Our organisation

Manaaki Tāngata | Victim Support is here 24/7 for people directly affected by crime, suicide and traumatic events, including their whānau, and witnesses.

We support people to feel informed, empowered, safe and able to cope with the impact.

Victim Support staff stand arm-in-arm, with Here for You message displayed on all their T-shorts

What we do

Emotional support
We’re someone independent who you can talk to. We listen without judgement and support you to identify ways to cope.

Practical assistance
We’ll work with you to develop a support plan, access financial assistance if you’re eligible, link you with community resources, and advocate on your behalf.

Information
We’ll help you understand your rights, what happens next, how to access resources, and support you to make informed choices.

Criminal justice/coronial process support
We’ll help you understand the justice system, including Victim Impact Statements and Victim Notification Register applications.

Referrals
You may find our help is enough. However, we’ll help you connect with other support services and counselling, when appropriate.

Our values

We are victim-centric, trauma-informed, Te Tiriti led.

These three core principles complement the Victims Code, which help us live our organisational values and form the basis for our practice.

Manaakitanga

Te tohu o te rangatira, he manaaki. The sign of a chief is manaakitanga.
Respect, generosity, and care for others to strengthen the mana of clients - representing the many aspects of support we provide to clients across their whare tapa whā.

Whanaungatanga

He hono he tangata e kore e motu - kāpā he taura waka e motu. Connections between people cannot be severed - whereas those of a canoe-rope can.
Our relationships and our connections to each other, woven together by what we share – representing Manaaki Tāngata | Victim Support as a whānau woven together by our shared experiences.

Rangatiratanga

Rangatiratanga mō tātou katoa i runga i ngā tikanga o tēnā, o tēnā, o tēnā. Self-determination for each of us springs from our own unique will.
Self-determination of individuals and peoples – representing the empowering of clients and whānau and respecting their right to choose their own path.

Kotahitanga

Mā te kotahitanga e whai kaha ai tātou. In unity we have strength.
Unity, togetherness, and collective action – representing our shared commitment to Manaaki Tāngata | Victim Support’s mission, vision and purpose.

Kaitiakitanga

Hauā te waka tapa i reira. Hauā te kai tapa i reira. Hangā te whare kii e te whāinga. Here lies the waka anchored at the edge. Here is the kai prepared for the people. Build your whare and lay forth the rituals within the whare.
Guardianship and responsibility - representing our commitment to uphold the safety, well-being and rights of those we support.

Our history

1987 - 1995

The early days

1987

First Victim Support office opened in Gisborne by former Police Officer Kevin Joblin.

New Zealand Parliament passed the Victims of Offences Act and created a Victims Task Force to develop guidelines and assess existing services and gaps.

1988

Pilot projects established in Porirua and Hamilton to gain a better understanding of victims and victims services in New Zealand.

1989

Joyce Fallon appointed New Zealand’s first full-time Victim Support Coordinator by the Porirua Victim Support Group.

1990

New Zealand Council of Victim Support Groups formed and out of this, the emergence national standards and a code of practice.

1991

Inaugural AGM for the New Zealand Council of Victim Support Groups held.

1993

Victims Task Force wound up and National Office of New Zealand Council of Victim Support Groups established.

1995

First full-time Chief Executive for Victim Support appointed.

1997-2002

A pillar to lean on

1997

First nationally co-ordinated crisis response to support victims and families of the tragic shooting of six people at Raurimu.

0800 VICTIM (842 846) crisis line launched.

1998

Memorandum of Understanding signed between Victim Support and New Zealand Police.

1999

Results of referendum on law and order lays the platform for victims' rights in the new millennium.

2000

Victim Incident Information System (VIBIS) goes live at Gisborne Conference.

Victim Notification Register set up.

2001

Restorative justice conferences and Victims Court Advisers scheme introduced.

Victim Assistance Scheme established.

2002

Passing of the Victims’ Rights Act 2002 steers Victim Support to a new strategic direction transitioning from crisis intervention to comprehensive support, helping victims from the time of crisis right through the court and parole process to eventual ‘recovery’.

2004 - 2014

Supporting victims nationwide

2004

National structure established to grow and strengthen Victim Support’s operational capability to meet the needs of victims throughout New Zealand.

Partnerships with New Zealand Police, Ministry of Justice, Department of Corrections, Ministry of Social Development and Ministry of Youth Affairs were forged to ensure the ongoing viability and sustainability of our work.

2007

Suicide postvention service in Canterbury/Tasman, Eastern and Greater Auckland provided through contract with Ministry of Health.

2009

Kaiwhakahaere Māori appointed to implement Māori strategy across Aotearoa.

Te Whare Tapa Whā adopted as model for Support Worker training, taking a holistic approach to spiritual, physical, emotional and whānau well-being.

2010

Victim Support’s Contact Service established providing 24/7 support to victims as a first port of call and triage point for non-crime and traumatic event victims.

Extended homicide service established.

2011

VIVA incident management system launched.

2012

Suicide postvention service rolled out nationally.

2014

Ministry of Justice provides funding for a specialist Homicide Support pilot programme in Auckland and Canterbury.

Victim Support is recipient of Mitre 10 Community of the Year Award.

2015 - 2020

The gateway for victims

2015

Victim Support launches Victim of Crime Information Line in partnership with Ministry of Justice.

Victim Support Contact Service crosses 100,000 inbound calls in a single year for the first time.

2016

Victim Support's specialist family violence capability grows with teams working closely with Police and Women’s Refuge in Cantebury, Waikato, Counties-Manukau and Auckland.

Victim Support celebrates its 30th anniversary drawing together key partners, Local Group Committees, staff and founding members at Parliament.

2017

NZQA approved Level 5 Diploma in Health and Well-being Applied Practice launched, formally recognising high-quality training provided to Support Workers.

2018

New partnership between Victim Support, Oranga Tamariki and the New Zealand Police launched to support victims through the Family Group Conference (FGC) process for youth offenders.

Never Alone regular giving programme launched.

2019

Victim Support provides support to victims and families of the terror attacks on two mosques in Christchurch raising $14 million for their recovery through an emergency appeal.

Victims Voices: The justice needs and experiences of New Zealand serious crime victims, published by Victim Support gives victims a bigger voice in the Government’s justice reforms.

2020

Homicide service rolled out nationally with appointment of a National Homicide Manager and a network of dedicated, specialist Homicide Support Workers.