Societies and trusts can now register using Māori macrons
28 November 2019
All Incorporated Societies and
Charitable Trusts registered with the Companies Office can
now have Māori macrons in their titles.
This means along with new registrations, existing societies and trusts can update their existing incorporation certificate to include macrons.
The move to enable macronisation across registers is part of ongoing upgrades to the Companies Office’s registers says Ross van der Schyff, General Manager, Business Integrity Services.
“Investment in the new Business Registers platform commenced at the end of 2015 and included a requirement for all new registers to include macronisation. Enabling incorporated societies to register using macrons in their titles is the next step in a plan to make this a reality”, says Mr van der Schyff.
The inclusion of Māori macrons on registers held by the Companies Office has the full support of Te Taura Whiri I Te Reo Māori (The Māori Language Commission).
Te Taura Whiri i Te Reo Māori Chief Executive Ngahiwi Apanui has commended the move. “Te Taura Whiri I Te Reo Māori is really pleased with the Companies Office’s support of macrons in its new registers. We encourage all organisations to recognise the status of te reo Māori and use correct modern spelling”.
The Companies Register, which went live in 2010, enables the use of macrons for company names, directors’ names, shareholders’ names and accounts.
Existing incorporated societies and charitable trusts can correct their certificate of incorporation with macrons using forms on the Companies Office website; the Incorporated Societies form or the Charitable Trusts form.
[ends]
UN Department of Global Communications: United Nations Proposes New Global Dashboard To Measure Progress Beyond GDP
Banking Ombudsman Scheme: Fraud Check Delays Well Worth The Inconvenience, Says Banking Ombudsman
Asia Pacific AML: NZ’s Financial Crime Gap - Beyond The 'Number 8 Wire' Mentality
Westpac New Zealand: Kiwi Households Adapting Despite Widespread Cost Pressure Concerns, Westpac Survey Shows
University of Auckland: Kids’ Screen Use Linked To Long-Term Deficits In Self-Control And Attention
University of Auckland: Research To Address Equity In STEM For Māori, Pacific And Female Students

