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Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management (New Zealand)

Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management
Te Rākau Whakamarumaru
Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management (New Zealand) (emblem).png
Agency overview
Formed July 1999
Preceding agencies
  • Ministry of Civil Defence
  • Ministry for Emergency Management
Jurisdiction New Zealand
Headquarters Bowen House, Wellington
41°16′47″S 174°46′31″E / 41.279794°S 174.775330°E / -41.279794; 174.775330
Annual budget NZD 12.3m
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Sarah Stuart-Black, Director
  • David Coetzee, National Controller
Parent agency Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (New Zealand)
Child agency
Website http://www.civildefence.govt.nz

The Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management (MCDEM; Māori: Te Rākau Whakamarumaru) is the public service department of New Zealand responsible for providing leadership and support around national, local and regional emergencies. Originally established within the Department of Internal Affairs in 1959, it now operates as a business unit of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet.

The Ministry reports to the Minister of Civil Defence, currently Nathan Guy.

No formal civil defence or emergency management structure existed in New Zealand until the 1930s, when the increasing threat of war prompted the formation of the Emergency Precautions Scheme, which was controlled by the Department of Internal Affairs. In addition to war, earthquake risk was another concern of the Scheme, prompted in part by the 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake. During World War II, the name of the EPS was changed to Civil Defence. While EPS/Civil Defence did not need to respond to any invasion attempts, it was twice called upon to assist with earthquake recovery efforts in Wellington and the Wairarapa region in 1942.

Following the war, responsibility for civil defence was assumed by the Department of Internal Affairs. A Review of Defence white paper, issued by the Second Labour Government amid the fear of nuclear war, proposed the establishment of a separate Ministry of Civil Defence. The first Director of Civil Defence was J.V. Meech (also the Secretary of Internal Affairs), though in practice much of the work was delegated to Andrew Sharp; the first Minister of Civil Defence in the post-war period was Bill Anderton (also the Minister of Internal Affairs). The Civil Defence Act 1962 set out in legislation the responsibilities and duties of the Ministry. In 1964, the first full-time Director of Civil Defence was appointed: Brigadier R.C. Queree.


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Wikipedia

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