Shift in gun owners’ trust in firearms regulator

Te Tari Pūreke - Firearms Safety Authority has recorded a big shift in trust from the firearms community. File Photo.

Just 18 months after launching as a dedicated firearms regulator for New Zealand, Te Tari Pūreke - Firearms Safety Authority records a big shift in trust and confidence in its work from the firearms community.

Te Tari Pūreke was launched on 30 November 2022 as New Zealand's first dedicated firearms regulatory authority.

One of its early tasks was to undertake baseline surveys of support from firearms licence holders, the public, and its own staff. This was a recommendation from the Royal Commission of Inquiry into the 2019 Christchurch terrorist attack.

Eighteen months on, Te Tari Pūreke has just released the findings of a follow-up survey that repeated the same questions, and it shows a significant uplift in the trust and confidence levels held by the firearms licence holder community – positive gains of between 15 per cent and 25 per cent across a range of key indicators.

More than two-thirds (68 per cent) of licence holders now have trust and confidence in Te Tari Pūreke management of firearms licensing (up from 42 per cent in 2022); and 65 per cent of licence holders have confidence in Te Tari Pūreke being effective in controlling the safe use and possession of firearms (up from 45 per cent in 2022).

Te Tari Pūreke Executive Director Angela Brazier says a lot of progress has been made strengthening New Zealand’s firearms regulatory system, and it was telling that licence holder trust and confidence levels now matched those of the wider public generally.

“It’s been a really pleasing shift in support from the licence holder community,” she says. “We have worked hard as an organisation to lift our responsiveness and performance, and provide better service to licence holders, like removing the licencing backlog. I think these improvements are coming through these results.

“This of course was the period in which we introduced the Firearms Registry. We’ve put a real emphasis on the quality of our outreach and communications we are undertaking with licence holders, seeking to improve interactions in person, over the telephone, online, and in letters and email.

“All of this is still a work in progress, but it’s fantastic to see that these kinds of changes are showing up in improved trust and confidence.”

The latest survey also measures public trust and confidence. Results confirm the levels of trust held by the wider public have been maintained, with around two-thirds (64 per cent) of the public continuing to have confidence in the way Te Tari Pūreke controls the safe use and possession of firearms in New Zealand (2022: 65 per cent); and 65 per cent in the way Te Tari Pūreke are manages firearms licensing (2022: 67 per cent).

Meanwhile, the staff of Te Tari Pūreke have signalled their confidence in the internal health and culture of the organisation with large gains in employee satisfaction across a number of indicators. These include:

• Staff believe the instruction and training they receive has improved with satisfaction scores for training up from 63 per cent in 2022 to 75 per cent in 2024.
• Satisfaction in the support employees receive to do their role also improving, rising 15 per cent from 62 per cent in 2022 to 77 per cent in the latest survey.
• Employees believe they have the tools they need to do the job has similarly had a marked increase, going up from 67 per cent in 2022 to 78 per cent today.

“As an organisation we will continue to work on those things that lift trust and confidence from the public, the licence holder community, and our own people,” says Angela Brazier.

“What we all have in common is wanting our families and communities to be safe from firearms harm. Te Tari Pūreke is committed to working with the sector – and the wider community - to listen and understand their ideas and feedback, as well as their challenges and concerns.

“While we are very pleased with these results, there is no reason to think we can’t continue building on this solid platform and lift them further in the coming years.”

Firearms Licence Holder Perspectives. Photo supplied.

Public Perspectives. Photo supplied.

Staff Satisfaction Survey ResultsPhoto supplied.

8 comments

Really?

Posted on 20-06-2024 17:44 | By Astoreth

Sorry, but I know literally hundreds of shooters, but quite confident that I don't know anyone who has any trust in the FSA.


Anti-gun zealots

Posted on 20-06-2024 21:52 | By Kiwigunguy

As a gun owner, they do not have my trust or confidence. They are an anti-gun organisation, put in place by an anti-gun government, and they're still staffed by the same people. They exist to end lawful gun ownership, not to facilitate it. They need to be scrapped in their entirety, along with the registry and the rest of Labour's failed draconian gun control laws.


Drop It

Posted on 21-06-2024 03:13 | By Yadick

As an organisation we will continue to work on those things that lift trust and confidence from the public, the licence holder community . . .
Then drop the absolutely ridiculous name that most people cannot pronounce let alone know what it means.
Te Tari Pūreke was launched on 30 November 2022 as New Zealand's first dedicated firearms regulatory authority.
Who? What? Zero confidence in the unknown. Very off-putting.


Surveys....

Posted on 21-06-2024 10:16 | By Rabba

They didn't poll me or a half dozen others I know. Good thing because the result would have been 0%
They are in place to get rid if us not assist us.


Trust ??

Posted on 21-06-2024 13:53 | By neil9

They don't have my trust either. Giving them a (shopping) list of my firearms and my address is the last thing I would want to do. There is no doubt at all that the registry will be breached sometime soon by a careless staff member or a disgruntled ex staff member and your details will be out there. My licence application, and my personal details were stolen from an insecure police station in Auckland 3 years ago. I was told not to worry!
The next step after we register is what fees the Govt will charge per firearm. $100 sounds like a good round figure. After all, you have to register your dog. Why not your gun.
The BEST thing that we can hope for is that Nicole from Act will rescind registration. The good guys will register. the bad guys wont.


Lies, damn lies and statistics...

Posted on 22-06-2024 09:09 | By Jayman

Except the survey only reached 1700 license holders, 700 of which were members of NZ police and the rest actually working for the FSA. Out of just over two hundred and thirty three thousand license holders that's a sample size of less than one percent... Very poor practice and a terrible misrepresentation. Bloody atrocious.


Keep up the good work Te Tari Pūreke

Posted on 22-06-2024 09:28 | By Christopherc

This was an independent survey done without prejudice. Of course there will be some that disagree, this is always the case even with surveys where you get a 100% (this is called margin of error). But to see those who call themselves fit and propper suggesting that the results were faked is extremely disappointing. Keep up the good work Te Tari Pūreke.


Registry liability

Posted on 24-06-2024 14:05 | By Fenn Trapper

Police lost the records of 5,000 Auckland licensed gun owners by leaving them in a rubbish skip for "several years" in an abandoned and insecure police station. They later found these records in criminal hands and said "don't worry". A gun registry is a shopping list for any hacker with names, addresses and gun details. A complete liability for public safety.


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