How we categorise, prioritise and initially respond to notifications (2024)

People are legally required to notify us about a broad range of events, planned actions or administrative changes. People also notify us voluntarily about events and other matters involving harm or risk of harm in the maritime sector and at ports.
This policy sets out:

  • what we mean by a notification;
  • how we categorise, and prioritise notifications; and
  • the initial actions we will take to respond to a notification.

What is a notification?

A notification is information about an event, planned action or administrative change in the maritime sector or at a designated port that must be provided, or that people choose to provide, to Maritime NZ.
Notifications provide us with information about:

  • harm, or potential harm to people, the marine environment or property;
  • issues or concerns raised by workers or health and safety representatives regarding their workplace that is a commercial vessel or a designated port;
  • planned actions that could present a risk or cause harm in the maritime sector; or
  • administrative matters to ensure Maritime NZ holds up to date information to allow us to perform our regulatory functions.

This policy applies to most notifications received by Maritime NZ

This policy applies to notifications:

  • from people who tell us about events, planned actions or administrative changes, as required by legislation, on:
    • New Zealand-flagged commercial vessels;
    • foreign-flagged vessels in New Zealand waters;
    • foreign-flagged vessels offshore in relation to New Zealand workers;
    • vessels on demise charter to New Zealand companies in New Zealand waters;
    • a foreign vessel operating between New Zealand and a workplace in connection with an activity that is regulated under the Exclusive Economic Zone and Continental Shelf (Environmental Effects) Act 2012 or the Crown Minerals Act 1991;
    • recreational vessels in New Zealand waters; and
    • designated ports.
  • from agencies as required by legislation or a formal agreement; and
  • made voluntarily by any person about events in the maritime sector or relating to ports, including notifications made under the Protected Disclosures (Protection of Whistleblowers) Act 2022.

If a notification is made under the Protected Disclosures (Protection of Whistleblowers) Act 2022, or a notification appears to be a protected disclosure, our operational policy on how we manage protected disclosures will apply.
If a notification is not related to a Maritime NZ function we will refer it to the correct agency, or advise the person who made the notification which agency they need to notify.

This policy does not apply to:

  • requests for search and rescue assistance;
  • notifications about oil spills or major maritime incidents;
  • notifications about maritime security; or
  • notifications made by Maritime NZ to other organisations.

These notifications have separate response protocols.

How we categorise notifications

We consider all notifications made to Maritime NZ to be important.
If a notification has insufficient information for categorisation and prioritisation, we will undertake best endeavours to seek further information from the person who made the notification. If the information provided is still insufficient or we are unable to contact the person that made the notification, the notification will be recorded and closed.
Once we have sufficient information, notifications covered by this policy are assigned to one of two categories.

1. Notifications that relate to a harm or potential harm occurring to a person, property or the environment; or
2. Administrative and planned action notifications.

Notifications that relate to a harm or potential harm occurring

As a significant range of notifications are in this category, we initially prioritise these notifications based on our understanding of:

  • whether the level of harm that has occurred, or the potential harm that could occur, is high, medium or low; and
  • the urgency with which the notification needs to be referred for a response.

How we determine the level of harm or potential harm that could occur

We use the following criteria to determine the level of harm, or potential harm:

  • the severity of the harm that has occurred; and
  • potential harm:
    • the severity of the potential harm; and
    • the likelihood of the potential harm occurring.

We then assign each notification a rating of high, medium or low.

High rating notifications

High rating notifications include:

  • events that have caused, events that under different circumstances were highly likely to have caused, and ongoing situations, where the circumstances are highly likely to cause:
    • death;
    • serious injury or serious illness that is life-threatening where the person is likely to have a serious permanent disability or health effect;
    • serious damage to a vessel or port including equipment used for port operations; or
    • serious harm to the environment through a pollution (excluding oil spills) event that is widespread, or in a protected area, or where the event results in the closure of fisheries/aquaculture or significant fatalities to marine animals.

Notifications of a breach of the Maritime Labour Convention that are likely to result in significant financial, nutritional or wellbeing issues for a seafarer are also considered to be a high rated notification.

Medium rating notifications

Medium rating notifications include:

  • events that have caused, events that under different circumstances were highly likely to have caused, and ongoing situations, where the circumstances are highly likely to cause:
    • a moderate injury or illness, that has caused a temporary disability or health effect, and requires medical attention;
    • a chronic work related health matter;
    • moderate damage to a vessel;
    • a moderate pollution (excluding oil spills) event. This is an event that is localised or near shore that covers a moderate sized area or involves a highly toxic substance, or where environmental recovery is likely to take less than a year;
    • moderate damage that makes a navigational aid ineffective; or
    • moderate damage where part of a port’s operation is compromised or the event has caused moderate disruption to commerce, transport or the public.

A breach of the Maritime Labour Convention that does not result in significant financial, nutritional or wellbeing issues for a seafarer is considered to be a medium rated notification.
A notification relating to a vessel that would have been considered a high rated notification but the vessel has left or is not within New Zealand’s jurisdiction is also considered to be a medium rated notification.
After further assessment a medium rated notification may be given a high or low rating.

Low rating notifications

Low rating notifications include events or potential events that would not be considered a high or medium rated event such as:

  • an incident that is contained and managed with no or minor harm to people, property or the marine environment, and a low potential for further harm to occur.

Planned action notifications and administrative notifications

Notifications about planned actions are prioritised in accordance with any legislated requirements or to ensure the required actions are taken.
All planned action and administrative notifications will be acknowledged within ten working days.
We record and periodically analyse these notifications to help inform our work.

How we will respond after initial prioritisation

Our initial response to a harm related notification will depend on its priority rating, the circumstances and the need for a decision on preserving a site.

High Rated Notifications

For high rated notifications, we will contact the person who notified us, or if the notification is related to the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 (HSWA), the duty holder/s, as soon as possible but within four hours of receiving the notification to:

  • verify the information we have been provided about the event and ensure the appropriate controls at the site are in place to eliminate or mitigate further harm from occurring;
  • make a decision on whether the site needs to continue to be preserved under HSWA or require a site to be preserved using our powers under the HSWA or the Maritime Transport Act 1994 (MTA); and
  • provide a timeframe for when Maritime NZ will attend the site, where we will do so.

Where we attend a site and observe ongoing risk of high harm without adequate controls in place, we will likely use one of our corrective tools, to ensure the site is safe or is made safe.
Further details on use of corrective tools are in our operational policy on the use of corrective and enforcement tools under HSWA and MTA.
Further details on preserving sites are in our operational policy on preserving and releasing preserved sites.
For most high rated notifications we will initiate an investigation.

Medium Rated Notifications

For medium rated notifications we will make an initial assessment as to whether a scene needs to be preserved. Where we believe a scene is required to be preserved, we will contact the person who notified us, or if HSWA related, the duty holder/s as soon as practicable but within four hours of receiving the notification to:

  • verify the details of the notified event and ensure the appropriate controls are in place at the scene to eliminate or mitigate further harm from occurring;
  • make a decision on whether the scene needs to continue to be preserved under HSWA or require a site to be preserved using our powers under HSWA or MTA; and
  • provide a timeframe for when Maritime NZ will attend the scene, where we will do so.

For medium rated notifications where the scene is not required to be preserved, within five working days we will contact the duty holder to:

  • verify the details of the notified event; and
  • initiate a response to the notification.

In many cases for a medium rated notification we will likely undertake an inspection to form a clear picture of the broad risks or circumstances associated with the notified event, rather than an investigation. Our focus will be on how best to support the person notifying us, or if HSWA related, the duty holder/s, to take the right corrective action to remedy the unsafe circumstances or non-compliance that led to the notified event.
Where the medium rated notification appears to indicate a pattern of recent non-compliant behaviour and multiple harm-related incidents, we may choose to investigate.

Low Rated Notifications

In general, if we receive a low rated notifications we will acknowledge the notification, record the details of the notified event and close the file. Decisions to close a file relating to a low rated notification will be made within 10 working days.
If however, the low rated notification appears to indicate a pattern of non-compliant behaviour, or is part of a series of very similar events over a relatively short period of time, we may escalate our rating and undertake an inspection.
Information gathered during the inspection may lead to us applying a corrective action tool, or take enforcement action should that be appropriate.

Acknowledging harm related notifications

Unless we make contact earlier, we acknowledge all harm notifications at least within ten working days and we will let the person who made the notification, or if HSWA related, the duty holder, know the rating that was assigned and any action we have taken.
We will provide regular updates on where a notification is in the process and when it is closed.
We record, periodically analyse, and publish these notifications to help inform our work, and the sector.

Further information

Further information and related operational policies can be found on our website.

Legislative basis for this policy

The following Acts and their regulations and rules provide the legislative basis for this policy.

  • Health and Safety at Work Act 2015
  • Maritime Transport Act 1994
  • Ships Registration Act 1992
  • Submarine Cables and Pipelines Protection Act 1996
  • Hazardous Substances and New Organisms Act 1996
  • Protected Disclosures (Protection of Whistleblowers) Act 2022

Key terms

Administrative notificationmeans a notification of information necessary for us to perform our role as a regulator such as the details or a change to the details of a person, organisation, vessel or operator that must be advised to Maritime NZ.
Demise chartermeans the demise, letting, hire, or delivery of a vessel to the charterer, by virtue of which the charterer has whole possession and control of the vessel, including the right to appoint its master and crew.
Designated port

means a port operated by a port company within the meaning of the Port Companies Act 1988 and includes the following ports:

  • Northport
  • Ports of Auckland
  • Port of Tauranga
  • Eastland Port
  • Port Taranaki
  • Port of Napier
  • CentrePort Wellington
  • Port Marlborough
  • Port Nelson
  • Lyttelton Port
  • PrimePort Timaru
  • Port Otago,
  • South Port
  • Ports used in connection with the Cook Strait inter-island ferries.

The definition also includes:

  • any area within the securely fenced boundaries of a port listed above, whether or not that area is operated by a port company; and
  • the buildings and installations, other structures or equipment on or adjacent to a port listed above and used in connection with that port’s operation or administration.
Event

means:

  • an accident, incident, mishap, or potential accident, incident or mishap, as defined in the MTA, occurring on:
    • New Zealand-flagged commercial vessels in New Zealand waters;
    • New Zealand-flagged commercial vessels offshore;
    • recreational vessels in New Zealand waters;
    • foreign-flagged vessels in New Zealand waters;
    • foreign-flagged vessels offshore in relation New Zealand workers;
    • vessels on demise charter to New Zealand companies in New Zealand waters; and
    • ports; and
  • a notifiable event, incident, injury, or illness, as defined in section 16 of HSWA, associated with work undertaken on a vessel or at a designated port.
Investigationmeans a formal structured inquiry and detailed examination in order to discover and confirm facts and or information.
Planned action notificationmeans a notifications of information required to be provided to us by legislation in advance of an action being undertaken, such as the transfer of oil between vessels at sea.
Propertymeans either private or publicly owned items with a legal title associated with maritime activity on vessels or on designated ports, and physical property that may be affected by adverse maritime activity such as an aquaculture farm.
Protected disclosuremeans a report by an employee or other worker (for example, ex-employee, volunteer, or contractor) alleges serious wrongdoing in their workplace, under the protection of the Protected Disclosures (Protection of Whistleblowers) Act 2022. It is also called whistle-blowing.

Disclaimer

This policy provides information about how Maritime NZ makes decisions on categorising, prioritising and initially responding to notifications under the relevant legislation specified in the policy. This document is not a substitute for legislation.

How we categorise, prioritise and initially respond to notifications (2024)

FAQs

How do you organize plan and prioritize your work answer? ›

Good answer: First, I assess all the tasks at hand and determine their level of urgency. Then, I categorize them based on their deadlines, and create a to-do list for the day. I use a calendar to keep track of deadlines and remind me of upcoming tasks that may need to be prioritized over non-urgent assignments.

What are the four categories for prioritization? ›

How Do You Use the Eisenhower Matrix?
  • First Quadrant (upper left): urgent and important.
  • Second Quadrant (upper right): important, but not urgent.
  • Third Quadrant (lower left): not important, but urgent.
  • Fourth Quadrant (lower right): neither important nor urgent.
  • Do the tasks in quadrant 1.

How do you prioritize which emails to respond to first? ›

Have mail sorted by priority
  1. On your computer, go to Gmail.
  2. To configure your inbox, go to the top right, then click Settings .
  3. In the "Inbox type" section, select Priority Inbox.
  4. To customize priority inbox setting, click Customize.
  5. Choose the inbox sections you want to show. Save Changes.

How do you answer how do you Prioritise your tasks? ›

Preparing your answer to “How do you prioritise your work?”
  1. Explain what underpins your prioritisation: value. ...
  2. Talk about your willingness and ability to respond to changing priorities. ...
  3. Talk about how you use deadlines to ensure the timely completion of tasks.

What are the four levels of prioritizing tasks? ›

Use tools like the Eisenhower Matrix to categorize tasks into four quadrants: urgent and important, important but not urgent, urgent but not important, and neither urgent nor important. First, focus on getting things done that are both important and urgent.

Can you describe how you organize and prioritize your work responsibilities? ›

How do you prioritize tasks effectively? Start by creating a comprehensive task list and identifying deadlines. Assess the importance, urgency, effort, and resources required for each one. Then prioritize your list based on the most urgent tasks, considering dependencies and breaking down complex tasks if necessary.

What are the 4 P's of prioritization? ›

In conclusion, the four Ps of time management (Prioritize, Plan, Prepare, and Perform) provide a useful framework for managing your time more efficiently and achieving your goals.

What are the 4 D's of prioritization? ›

The 4 Ds are: Do, Defer (Delay), Delegate, and Delete (Drop). Placing a task or project into one of these categories helps you manage your limited time more effectively and stay focused on what matters most to you.

What are the 3 categories to setting priorities? ›

One system of prioritization is to assign each task on your list into a category of “high,” “medium,” and “low” priority, being careful not to leave all the tasks that will help you reach your long-term goals in the “low” category. High priority tasks should be important ones that need attention today.

How do you prioritize a message? ›

Once you receive the message, follow the steps below.
  1. Swipe down from the top of your screen to open the notification shade.
  2. Long-press the message, and from the three notification options that appear, tap on Priority.
  3. Next, tap the Apply option in the bottom right corner to confirm.
Jul 8, 2023

When should one respond reply to an email? ›

If there's a clear question that you're intended to answer, then obviously a response is required, and maybe a speedy one at that—or one within 24 hours.

How do you prioritize emails? ›

Using Email Filters and Labels

Email filters and labels are powerful tools that can significantly streamline your inbox and prioritize incoming messages. These features allow you to automatically categorize and label emails based on specific criteria, such as sender, subject, keywords, or even specific email addresses.

How do you organize and plan your work? ›

Here are 15 tips to help you organize your workday:
  1. Keep a to-do list. ...
  2. Keep a tidy workspace. ...
  3. Find a schedule and stay with it. ...
  4. Take breaks. ...
  5. Reduce multitasking. ...
  6. Identify distractions. ...
  7. Automate your job where you can. ...
  8. Tackle tasks in order of importance.

How do you organize plan and prioritize your work how do you deal with conflicting priorities? ›

10 Strategies for Priority Management
  1. Use task management software. ...
  2. Create a priority ranking system. ...
  3. Establish clear goals. ...
  4. Visualize priorities. ...
  5. Create a prioritization matrix. ...
  6. Create a master task list. ...
  7. Adjust timelines. ...
  8. Plan out resource allocation.
Nov 29, 2023

How do you Organise and Prioritise your workload? ›

Prioritisation should not be rigid, however, as the urgency of certain tasks can change and new items can always arise.
  1. To-Do List. ...
  2. Task Focusing. ...
  3. Review Your Workload Regularly. ...
  4. Break Down Tasks. ...
  5. Concentrate on One Task at a Time. ...
  6. Delegate Tasks. ...
  7. Set Realistic Deadlines. ...
  8. Minimise Interruptions.

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