Ministry of Transport (New Zealand)

Ministry of Transport
Te Manatū Waka
Agency overview
Formed 1968 (1968)
Jurisdiction New Zealand
Headquarters Level 6,
89 The Terrace,
Wellington
WELLINGTON 6140
Employees 146 (June 2012)[1]
Annual budget Vote Transport
Total budget for 2015/16
$4,270,641,000[2]
Minister responsible
Agency executive
  • Martin Matthews
    Chief Executive

The Ministry of Transport (Māori: Te Manatū Waka) is the public service department of New Zealand charged with advising the government on transport policy.

History

The Ministry of Transport was formerly responsible for enforcement of traffic laws before their division of traffic officers was merged into the same organisation as the police in 1992.[3]

Government transport sector

The transport sector includes four Crown entities and three State-owned enterprises:

Crown Entities

State-Owned Enterprises

They are responsible for day-to-day hands-on management of daily traffic, aviation, rail and maritime activities. Their roles and the composition of their boards are defined in legislation.

The Ministry negotiates an annual performance agreement with each entity on behalf of the Minister, monitors the entities' performance against that agreement, and recommends appointments to the entities' governing bodies.

The Ministry provides policy advice to the Minister, in collaboration with the Crown entities, including the making of transport rules. As well, the Ministry negotiates on behalf of New Zealand, bilateral and multilateral air services agreements and is the licensing authority for foreign international airlines operating services to and from New Zealand.

Additional

The Ministry also:

The Ministry does not have a hands-on-role in daily traffic, aviation, rail or maritime matters.

Cabinet Ministers

Name Took Office Left Office Party
Peter Gordon 1968 1972 National
Basil Arthur 1972 1975 Labour
Colin McLachlan 1975 1981 National
George Gair 1981 1984 National
Richard Prebble 1984 1987 Labour
Bill Jeffries 1987 1990 Labour
Rob Storey 1990 1993 National
Maurice Williamson 1993 1996 National
Jenny Shipley 1996 1997 National
Maurice Williamson 1997 1999 National
Mark Gosche 1999 2002 Labour
Paul Swain 2002 2004 Labour
Pete Hodgson 2004 2005 Labour
David Parker 2005 2006 Labour
Annette King 2006 2008 Labour
Steven Joyce 2008 2011 National
Gerry Brownlee 2011 2014 National
Simon Bridges 2014 Incumbent National

See also

References

External links

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