1840 - The first head of New Zealand Customs, George Cooper, arrived in New Zealand from New South Wales with Captain Hobson on HMS Herald.
1841 - The colony was detached from New South Wales and the Customs Department became a Customs Home Establishment, subject to the control of the Lord Commissioner of the Treasury in the United Kingdom.
1844 - Customs was abolished on 30 September 1844 when the Government introduced a property tax on all property and income, but left it to the good faith of people to assess themselves.
1845 – Following a major decline in tax receipts, in April 1845 the Governor repealed the Property Tax and revived Customs.
1850 - The Department was freed from detailed control of the United Kingdom Treasury.
1858 - Customs Regulations made provision for administration of the Department to be placed in the hands of a Commissioner of Customs (now the Minister of Customs) appointed by the Governor. The Head of the Department was called the Collector of Customs.
1865 – The title of the head of the Customs Department changed to Secretary and Inspector.
1881 - The Customs cutter Hawk entered service. The name has become a tradition, with the current patrol boat also called Hawk.
1910 – Title of Comptroller adopted for the head of Customs.
1913 – The Customs Act 1913 was passed, updating the legislative basis for the Department’s work.
1933 - The introduction of Sales Tax (as a temporary measure). Replaced by the GST Act that came into force on 1 October 1986.
1938 - Import Licensing introduced. (Basic Licences were introduced later in 1958).
1966 - Introduction of the Customs Act 1966.
1974 – The first drug dogs entered service.
1980 – CASPER (Customs and Statistical Processing of Entries and Retrieval) computer system introduced.
1996 – New Customs and Excise Act introduced, changes include renaming the department as the New Zealand Customs Service.
1997 – CusMod computer system and associated modernised practices introduced.
1998 – New Zealand Customs Service internal structure re-organised into national business units.
1999 – Border Control Review recommends a more integrated approach to border management. The Government response is to require more focus on a whole-of- government approach.
2001 – Customs Strategic Priorities 2001-2004 adopted.
2003 – Supply Chain Security Strategy initiated, providing assurance over goods in international trade arriving in, transiting in and exported from New Zealand.
2004 – purchase of 11 additional pieces of non-invasive (x-ray) inspective technology.
2005 – Project Guardian implemented, realigning organisation for maximum efficiency.
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