Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
Item 5B: Draft – Not for Circulation
FIRE AND EMERGENCY NEW ZEALAND
INTEGRATION PROGRAMME
Terms of Reference for Local Advisory Committee
Trial
4 October 2017
V0.6
under the Official Information Act 1982
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
DOCUMENT CONTROL
Document information
Project name
Fire and Emergency NZ Integration Programme
Author
Resilient Communities Workstream
Title
Terms of Reference for Local Advisory Committee Trial
File name
Resilient Communities_TOR_LAC Trial_v0.6
Document ID
[Reference Number]
Revision history
Version
Date
Author
Description of change
0.1
15 September 2017
Nic Wright
Initial draft
0.2
18 September 2017
Nic Wright
Updated for feedback provided from internal Integration Programme review
0.3
18 September 2017
Nic Wright
Updated for feedback provided from internal Integration Programme review
0.4
19 September 2017
Nic Wright
Draft for Integration Reference Group review and feedback
0.5
26 September 2017
Nic Wright
Updated for feedback from Integration Reference Group and Leigh
Deuchars
0.6
4 October 2017
Nic Wright
Updated for feedback from the Integration Director, David Strong
Feedback and input sought from
Name
Business Area
Date
Version
Richard Stewart
Workstream lead, OPP Workstream, Fire and Emergency
18/09/2017
0.1
New Zealand Integration Programme
Janine McLees
Worksteam lead, Implementation and Change , Fire and
18/09/2017
0.1
Emergency New Zealand
Mark Plowman
Business Analyst, Fire and Emergency New Zealand
18/09/2017
0.1
Integration Programme
Cushla Majendie
Implementation and Change Analyst, Fire and Emergency
18/09/2017
0.1
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New Zealand Integration Programme
Sue Sherburd
Stakeholder Engagement Principal Advisor, Fire and
18/09/2017
0.1
Emergency New Zealand Integration Programme
Hayley Corbett
Principal Advisor, Fire and Emergency New Zealand
19/09/2017
0.2
Integration Programme
David Strong
Integration Reference Group
20/09/2017
0.4
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Kevin O’Connor
Kerry Gregory
Daryl Sayer
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
Name
Business Area
Date
Version
Gary Simpson
Sue Sherburd
Steve Kerr (Department of
Internal Affairs)
Rhys Jones
Strategic Leadership Team
24/09/2017
0.4
Leigh Deuchars
Meiken Bassant
Wayne Mackey
Paul McGil
Murray Mitchel
Brendan Nally
Kevin O’Connor
David Strong
Brett Warwick
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
CONTENTS
Document control ....................................................................................................................................... 2
Background and purpose ............................................................................................................................ 5
Objectives ................................................................................................................................................. 6
Scope ....................................................................................................................................................... 7
Approach .................................................................................................................................................. 8
Dependencies.......................................................................................................................................... 10
Costs ...................................................................................................................................................... 11
Trial deliverables ...................................................................................................................................... 12
Plan on a Page ........................................................................................................................................ 13
Trial governance structure ........................................................................................................................ 14
Risk and issue management ..................................................................................................................... 17
Resourcing .............................................................................................................................................. 20
Appendix 1: High Level Local Advisory Committee project Plan on a Page .................................................... 21
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
Background
The Fire and Emergency New Zealand Act 2017 (the Act) requires Fire and Emergency New Zealand (NZ) to
establish Local Advisory Committees (LACs).
Fire and Emergency NZ will be supported by a network of LACs to ensure a local and community-focused
perspective is heard and inputs into planning and the provision of services.
The purpose and functions of LACs are set out in Section 14 of the Act. Cabinet has been advised that there will
be up to 16 LACs. The Cabinet paper has been made public (CAB-15-MIN-0207 refers).
Purpose of this document
This paper outlines the draft Terms of Reference (TOR) for the LAC Trial to be undertaken in the Hawke’s Bay in
early 2018. Specifically, the TOR outlines the objectives, scope, approach, timeline and governance model for
the trial.
The trial will inform the final detailed design, operational processes and procedures and mandate upon which the
LACs will operate, as well as helping Fire and Emergency NZ to better understand the skills and knowledge LAC
members should have, how committees should be structured, how they will work with the organisation, and how
their local input will be incorporated into planning processes.
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
OBJECTIVES
The LAC trial will provide an opportunity to test, validate and confirm the elements of the LAC detailed design
and observe how these could play out in practice, across a number of different business scenarios, before the
LACs proper, are established. The trial provides the opportunity to test the detailed design in a simulated LAC
environment and gather feedback from the LAC trial members and other stakeholders. This will result in the
detailed design being updated accordingly.
The objectives for the LAC trial are as follows:
#
Objective
Measure
1.
Prove that the critical elements of the LAC Detailed
We design LAC operating principles, processes and develop policies
Design are practical and achievable and that they
that:
provide a framework within which LACs can operate
enable LACs to profile and represent their local issues for
efficiently and effectively, to achieve the legislative
consideration during the Fire and Emergency NZ planning
intent of the Fire and Emergency NZ Act 2017.
process providing input at a local and national level as
required;
are relevant, straight-forward and easy to fol ow and are
not onerous for LAC members to carry out;
are repeatable across different LACs and provide
sufficient flexibility to accommodate local risks and needs;
will create a level of consistency across all LACs for
national reporting purposes;
enable effective engagement between the LAC and the
Fire and Emergency NZ representative on an ongoing
basis.
2.
Provide confidence to our stakeholders that the
Engagement scores and feedback from local community interest
proposed design will ensure Fire and Emergency NZ
groups and interim LAC members participating in the trial.
maintains a close connection with the community
Developed processes for considering advice provided by LACs into
and has the capability to integrate advice provided
planning processes.
by the LACs in respect of local risks, issues and
Developed processes for identifying the appropriate interest groups
community interests into planning processes and
to represent key risks within each community.
plans.
Developed a defined skills matrix for potential LAC members.
under the Official Information Act 1982
Developed a defined skills matrix for Fire and Emergency personnel
required to support the LAC process.
Developed skills identification, selection, appointment, induction
policy and processes, with supporting training material.
3.
Develop a roadmap for the establishment and
Develop an implementation timeline that can be achieved by al
deployment of LACs.
LACs, based on learnings from the trial.
4.
Validate the roles, responsibilities and expectations
Defined RASCI (accountability and responsibilities) for operating the
of those people integral to the LAC process including LACs.
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LAC members, Fire and Emergency NZ Board,
Defined capabilities and capacity required of each Fire and
engagement personnel, and secretariat and
Emergency role, to support the running of the LACs
administration functions.
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
SCOPE
The scope of the LAC Trial is outlined in the table below:
In Scope
Out of Scope
Validation of policies, processes, decisions, systems and tools required to
Validation of policies, processes, decisions, systems and tools
perform the following functions:
required to perform the following functions:
1.0 ESTABLISH & MANAGE LOCAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Set and review local area boundaries
Identify, appoint and remove committee members
Measure LAC performance
Remuneration of committee members
Measure and report on progress in relation to local planning
Set and review LAC operating principles
Manage complaints and dispute resolution
Appoint Fire and Emergency NZ representative (advisory function) to
Setting the remuneration scale for LAC members
LAC
Board and LAC Chairs meeting.
Development and training
Maintain LAC member capability.
Permanent appointment for LAC proper in the Hawke’s Bay
area
2.0 OPERATE LOCAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Setting boundaries of LACs and the preparation for documents
Engage with local stakeholders and consider local risk and need
for public consultation on the proposed boundaries
Provide advice to Fire and Emergency NZ
Drafting of regulations to support LACs
Share information and knowledge with LACs
Determining LAC committee names
Secretariat and admin support functions
Finalisation of policies, processes, systems and tools required
Engagement with Fire and Emergency NZ, operating expectations
to support LAC operation
and obligations/entitlements.
LAC implementation
Information technology changes required to support the LACs
3.0 SUPPORT LOCAL ADVISORY COMMITTEES
Training development and delivery for LACs members.
Setup new committee members
Provide support to committee members
Pay committee member remuneration
Reimburse expense claims
Processes, tools and controls to support committee functions.
4.0 LOCAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE ENGAGEMENT
Board engagement with LACs
Fire and Emergency NZ relationship locally and nationally – including
roles and responsibilities
Escalation and dispute process.
Identify and design processes that may be missing from the existing
design
Engagement with local leaders in the Hawke’s Bay area to assess and
validate local risk and issues and seek appointment nominations
Wider stakeholder engagement with local community interest groups
through the Trial Reference Group
under the Official Information Act 1982
Determine the interim boundaries that will apply to the trial
Interim LAC member appointments for Hawke’s Bay
Appoint a temporary Fire and Emergency NZ representative to act as the
engagement and liaison point for the LAC
Assess organisational impact on other parts of the business as a result of Organisational design and changes required to appoint Fire and
administering the LACs.
Emergency NZ engagement representative personnel or
support secretariat functions required during the trial.
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
APPROACH
The Integration Programme principles will guide how the trial is designed and executed. They include:
Collaboration: Active engagement of and co-design with our people, the sector, unions and
associations, community interest groups, associations and emergency partners will underpin success.
The Programme will work ‘with’ not ‘to’ the sector, and will adopt a ‘listen and act’ not ‘tell and do’
approach. The Programme will treat all parties with respect and give peoples’ views due consideration.
Transparency: The Programme will communicate transparently and often. Transparency will be crucial
in maintaining the support of people, and including our people in the change.
Impartiality: The Programme will treat the views of all internal and external stakeholders fairly and with
respect. When designing solutions, it will work with the best interests of Fire and Emergency NZ and
the Community in mind and keep an open mind to diverse views.
Momentum: The Programme will maintain the momentum that was built throughout the Review and
Transition Phases of the Programme. It will balance the desire to work quickly with the sector and the
organisation’s ability to absorb change.
Leader-led: Change is more effective if it is owned and led by leaders throughout the organisation, in
particular regional and local leaders who have trust and credibility with our people. The Programme will
support leaders throughout the organisation and give them the tools they need to manage change and
empower them to lead effectively.
The trial will be led out of the Resilient Communities Workstream, in the Integration Programme. In Hawke’s
Bay, it will be led by Hawke’s Bay local leaders, Principal Rural Fire Officer (Trevor Mitchell) and the Area
Manager (Ken Cooper), with support from the Region 3 Regional Manager Rural (Gary Lockyer), Region 3 Acting
Fire Region Manager (Bruce Stubbs).
Planning and consultation will be undertaken prior to engaging and executing to ensure this is done in a
considered and prepared manner, and to ensure a seamless trial on a “no surprises” basis. Roles and
responsibilities wil be defined to ensure that there is clarity around who is responsible for doing which activities.
Stakeholder Engagement
Consultation, collaboration and buy-in are critical not only to the successful design and execution of the trial but
more importantly to how LACs are perceived by the community (through its local interest groups). LACs will be a
valuable mechanism for providing input to Fire and Emergency NZ around alignment of local risks and needs,
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against Fire and Emergency NZ’s capability, and for ensuring that the interests of the local community have
appropriately been considered as part of the planning process. For Fire and Emergency NZ, LACs provide a
forum and opportunity to strengthen strategic stakeholder relationships, on both a local and national level and
means to ensure that we remain a tight connection with local communities.
A stakeholder engagement plan and communications plan is being prepared to ensure that engagement in
respect of the trial is carried out in an all-encompassing, planned and cohesive manner. The objectives of
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stakeholder engagement are to:
establish a trial Reference Group that will support the design process and act as champions within their
respective stakeholder organisations for the establishment and support of future LACs post July 2018;
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
identify and appoint interim LAC members that can effectively represent the community interests of the
Hawke’s Bay Area;
educate stakeholders on the purpose of the LACs in the lead up to the establishment of LACs national y
post July 2018; and
tap into wider stakeholder groups, at a national level during and post the trial in the lead up to
implementation of the LACs.
Stakeholder analysis will ensure all appropriate community interests in the Hawke’s Bay local area are identified
and engaged to enable the best chance of securing interim LAC members that most appropriately represent the
community interests. This will be done collaboratively with the local leaders.
Reference Group
A Reference Group will also be established for the purposes of the trial. It is expected that this will comprise of
representatives from local community entities (that are not LAC members), unions and associations
representatives, previous Enlarged Rural Fire District Chairs Group and Fire and Emergency NZ Subject Matter
Experts from the LAC pilot groups. This group will be continuously consulted and informed on the trial as it
progresses, be responsible for reviewing trial outcomes and be used to workshop improvements, where specific
issues or inefficiencies have been identified. The Reference Group will also be tasked with keeping their
respective (national and local) stakeholder groups updated on trial progress and will act as a good medium for
continued stakeholder engagement, at a national level, once we are ready to deploy LACs across the country.
Trial Approach
The trial will replicate where practical, real life processes that we would expect the LAC to perform post July
2018. These will be based on the draft detailed design and allow us to test a number of dif erent business
scenarios within a process. The intent of the trial is to test these processes to ensure that they are not only fit-
for-purpose, but also easy for LAC members to perform, without being time intensive or requiring significant IT or
other specialist skills, recognising that LAC members are likely to stem from a number of diverse groups, with
varying skill sets. A series of business scenarios will be developed to allow us to test the end-to-end process,
and assess the impacts on all participants in the process, as part of the trial planning. These will also include
scenarios where things do not go as planned. For example, what happens when a LAC is unhappy with Fire and
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Emergency’s response to their advice, what happens when the LAC is not functioning and meeting expectations
under the Operating Principles etc.
An iterative design process wil be adopted during the trial, involving the Reference Group in design and using
the trial participants to test different design options, where appropriate, in order to land on the best solution.
Where possible, we will try to trial refinements to process, during the trial period, to ensure these pan out as
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intended.
The trial will also enable the assessment of the people impacts of proposed design and the practicality and
effectiveness of the proposed Fire and Emergency NZ engagement/relationship manager role, and the capability
and capacity that is required in order to successful y support the LAC process nationally, in the future. There will
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Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
be no permanent changes to roles made as a result of the trial. Relevant unions and associations will be advised
of any temporary impacts on existing jobs e.g. secretariat functions required to support the LAC trial.
At the conclusion of the trial, findings and recommendations will be documented and presented to the Board for
consideration. It is envisaged that the LAC Detailed Design will also be finalised at this point and presented to
the Board for approval.
DEPENDENCIES
Upstream Dependencies – One or more of the project deliverables is dependent on a deliverable from another
project and is outlined in the table below.
Project
Deliverable
Is dependent on…..
Resilient Communities
Conduct LAC Trial
Detailed Design for LAC processes being drafted to a level of detail
sufficient to trial
Resilient Communities
Conduct LAC Trial
High Level Design and Detailed Design for the local planning processes
(including local risk modelling and local capability model ing being
drafted to a level of detail sufficient to trial
Leadership in the Sector
Conduct LAC Trial Link and align with overal engagement across the sector
Downstream Dependencies – Another project’s deliverable is dependent on one or more of the project’s
deliverables, and is outlined in the table below.
Project
Deliverable
Creates a dependency for….
Resilient Communities
Findings and recommendations
Draft LAC Regulations -these may require
updating fol owing the trial
Resilient Communities
Findings and recommendations
Target Operating Model design - new
functions required to support the LACs
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COSTS
It is anticipated that the following direct costs will be incurred as a result of executing the trial. These will be
funded through the Integration Programme, Stakeholder Engagement budget.
Cost Category
Cost Description
$
LAC Interim
Remuneration - up to 8 people for max. meetings over 3.5 months @
23,360
Appointments
$
/day
Travel and accommodation @$50 per member per meeting
6,400
Public notifications
5,000
Total Direct costs
$ 34,760
Assumptions:
Project resource costs will be funded from the Integration Programme budget. These will be used to
plan and facilitate the trial including conducting stakeholder analysis with local leaders, developing a
comprehensive stakeholder engagement plan, developing communications, documenting finding and
recommendations etc.
Stakeholder engagement activities and venue costs, travel and accommodation required to be
undertaken by the project team and Reference Group will be funded by the Integration Programme,
Stakeholder Engagement budget.
Time and effort required for Area and Local Leaders to conduct stakeholder analysis, local community
engagement, participating in Reference Group, communicating trial progress to stakeholders etc. will be
absorbed by BAU.
Time and effort required for members of the Reference Group to review trial progress and findings and
collaborate on design for alternative solutions, will be absorbed by BAU and/or partner agencies from
which those members are affiliated.
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Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
TRIAL DELIVERABLES
The table below summarises the key deliverables and activity that will have been completed by the end of the
trial.
Table 1: Trial Deliverables
Completion
Deliverable
Description
Date
Draft Terms of Reference – LAC Trial – Hawke’s Bay
30/09/2017
Stakeholder analysis with regional and local leaders
06/10/2017
06/10/2017
Communications and Stakeholder Engagement Plan for purposes of engaging and
identifying potential nominations for LAC members
Skills matrix for LAC member positions
13/10/2017
Final Terms of Reference – LAC Trial – Hawke’s Bay (approved by the Board)
16/10/2017
Agreement on the Board’s involvement in the trial
31/10/2017
Evaluation criteria for LAC member selection
03/11/2017
Trial Reference Group formed
18/11/2017
30/11/2017
Local stakeholder engagement for the purposes of engaging and identifying potential
nominations for LAC members
LAC appointee nominations for Board consideration
30/11/2017
08/12/2017
LAC appointee engagement artefacts – confidentiality, code of conduct, terms and
conditions of engagement etc.
15/12/2017
Trial runsheet including meeting schedule, activities and specific business scenarios
planned for testing at each meeting
LAC interim appointees confirmed by the Board
18/12/2017
LAC interim appointees appointed and inducted
31/01/2018
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Hawke’s Bay LAC Trial complete
30/04/2018
Trial findings and recommendations
31/05/2018
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Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
PLAN ON A PAGE
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
TRIAL GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
*Note, to be updated once Phase 2 governance arrangements are confirmed
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RISK AND ISSUE MANAGEMENT
The table below includes an initial assessment of potential LAC trial risks.
#
Risk Title
Risk Description
Mitigation Plan
Residual Risk
Rating
1.
Unsuccessful in getting
If we are unable to get local community
Allow sufficient time up front to engage widely with stakeholders,
Moderate
local community
interest groups to participate in the LAC
actively promoting the local advisory committee’s value add to the
interest groups to
trial, then there is a risk that our
community by providing local risks and issues advice to Fire and
participate in the LAC
detailed design will not fit for purpose or
Emergency NZ, the importance of the role and ability to influence
trial for the required
well suited to future LACs.
readiness, response and recovery, prior to calling for LAC
duration of the trial
nominations.
Ensure LAC member remuneration for the trial is commensurate with
time invested.
Plan and map out trial activities in detail prior to the trial in order to set
expectations around time commitments to LAC members upfront.
2.
Conflict of interest/ lack If we don’t have appropriate controls
Design a robust selection, appointment and induction process that
Low
of confidentiality
and appointment processes in place,
clearly sets out our expectations for impartiality, independence and
there is a risk that the integrity of the
confidentiality and contractually binds LAC member appointees to
LAC and its credibility as critical advisor
comply with this conditions.
to Fire and Emergency NZ will be
Put in place review.
compromised.
Build in ability to remove members who are not acting in accordance
with expectations and the conditions of their appointment.
Implement appropriate controls to ensure that conditions are
continuing to be met on an ongoing basis throughout the member’s
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term of appointment.
3.
Decisions are not made
If we don’t appoint the right
Develop methods to ensure that LAC nominations are representative Moderate
as a collective group,
representatives to the LAC, there is a
of the local community.
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Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
#
Risk Title
Risk Description
Mitigation Plan
Residual Risk
Rating
the voice of the
risk that the voice of the individual
Design a robust selection process, that also takes into account
individual overpowers
members will overpower the committee
personality types and dynamics.
committee/ special
and dilute the effectiveness and intent
Appoint a strong Chair that can manage committee dynamics
interest groups drive
of the LAC.
effectively.
wrong focus/ industry
Ensure LAC members are well briefed on their roles and
vs community interest
responsibilities as members and their responsibility to represent the
groups
interest of the overall community.
Build in ability to remove members who are not acting in the interests
of the community.
Observe behaviour and representation during the trial and use
observations to build in controls to manage.
4.
Trial sets precedent for
There is a risk that external
Ensure that trial appointees are engaged as interim appointments
Low
the permanent make up
stakeholders and trial appointees
only. Appointments will be timebound for the period of the trial.
of future LAC for the
perceive that the trial appointees will
Hawke’s Bay area
continue to operate the LAC ongoing as
a permanent arrangement, post the
trial, despite the detailed design and
other LAC establishment activities
having been implemented.
5.
Fail to get buy-in and
If we do not run a thorough, well
Simulate as close as possible, all business scenarios that are likely to High
engagement from trial
planned and coordinated trial process,
be required and/or encountered as part of operating the LAC. Ensure
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participants
there is a risk that we will be not get
that business scenarios simulate the end to end business process
buy in or effective contribution from trial
wherever possible to flush out any inefficiencies or breakdowns in
participants and will be unsuccessful in
process and consult with stakeholders to design resolutions and/or
achieving our trial outcomes.
improvements to the process design.
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
#
Risk Title
Risk Description
Mitigation Plan
Residual Risk
Rating
Conduct the trial over a long enough duration to ensure that all
possible business processes and scenarios can be tested thoroughly.
Invest time upfront, to get everyone (stakeholders and trial
participants) on the same page, so everyone is clear on the
expectations of the trial and their responsibilities and contribution to
the overall design.
Be agile - Listen to feedback, tweak processes and re-test throughout
the trial. Be flexible and adaptable and build in review sessions to
canvas and consider feedback.
Ensure we are as prepared as possible prior to the commencing the
trial i.e. draft detailed design complete for the processes that we are
trialling, draft templates, artefacts, guides etc. are complete and
available, and a structured plan/daily runsheet of trial activities to be
carried out by the trial LAC has been completed.
6.
The local planning
If we cannot agree and put in place
Prioritise local risk and capability and planning framework projects
Moderate
framework is not agreed changes to the local planning
with the Resilient Communities workstream. Ensure this is the main
and ready to be
framework before the trial commences,
effort, along with the LAC project in terms of workstream priorities.
tested during the trial
there is a risk that we will not be able to
Obtain Business sponsor backing so potential roadblocks or conflicts
period
sufficiently test this critical responsibility
in priorities and/or resources are addressed and resolved in a timely
of the LAC and by not being ready, we
manner.
will create creditability issues with the
Provide proxy risk inputs, that closely align with the proposed detailed
trial participants.
design, for the LAC trial purposes if system/tool changes to risk tools
cannot be implemented in time for the trial.
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Fire and Emergency New Zealand Integration
Terms of Reference – LAC Trial
RESOURCING
It is expected that the following resource will be required in order to successful y deliver the LAC trial outcomes.
Named Resource
Role
Allocation
Nic Wright
Project Manager
40%
Mark Plowman
Business Analyst
20%
TBC
Business Analyst
40%
Neroli Walkham
Technical Writer
25%
Janine McLees
Implementation & Change Workstream Lead
10%
Cushla Majendie
Implementation Analyst
100%
Julia Anderson
Communications Advisor
40%
Sue Sherburd
Stakeholder Engagement Advisor
10%
Julia Saunders
Learning and Development Advisor
20%
TBC
SME
10%
TBC
SME
10%
Gary Lockyer
Regional Rural Manager, Region 3
As required
Bruce Stubbs
Fire Region Manager, Region 3
Trevor Mitchell
Principal Rural Fire Officer, Hawke’s Bay
As required
Ken Cooper
Area Manager, Hawke’s Bay
TBC
Fire and Emergency NZ Interim Engagement
<50% during trial period
Representative
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TBC
Fire and Emergency NZ Performance and
As required
Planning analyst
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APPENDIX 1: HIGH LEVEL LOCAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE PROJECT PLAN ON A PAGE
The timeline below outlines the key tasks and blocks of work for the Local Advisory Committee project, and how the trial fit within this.
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