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Police Vet Information SheetWhen must vetting be done?
What is the process?When police receive a form signed by the applicant, they run a check on the Law Enforcement System LES ( the former "Wanganui Computer"). This check may show criminal and / or traffic convictions. The police then check for any other information about behaviour of a sexual or violent nature that may pose a risk to children and young people. If they do hold such information, and it is substantiated, police will stamp the application "police recommend that this person does not have unsupervised access to children, young people, or the more vulnerable members of society". Where police do stamp the vetting form as above, the individual concerned should be advised that they can obtain the reason for the stamp by writing directly to the Manager, Licensing & Vetting, NZ Police, PO Box 3017, Wellington. Vetting information is personal information, and therefore must be protected. This information is to be securely stored until such a time as it is no longer useful for the purpose it was obtained. Boards or management requesting police vets should take care to ensure compliance with the principles of the Privacy Act, in addition to complying with the requirements of the Education Act. The applicant, however, may keep their vet information if they wish.
What is the NZ Teachers Council's role?
What is the fee?The fee for an application is $10.00(inclusive of GST). This is to cover the NZ Teachers Council's administrative costs in relation to co ordinating police vetting requests for non teaching and unregistered employees.
Non Teacher Police Vet Information Sheet (150Kb PDF file) |