policy- an appropriate timeframe that your team feels answers the questions.
Yours sincerely,
Lauren Doocy
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