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Jeff Montgomery Registrar-General Births, Deaths and Marriages. Celebrants Association of New Zealand Conference 11 August 2013. Department of Internal Affairs – Our Strategic Focus Areas. Transforming the way government agencies deliver their services.
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Jeff MontgomeryRegistrar-General Births, Deaths and Marriages Celebrants Association of New Zealand Conference 11 August 2013
Department of Internal Affairs – Our Strategic Focus Areas Transforming the way government agencies deliver their services Increased trust in how government manages NZ’s civic information Stronger and more resilient communities Internal Affairs is a robust sustainable and fit for purpose government agency
Department of Internal Affairs – How we work • 2000+ staff working across a wide range of areas • Building a safe, prosperous and respected nation • Service Delivery and Operations provide a range of services that make a difference in the lives of the people by enabling them to fulfil aspirations - for themselves, their families and their communities. This includes: • Citizenship • Passports • Community Operations • Charities • iGovt – RealMe • Births, Deaths and Marriage
Births, Deaths and Marriages • Registrar-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages - Jeff Montgomery. Independent statutory officer who makes decisions on who becomes a celebrant, amongst other things. • 48 registries nationally - Four run directly by the Department and 44 by the Department's agents, Ministry of Justice and local councils. • Each year BDM deals with more than 300,000 New Zealanders. We register: • 62,000 births • 23,000 relationships • 30,000 deaths • We issue more than 275,000 certificate and printouts • Register Name Changes and Gender Reassignments • 9,500+ approved marriage celebrants or Registrars of Marriage
Marriage Statistics • Current celebrant numbers (July 2013) • Church and organisation marriage celebrants = 7,594 • Independent marriage celebrants = 1,817 • Independent civil union celebrants = 452 • Each year 400 applications for independent celebrants. 25% approved. • Proportion of ceremonies performed by marriage celebrants • 45% by an independent marriage celebrant • 32% by a church or organisational marriage celebrant • 23% in a Registry Office by a Registrar of Marriages
Marriages, Civil Unions, and Divorces: • Year ended December 2012 • 20,521 marriages registered to New Zealand residents • 2,422 marriages were registered to overseas residents. • 303 civil unions registered to New Zealand residents plus 87 to overseas residents. 22% were different sex couples. • 8,785 married couples divorced. • More relationships ending • Just over one-third of couples married in 1987 divorced within 25 years (ie before their silver wedding anniversary). • Of the 2,455 civil union couples in New Zealand, only 124 civil unions (less than one in 20) have been dissolved. • Source: Statistics New Zealand
Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Act 2013 Royal Assent granted on 19 April 2013 First same-sex marriage probably Monday 19 August 2013 Notices of Intended Marriage accepted from 16 August Specifies that a marriage is between two people regardless of their sex, sexual orientation, or gender identity All married couples will be eligible to apply jointly to adopt a child Transgender people able to remain married regardless of gender identity Nothing else changes
“A marriage licence shall authorize but not oblige any marriage celebrant to solemnize the marriage to which it relates.” (current Act - unchanged) The Marriage Act authorises but does not oblige any marriage celebrant to solemnise a marriage. No change. Reinforced by the Amendment Act “no religious or organisational celebrant is obliged to solemnise a marriage that would contravene religious beliefs or philosophical or humanitarian convictions of a religious body or approved organisation.”
Marriage Amendment Act – Implementing the change • Not a major change. Flow on implications for the birth and death registration systems. • Change to the Notice of Intended Marriage form, adding options for Headings of Particulars
Celebrant Registration No change to celebrant appointment process. Celebrants registered for civil unions - 130 have been offered the opportunity to also be a marriage celebrant. Changing application process - merging marriage and civil union celebrant forms. Making criteria more transparent and permissive. Sought further feedback from CANZ. Working with CANZ to review renewal process (different time of year, maybe for longer) Looking at possibility for a competency based appointment process. Adding celebrant identification number to forms to improve quality of information we collect – eg number of ceremonies completed.