Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives
Te Tari o te Manahautū o te Whare Māngai | |
Agency overview | |
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Headquarters | Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives, Parliament Buildings, Wellington |
Employees | 100[1] |
Annual budget | NZ$17,470,000[2] |
Agency executives |
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Website | http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/ParlSupport/Agencies/OOC/ |
The Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives is a New Zealand Public Sector Organisation.
The Office of the Clerk is the legislature’s secretariat. It provides specialist advice on procedure and parliamentary law and secretariat services. The Office of the Clerk is a politically independent organisation, providing services to Parliament, as distinct from services to the Government, and providing services to members in their parliamentary roles rather than in their party or electorate capacities.[3]
Although the Office of the Clerk’s primary client group is members of Parliament and its principal relationships are with the Speaker, with other presiding officers, and with committee chairs, it also deals with office holders such as the Leader of the House, party leaders, and party whips, and with members’ staff.[4]
The Office of the Clerk carries out the functions required under section 3 of the Clerk of the House of Representatives Act 1988, which provides that:
- “The functions of the Clerk of the House of Representatives shall be—
- (a) to note all proceedings of the House of Representatives and of any committee of the House:
- (b) to carry out such duties and exercise such powers as may be conferred on the Clerk of the House of Representatives by law or by the Standing Orders and practice of the House of Representatives:
- (c) to act as the principal officer of the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives and, in that capacity, to manage that office efficiently, effectively, and economically:
- (d) to ensure that staff of the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives carry out their duties (including duties imposed on them by law or by the Standing Orders or practice of the House of Representatives) and maintain—
- (i) proper standards of integrity and conduct; and
- (ii) concern for the public interest:
- (e) to be responsible, under the direction of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, for the official reporting of the proceedings of the House of Representatives and its committees.”
References
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