An employee of an organisation may disclose information to
an appropriate authority if the employee believes the information relates to
serious wrongdoing and is true or likely to be true. The purpose of the disclosure must be for the
purposes of investigating the serious wrongdoing. Employees also covers contractors, board
members and volunteers.
If an employee makes a disclosure under the Protected
Disclosures Act the employee is protected from civil, criminal or disciplinary
actions and this applies even if the employee was mistaken as to the serious
wrong doing.
The employee should first use any established internal
procedures to report the serious wrongdoing within the organisation but can go
straight to an appropriate authority if they believe on reasonable grounds that
the head of the organisation is involved in the serious wrongdoing or the
immediate referral to the authority is warranted due to the urgency or
exceptional circumstances or there has been no action on the internal referral
within 20 working days.
The appropriate authority receiving the information must
take all care to not disclose the identity of the employee making the
disclosure unless limited exceptions apply.
Employees who volunteer supporting information are also
protected under the Act so long as they did so prior to being approached by the
investigators.
The act does not permit the disclosure of legally
privileged information and any such disclosure is not protected.
No one can agree that the act does not apply so employees
cannot contract out of their protections.
The most common appropriate authorities for employees to
make the disclosure to are the Police, Auditor-General, Serious Fraud Office,
Inspector General of Intelligence and Security, Ombudsman, Commissioner for the
Environment, Police Conduct Authority, Solicitor-General, State Services
Commissioner and Health & Disability Commissioner, heads of Public Service
organisations, and professional disciplinary bodies but does not include Members
of Parliament.
Alan
Knowsley
Employment
Lawyer Wellington
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