Advanced Search

The Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal


Published: 1985

Subscribe to a Global-Regulation Premium Membership Today!

Key Benefits:

Subscribe Now for only USD$40 per month.
Reprint
as at 17 May 1985

The Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal

(SR 1985/95)
Elizabeth R
Royal Warrant

Note

Changes authorised by section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989 have been made in this reprint.
A general outline of these changes is set out in the notes at the end of this reprint, together with other explanatory material about this reprint.
This warrant is administered by the Ministry of Defence.

Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God Queen of New Zealand and Her Other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, to all to whom these presents shall come,
Greeting!
Whereas We are desirous of signifying Our appreciation of the long service and good conduct of ratings of Our Royal New Zealand Navy which has hitherto been recognised by the award of a Long Service and Good Conduct Medal of the same design as that awarded to ratings of Our Royal Navy:
We do by these presents for Us, Our Heirs and Successors, institute and create a new Medal.

1 Style

The Medal shall be designated and styled “The Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal”.

2 Description

The Medal shall be of silver and circular in shape, bearing on the obverse the Uncrowned Effigy of the Sovereign and on the reverse a representation of HMS Victory surrounded by the inscription “For Long Service and Good Conduct”.

3 Ribbon

The Medal shall be worn from the left breast suspended from a ribbon, 32 mm in width, of blue edged white.

4 Eligibility

Those eligible for the Medal shall be ratings of Our Royal New Zealand Navy, serving on or after 1 December 1977, whose character and conduct have been irreproachable and who are recommended by their commanding officer.

5 Service required

The qualifying period requisite for the Medal shall be 15 years full-time service, or an aggregate of 15 years full-time service, in Our Royal New Zealand Navy.

6 Clasps

(1) A Clasp to the Medal, to be attached to the ribbon when the Medal itself is worn, may be awarded for each additional 15 years of full-time service subsequent to those for which the Medal was awarded.
(2) For each Clasp awarded a silver rosette shall be added to the ribbon when worn alone.

7 Reckoning of service

(1) Subject to subclause (2), the following service may be reckoned towards the qualifying period for the award of the Medal or any Clasp thereof:
(a) service in Our Royal New Zealand Navy or a permanent naval force of a country of the Commonwealth of which We are Queen (other than service that has been recognised by the award of a decoration or medal for long service):
(b) where a rating has been appointed to a commission in Our Royal New Zealand Navy, the qualifying service for the Medal shall be 15 years and those 15 years shall include at least 12 years service as a rating:
(c) where a rating who has been appointed to a commission in Our Royal New Zealand Navy has, before being so appointed, been awarded the Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal, the qualifying service for the award of the Clasp shall be 15 years from the award of the Medal and those 15 years shall include at least 7 years service as a rating:

(d) service in any force not involving full-time service, being a force that is a reserve, militia, territorial, volunteer, or auxiliary military force or other force of New Zealand or of any other country of the Commonwealth of which We are Queen, if—
(i) the reserve or militia or force is declared liable or is otherwise liable for continuous service in an emergency; and
(ii) the member of the reserve or militia or force actually renders full-time service.

(2) Service before the age of 17½ years shall not be reckonable.

8 Registration

The names of all those to whom the Medal is awarded shall be recorded in a register kept by the Secretary of Defence in Our Realm of New Zealand.

9 Names of recipients

The name of the recipient shall be engraved or stamped on the rim of the Medal.

10 Order of wear

In the official list showing the order in which Orders, Decorations, and Medals shall be worn, the Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal shall in Our Realm of New Zealand be placed immediately after Our New Zealand Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.

11 Miniatures

(1) Reproductions of the Medal in miniature, which may be worn on certain occasions by those to whom the Medal is awarded, shall be approximately half the size of the Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.
(2) A sealed pattern of the miniature Medal shall be deposited with and kept by the Secretary of Defence in Our Realm of New Zealand.

12 Delegated powers

Delegated powers to make awards under the terms of this Our Warrant shall be vested in Our Defence Council in New Zealand which shall be competent to make such orders as to the award of the Medal as may be necessary from time to time in amplification of this Our Royal Warrant.

13 Forfeiture and restoration

It shall be competent for Our Defence Council in New Zealand—
(a) to cancel and annul the conferment of the Medal or any Clasp thereof on any person; and
(b) where it has cancelled or annulled the conferment of the Medal or any Clasp thereof on any person, to restore the Medal or Clasp to that person.

14 Annulment

We reserve to Ourself, Our Heirs and Successors, full power of annulling, altering, abrogating, augmenting, interpreting, or dispensing with this Our Royal Warrant, or any part thereof, by a notification under Our Sign Manual.

Given at Our Court at Saint James's, this 6th day of May 1985, in the 34th Year of Our Reign.
By Her Majesty's Command,
David Lange,Prime Minister of New Zealand.

Explanatory note

This note is not part of the warrant, but is intended to indicate its general effect.
The Royal Warrant establishes the Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.
The Royal Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal was awarded to eligible members of the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy over the period 1921–1941 and thereafter to eligible members of the Royal New Zealand Navy.
A British Order in Council dated 28 October 1981 concerning the Royal Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal makes no provision for this Medal to be awarded to members of the Royal New Zealand Navy.
The new medal (which is of the design traditionally awarded to ratings of the Royal New Zealand Navy) is specific to New Zealand and is to be awarded to ratings of the Royal New Zealand Navy.
The conditions for the award of the new medal are similar to those for the award of the Royal Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.

Issued under the authority of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989.
Date of notification in Gazette: 16 May 1985.

Contents

1General
2Status of reprints
3How reprints are prepared
4Changes made under section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989
5List of amendments incorporated in this reprint (most recent first)

Notes

1 General

This is a reprint of The Royal New Zealand Navy Long Service and Good Conduct Medal. The reprint incorporates all the amendments to the warrant as at 17 May 1985, as specified in the list of amendments at the end of these notes.
Relevant provisions of any amending enactments that contain transitional, savings, or application provisions that cannot be compiled in the reprint are also included, after the principal enactment, in chronological order. For more information, see http://www.pco.parliament.govt.nz/reprints/ .

2 Status of reprints

Under section 16D of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989, reprints are presumed to correctly state, as at the date of the reprint, the law enacted by the principal enactment and by the amendments to that enactment. This presumption applies even though editorial changes authorised by section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989 have been made in the reprint.
This presumption may be rebutted by producing the official volumes of statutes or statutory regulations in which the principal enactment and its amendments are contained.

3 How reprints are prepared

A number of editorial conventions are followed in the preparation of reprints. For example, the enacting words are not included in Acts, and provisions that are repealed or revoked are omitted. For a detailed list of the editorial conventions, see http://www.pco.parliament.govt.nz/editorial-conventions/ or Part 8 of the Tables of New Zealand Acts and Ordinances and Statutory Regulations and Deemed Regulations in Force.

4 Changes made under section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989

Section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989 authorises the making of editorial changes in a reprint as set out in sections 17D and 17E of that Act so that, to the extent permitted, the format and style of the reprinted enactment is consistent with current legislative drafting practice. Changes that would alter the effect of the legislation are not permitted.
A new format of legislation was introduced on 1 January 2000. Changes to legislative drafting style have also been made since 1997, and are ongoing. To the extent permitted by section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989, all legislation reprinted after 1 January 2000 is in the new format for legislation and reflects current drafting practice at the time of the reprint.
In outline, the editorial changes made in reprints under the authority of section 17C of the Acts and Regulations Publication Act 1989 are set out below, and they have been applied, where relevant, in the preparation of this reprint:

•omission of unnecessary referential words (such as “of this section” and “of this Act”)
•typeface and type size (Times Roman, generally in 11.5 point)

•layout of provisions, including:

•indentation
•position of section headings (eg, the number and heading now appear above the section)

•format of definitions (eg, the defined term now appears in bold type, without quotation marks)
•format of dates (eg, a date formerly expressed as “the 1st day of January 1999” is now expressed as “1 January 1999”)
•position of the date of assent (it now appears on the front page of each Act)
•punctuation (eg, colons are not used after definitions)
•Parts numbered with roman numerals are replaced with arabic numerals, and all cross-references are changed accordingly

•case and appearance of letters and words, including:

•format of headings (eg, headings where each word formerly appeared with an initial capital letter followed by small capital letters are amended so that the heading appears in bold, with only the first word (and any proper nouns) appearing with an initial capital letter)
•small capital letters in section and subsection references are now capital letters

•schedules are renumbered (eg, Schedule 1 replaces First Schedule), and all cross-references are changed accordingly
•running heads (the information that appears at the top of each page)
•format of two-column schedules of consequential amendments, and schedules of repeals (eg, they are rearranged into alphabetical order, rather than chronological).

5 List of amendments incorporated in this reprint (most recent first)