Why, Labour education spokesman Chris Hipkins asked, had it taken the Government so long to take action over the troubled Novopay school payroll service? It was a reasonable question on several counts. As long as 18 months ago, a Deloitte technical report said that long-term stability could not be delivered
Editorial: Government slow to act on Novopay
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Novopay Minister Steven Joyce. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Mr Joyce is obviously keen for the episode to be consigned to history. The outcome should, he said, "not necessarily be seen as failure on anyone's part any more than it had been". That was a reference to the misrepresentation of Novopay by ministry staff, and the failure of ministers Hekia Parata, Craig Foss and Bill English to detect this. But the lessons should not be brushed aside. If it is unusual for any software system change to be fault-free, Novopay's troubles came not so long after another debacle that involved the police's Incis system. Ministers and their officials should have been on high alert.
Mr Joyce said government control was not a silver bullet. That suggests he expects problems to continue for some time, a point reinforced by the improvements in the service centre, and further taxpayer funding will be needed to achieve a more effective and efficient service. Already, Novopay has cost $110 million, $45 million more than originally budgeted. That should have provided every incentive to staunch the bleeding at the earliest possible opportunity.