Corrections has spent over $305,000 on slushy syrup and maintaining frozen ice machines in the past six years.

The news comes as proposed job cuts ravage the public service with 3460 jobs set for the chopping block, as part of the cost savings drive.

The slushy machines caused controversy in 2019 when it was revealed Corrections had spent over $1 million of taxpayer money on 193 slushy machines.

The then-National leader Simon Bridges called it “irresponsible and wasteful spending” at the time but then-Corrections minister Kelvin Davis said was about health and safety.

Since then the slushy fund has continued with 160 of the 193 original machines still in use and $305,906 spent on syrup, maintaining them.

    • @TagMeInSkipIGotThis
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      2 months ago

      Yeah but these articles are almost always planted by the Taxpayer’s Onion so they don’t care about the proportion of the spend, or how it might make working in such a place slightly more tolerable, its all just a BS shitpost to make people think the public service wastes lots of money.

      I can promise anybody that corporates throw way more money around on stuff way stupider than $50k per year on some icey beverages.

      Hell, some corporates provide financial backing to the morons at the TU so, yeah.

      • @Xcf456
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        82 months ago

        100% my first thought too. Cultivate the vibes of enormous public sector waste that doesn’t stand up to basic scrutiny, in terms of substance or scale.

        Then people get shocked Pikachu face when the so called waste getting cut is actually school lunches, hospitals, customs officers and so on because this stuff is miniscule compared to the targets the govt has set, and the amount they want to give away in tax cuts.

    • @DaveOPMA
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      22 months ago

      We have about 8,000 prisoners. That’s 300k per year per prisoner?

      Figures I’ve heard previously were more like $150k so I guess Corrections spends a lot outside of prisons?

      • @deadbeef79000
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        32 months ago

        Parole checks and home detention and community detention for example.

        • @DaveOPMA
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          32 months ago

          Yes that makes sense. I also wonder if that budget includes funding for rehabilitation programmes.

          • @deadbeef79000
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            32 months ago

            I assume so, hence “corrections” rather than “incarceration” being the department name ;-)

            • @[email protected]
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              32 months ago

              In the US, we privatize the prisons so a corporation is incentivised against rehabilitation. Then when someone is granted parole, their family has to pay for monitoring. Isn’t it great? I’ll go cry in the corner.

      • Rimu
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        2 months ago

        I don’t know an intra-departmental breakdown. That might take some digging.

        In the interest.co.nz article I linked to earlier it has a figure of $1.7bn for the year 2017. Big increases in 2018 and 2020. Labour invested heavily in prisons!

        • @DaveOPMA
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          22 months ago

          Weird because there were also huge drops in prison population under Labour! Was down from something like 10k to 7k off the top of my head.

          But also that’s operational costs not capital investment, so probably not so much investing in prisons and more just an increase in costs.

          That’s an increase of about 6% per year assuming 1.7 in 2017 and 2.4 in 2023. High but not crazy considering what’s happened in that time.