TAIC’s principal purpose is to determine the circumstances and causes of certain aviation, rail, and maritime accidents and incidents, with a view to avoiding similar occurrences in the future, rather than to ascribe blame to any person.
Legislation
TAIC acts in accordance with its powers under the Transport Accident Investigation Commission Act 1990 (the TAIC Act), and its obligations under the Public Services Commission’s Code of Conduct, the Privacy Act 2020, the Official Information Act 1982, and the Public Records Act 2005. All records are held securely.
Information gathering
TAIC gathers information for the purposes of an inquiry or in support of the inquiry process. This includes physical evidence at the site of an accident or incident, and information from personal interviews, documents, and digital sources.
TAIC receives most personal information directly from the person concerned. However, sometimes a person may provide TAIC with information about someone else.
TAIC has no law enforcement or regulatory compliance responsibilities, so TAIC gathers no information for these purposes.
Confidentiality
The TAIC Act gives strong confidentiality protections to the information we gather when it is for the purpose of an investigation. TAIC may only use information collected under the provisions of the TAIC Act for the inquiry process. It is an offence for inquiry information to be disclosed except in accordance with the Act.
If a Commission report refers to an individual, it is by their role and not by name.
The TAIC website has further information about TAIC’s inquiry processes: Our Work