The first thing is that the question of whether we should be part of the audit office has never been asked, because we never have been. Maybe that's a blind spot that the whole of New Zealand has. We've never thought of that model, because we had an auditor's office, we had an ombudsman's office, and then we established a commissioner for the environment office. So that one's never been debated.
The second part of your question, I think, is absolutely on the button. Has there been debate about the role, and are we doing enough of some things? Yes, of course there has been.
One of the things is whether we should be focusing more on bigger systems and whether we should be more of an advocate or less of an advocate. And yes, that has waxed and waned.
Should we be more targeted in our work and look at particular sections, such as legislation around water management, which we've signalled is important, in great detail, or should we do more on the bigger systems? Should we focus more on the concerns that are coming from citizens? Some of them are quite focused, very small concerns.
That debate waxes and wanes. But at the end of the day, with a piece of legislation like this that creates an office like this, if it's going to be very independent, it's inevitably going to be shaped by the strengths of the appointee, the commissioner. That's the very nature of these sorts of roles and the capability the commissioner brings together as a team.
What I've also done in my 10 years is develop a series of strategic plans. We bring together a very wide collection of New Zealand citizens who have a great interest in this broader sphere of work. And we've actually involved your Canadian commissioners in that process. We've developed a series of rolling five-year strategic plans, which sets a frame and signals to New Zealand society, and signals to Parliament, what it is that we think are the strategic areas, and the components of those, into which we think we should be putting our very limited resources.
So in a sense, that's a way of going out and having a wider conversation with New Zealand about what it is we do, how we do it, and whether it is being effective.