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People working in the children’s sector will often need to work together to ensure children and young people are getting the services and support they need to be safe, protected from harm and to thrive and succeed. New guidance shows them how.
The guidance provides material that people need to confidently make good and timely decisions. It covers sharing under the Oranga Tamariki Act (wellbeing and safety), the Family Violence Act (protection from family harm) and the Privacy Act (personal information) and includes useful tools such as quick reference guides and checklists.
There is no legislative barrier to information sharing when there is a wellbeing or safety concern for a child or young person and the Privacy Act does not stand in the way of protecting children from harm.
OPC’s work is part of the integrated government response (rec 7) relating to the Dame Karen Poutasi review in 2022.

One of the important changes in the Privacy Amendment Act 2025 is the addition of Information Privacy Principle 3A, which comes into force on 1 May 2026.
If an agency collects personal information indirectly, IPP3A will require them to take reasonable steps to make sure that the person concerned is told.
We’ve developed some guidance on IPP3A to help people understand the new requirements, which includes an IPP3A decision flowchart to help you figure out if you need to tell individuals that you have collected their information indirectly.
The guidance includes information on what collecting personal information indirectly means, the notification requirements of IPP3A, the differences from IPP3, timing of notifications, and exceptions for when collecting information indirectly.
On 1 May 2026 all organisations will need to have their systems in place to comply with the new requirements. We are still considering how IPP3A will best apply to the Codes of Practice made under the Privacy Act, and you can expect to see consultation on this early next year.
Galleries, Libraries, Museums, and Archives readers will be especially interested in the IPP3A(5) guidance about archiving in the public interest.
Privacy complaints in our 2024/25 Annual Report are up 21% from 2023/24, which had also been a record year. The number of serious privacy breaches notified by organisations also rose 43% this year.
The Annual Report also showed:
A 40% increase in privacy complaints for investigation.
A 30% drop in privacy breaches notified by the public sector, while the private sector recorded a 133% increase in notifiable breaches.
1208 privacy complaints dealt with as ‘fast resolve’, which means we acted swiftly to help people resolve their privacy concerns or provided agencies with information about how to comply with their obligations. This was 16% up from last year.
We negotiated financial reparation for 6.5% of the privacy complainants that we accepted for consideration.
We also made 12 submissions to select Committees during the year to ensure privacy was considered and provided sound privacy advice to dozens of agencies which helped the strengthen their privacy projects.
Simply Privacy is running its popular Privacy Officer Toolkit Workshop for new Privacy Officers on 3 and 4 March 2026.