All-Of-Government Focus To Our Work
In this section...
- Statement of Intent Homepage 2007/08
- Minister's foreword
- Chief Executive's overview
- Statement of responsibility
- Strategic direction
- Introduction
- Our strategic context
- The outcomes we want for land management and land information
- Managing for outcomes
- End outcomes
- Intermediate outcomes
- Our outcomes framework
- Our strategy and planning framework
- All-of-government focus to our work
- Demonstrating our progress towards outcomes
- Our key priorities 2006-2009
- Risk management
- Focusing on our future capability
- Forecast financial statements
- Appendices
- Contact details
Integrating our work across government remains a key focus for LINZ.
We collaborate with a range of agencies to ensure our policy advice reflects the wider interests of key stakeholders, and so it can better meet the Government's expectations for Economic Transformation and National Identity. Working proactively across government means we contribute to a sustainable economy by developing policy that is innovative, and where impacts and consequences are robustly considered.
For this reason, we will continue to share information and align our policies with those of other relevant agencies.
An example of this collaboration was our work in 2006/07 with the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology on the Ocean Survey 20/20 initiative. Ocean Survey 20/20 aims to provide New Zealand with greater knowledge about its ocean territory. This work included an agreement that the governance structure for the initiative should comprise representatives of various agencies.
As part of our commitment to maintaining an all-of-government focus during 2007/08 LINZ will work on the following initiatives:
- Establishing the Geospatial Office - this office will be situated within LINZ and will provide a mechanism for co-ordination and collective decision making across the wider geospatial sector.
- Māori land registration - this is a joint agency initiative between the Ministry of Justice and LINZ to enable the completion of registration of Māori freehold land. There are approximately 8,000 Māori freehold blocks where no formal survey data is held, and this project will ensure some form of survey data for every block is held on record. The project will also complete registration for approximately 57,000 unregistered Māori Land Court orders.
