9 Jan 2025

Treaty Principles Bill submissions re-open after website woes

1:48 pm on 9 January 2025
David Seymour

The bill's architect, David Seymour. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Parliament's justice select committee unanimously agreed to re-open submissions to 1pm Tuesday 14 January after technical issues.

Initial indications are that the committee received 300,000 online submissions, half of which were received on the last day.

It easily surpasses the previous record of about 107,000 on the Conversion Practices Prohibition Legislation Bill in 2021.

The final number of submissions is likely to change as committee staff work through processing the submissions.

Failed submission on Treaty Principles Bill

Photo: Supplied

Submissions emailed to treatyprinciples@parliament.govt.nz or justice@parliament.govt.nz between Monday and 9am Thursday will be accepted as a regular submission, provided their email references the technical issues with the website, contains a name, a submission, and meets the submisson conditions.

Those who emailed submissions that do not meet this criteria would need to re-do it on the website portal.

The committee has "strongly encouraged" those wishing to make submissions to do so promptly and not leave doing so until the final hours of next Tuesday.

Those experiencing technical difficulties - or wondering if their email meets the committee's criteria - have been asked to email committee staff at treatyprinciples@parliament.govt.nz.

Anyone approaching the committee about technical difficulties need to attach a screenshot of the issue they're experiencing.

The Justice Committee says people may experience a delay getting a response to their queries due to the high level of public engagement.

"Committee staff are working hard to support everyone to participate in the committee's work, and the committee appreciates your patience," it said.

Each individual submitter will be counted once, even if they make multiple submissions, and it's up to the committee as to how it handles identical submissions from different individuals.

Problems with the website meant people were not able to make a submission by the original deadline of 11.59pm on Tuesday, 7 January.

RNZ was contacted by dozens of people who couldn't get their submission in and one case where the feedback was altered.

The committee met on Thursday to decide whether an extension was merited.

Tech consultant Louisa Taylor said the errors she observed on the website could be caused by low server capacity or an attack.

"If a nefarious actor sent a lot of traffic to the site they could actually take it down," she said.

It's not clear how many people were affected by technical problems but RNZ has seen evidence they could date back to late November 2024.

Back then, a submitter emailed their feedback to Parliament, flagging they had experienced problems with the official submissions portal.

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