MEDIA STATEMENT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday 24 June 2025, 10:00 AM
2 minutes to Read

Te Tiratū Iwi Māori Partnership Board is concerned over proposed legislative reforms to the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) Act 2022 that removes the current direct role of Iwi Māori Partnership Boards (IMPBs) in shaping the local health service design and delivery.

Stripping IMPBs of their decision-making authority and reducing our role to that of a ‘consultative’ body risks undermining the spirit and intent of Pae Ora, weakening community-led health leadership, and falls well short of the Crown’s obligations under Te Tiriti o Waitangi,” said Hagen Tautari, co-chair of Te Tiratū Iwi Māori Partnership Board.

“Te Tiriti is a constitutional foundation. Reforms must reflect the Crown’s enduring duty to uphold Te Tiriti obligations in both law and practice, not through policy alone.”

The sentiment is also shared by the larger Te Manawa Taki IMPB collective that comprises of Te TiratūTairāwhiti Toitū Te OraTe Moana a ToiTe Taura Ora o Waiariki, Tūwharetoa, and Te Pūnanga Ora.

The rōpū has called for the legislative changes to enter a formal co-design phase with Iwi Māori Partnership Boards and asked the Minister for urgent clarification on:

  • How IMPBs’ Community Health Plans will influence service outcomes under the new framework
  • What mechanisms will ensure IMPBs retain their role in local service design
  • How the Crown will ensure accountability and transparency without undermining Tiriti-led governance

While Te Tiratū supports the Minister’s back-to-basics approach putting patients first and stated goal of timely, quality healthcare for all New Zealanders, Tautari says the proposals risk centralising decision-making in Wellington which would erode decades of hard-won progress trying to improve health outcomes for highest-need group in New Zealand’s health system.[1]

A letter to the Minister has been penned and endorsed by the Te Manawa Taki IMPB collective providing constructive feedback and solutions. It supports reforms that strengthen national oversight and equity outcomes – including the proposed expansion of the Hauora Māori Advisory Committee (HMAC) – but only if they are adequately resourced and do not displace the unique, community-based role of IMPBs.

“Partnership is not a principle to be referenced in policy—it is a constitutional obligation that must be upheld in law and practice,” said Tautari. “The voices of our whānau are strongest at the local level, where services are delivered, where the gaps are being identified by Whānau Voice and where IMPBs are making a real difference.”

The Board points to recent success in Te Moana a Toi, a member of te Manawa Taki IMPB collective where the regional IMPB worked alongside Whakatāne Hospital to address critical maternity service issues, delivering faster solutions than waiting on national intervention.

“Equity comes from working alongside whānau, listening to communities, and enabling local solutions. The reforms must protect that,” Tautari said. Reiterating the Board’s commitment to working constructively with the Government to ensure the health system delivers better, more equitable outcomes for Māori and all New Zealanders.

[1] Pg23-24 https://forms.justice.govt.nz/search/Documents/WT/wt_DOC_195476216/Hauora%202023%20W.pdf

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