Otago Daily Times

Survey points to presence of inequality gap

- JOSHUA WALTON joshua.walton@odt.co.nz

QUEENSTOWN Lakes District’s inequality gap has been put in the spotlight as more than a fifth of residents say they do not have disposable income.

Figures released yesterday from a quality of life survey sample of 1700 residents carried out by the Queenstown Lakes District Council showed 88% were either selfemploy­ed or worked fulltime or parttime.

Despite the district’s high employment rate, 21% of respondent­s said they did not have disposable income and 3% were not able to cover their expenses.

QLDC chief executive Mike Theelen said the survey ‘‘delves into how people feel about living here from a more holistic perspectiv­e’’.

Queenstown Salvation Army social worker Hine Marchand said the survey was a ‘‘good start’’ but actually ‘‘problems are much bigger’’ for residents than the results showed.

Mrs Marchand said: ‘‘It is up much higher for disposable income and the same for those who cannot cover expenses — 3%, I think that is incredibly low.

‘‘The living wage doesn’t cut it here.’’

She said Queenstown residents are ‘‘exclusivel­y not able to cope on that income’’ and the survey results did not seem like a ‘‘true reflection’’ of the problems people faced.

‘‘Do you think that doing a survey would be a priority for those people that are struggling?’’

The research showed strong evidence of an inequality gap, with 79% of residents considerin­g their quality of life to be either good or extremely good and just over a fifth rating their lifestyle as average, poor or extremely poor.

Just over a quarter of residents mentioned that wages did not align with living costs in the district and 21% indicated that wages are generally low.

Half of the residents surveyed indicated their annual household income was under $80,000 and 36% reported it was between $80,000 and $200,000.

About 7% said their household income was higher than $200,000 and a further 7% declined to reveal their income.

The figures showed an almost equal split of people who rented and owned the homes they lived in.

About 30% of residents said they rented and about a third owned their home either with or without a mortgage.

Mrs Marchand said another big issue highlighte­d by the survey was access to vital care services, after 25% of people surveyed said they accessed mental health services in the last year.

‘‘If I get a fulltime counsellor at my work, either for free or much lower cost than what people have to pay, then I would be absolutely overloaded.’’

Growth in the district was also seen as a big problem, with 63% of respondent­s stating they were not comfortabl­e with rising visitor numbers.

About a quarter of residents said they were not sure if they intended to stay in the district for less than two years.

QLDC senior policy and performanc­e adviser Katherine Davies, who oversaw the research, said there was an ‘‘overwhelmi­ng response’’, which gave the council ‘‘great confidence’’ in the results.

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