Taupo & Turangi Herald

Severe shortage of affordale homes

- Laurilee McMichael

The Taupo¯ district has a severe shortage of public housing, affordable rentals and home-ownership opportunit­ies for lower- and middleinco­me households, a new report has found.

The Taupo¯ Housing Review and Recommenda­tions Report by economic consultanc­y Berl was commission­ed by economic developmen­t agency Enterprise Great Lake Taupo¯ . The first phase of the report was completed last November and the second phase in March.

The first phase was a statistics­based assessment of housing conditions in the Taupo¯ district and a series of discussion­s and a workshop with organisati­ons and people with an interest in housing issues locally. That phase came up with a list of five recommenda­tions and the second phase was to investigat­e each recommenda­tion.

The five key findings that came out of phase one of the report were: That there were strong socio-economic contrasts within the Taupo¯ district, with the southern part of the district “considerab­ly more deprived” than the northern part.

The cost of developing land and building houses was a problem. There is a severe shortage of public housing for disadvanta­ged and vulnerable families and individual­s (only 1.1 per cent of occupied dwellings in the district are public housing compared with 3.6 per cent nationally). There is also a severe shortage of affordable rentals and opportunit­ies for lowerand middle-income families to get into home ownership.

Just under 23 per cent of the dwellings in the Taupo¯ district are not permanentl­y occupied, a proportion which has continued to creep up over time. There are an estimated 2000 very short-term rentals (such as Airbnb properties) in the district. These were seen as having an important but mostly negative impact on housing in the district, reducing the supply of homes for rent and displacing families from longterm rental housing.

Phase two of the housing report investigat­ed potential ways Taupo¯ district’s housing issues could be addressed. Those ways included developing community housing for the most vulnerable groups, building affordable rentals for families on low incomes, helping families who could afford a mortgage or part of a mortgage but could not save enough for a deposit to buy their own home, supporting papakainga housing and supporting major employers to improve the supply of housing for their staff.

The Berl phase two report concluded there were no quick fixes or simple solutions to the Taupo¯ district’s housing issues. Its view was that it would be desirable to set up one or more community housing providers in the district which might be the best way of addressing the needs for community housing, affordable rentals and helping families into home ownership.

The advantage of using a community housing provider was that such providers can access the Government’s Income Related Rent Subsidy Scheme, which councils are unable to do. There are several community housing providers operating elsewhere in New Zealand.

At a workshop to present the report’s findings there was strong support for a community housing provider or several to make it more affordable to develop housing for the different groups in the community finding it difficult to access good quality and affordable housing, the report says.

“The general feeling was that the council should consider whether to encourage the developmen­t of a community housing provider and if so, how and in what form. However it was accepted that it was not solely up to the council to find solutions. The wider community also needed to accept that change was necessary; for example to permit higher density housing developmen­t in some locations.”

Similarly, it was recognised that action on a number of fronts (such as encouragin­g the developmen­t of papakainga housing) was necessary because the problems were complex, the report added.

Enterprise Great Lake Taupo¯ general manager Kylie HawkerGree­n says EGLT identified housing constraint­s as a significan­t issue when developing its threeyear strategy.

She says viable economies need adequate and available housing to suit all residents across the housing spectrum.

“In simplistic terms, in order for our businesses to grow and be successful, they need secure, reliable, stable staff. And those staff need to be in secure, long-term and appropriat­e residentia­l accommodat­ion,” Kylie says.

“Anecdotall­y we had been hearing that people were struggling to secure long-term rental accommodat­ion, and that purchase prices were becoming prohibitiv­e for those on lower incomes. We had heard examples of employers struggling to recruit/attract staff from outside the district, as the new employees declined the job offer as they couldn’t find somewhere suitable to live.”

Kylie says the report was prepared before Covid-19 and so some of its findings may no longer reflect the current situation. However, some aspects remained, in particular the lack of state housing across the district, the limited numbers of entrylevel or affordable homes across the district, and a lack of community and social housing provision.

Following the report, EGLT has raised housing challenges through the Regenerate Taupo¯ District project engagement, and has also advocated for a community housing trust to be created.

The five key findings of the Berl Taupo¯ Housing Review Report.

1. There are strong socio-economic contrasts within the district, reflected in housing conditions and affordabil­ity.

2. Land zoning is not a major issue but the cost of developing land and building houses on it is a problem.

3. There is a severe shortage in the district of public housing for disadvanta­ged and vulnerable families and people.

4. There is a severe shortage of affordable rentals and homeowners­hip opportunit­ies for lowerand middle-income households

5. Airbnb has had a major effect on the rental market with some dire consequenc­es for families who have lost homes they had been renting long term, however other factors might also be influencin­g rental supply.

Finding a rental: the struggle is real

The news that rentals are unaffordab­le and hard to find is unsurprisi­ng to Puruhi Peachey, the administra­tor of the Facebook page Taupo¯ to Rent or Board, where people can both post accommodat­ion and search for it.

He said many rental properties had been converted to Airbnbs in recent years causing a shortage in rentals. Since Covid-19 more former Airbnbs had become available to rent, although many were short-term rentals only.

“There’s a lot more rentals out there from what I’m seeing but they are really highly priced.”

Puruhi said the cost of renting in Taupo¯ was high, especially compared with incomes. He has lived in Taupo¯ for 20 years and said rents had risen to the point where they were becoming unaffordab­le. He rented a four-bedroom house for $400 “in the ghetto” and before that was paying $390 per week for “a three-bedroom, run-down dive”.

“I was renting a house for two-anda-half years and I made it a home, did heaps to it and the landlord came and had a look at it and said, ‘I’m going to sell it now’.

“I struggled for three months to find a house. I was a solo dad working full time with one child and a perfect rental history. I would go to a viewing and there would be 20 people at it. It was really stressful and I had to settle for a house I didn’t want to live in because that was all I could get.”

Dannii Renee, who rents a home with her partner in Nukuhau, Taupo¯ , says she applied for more than 30 houses and went to viewings where multiple people were also applying, before she was able to secure a rental.

She said rents were high and sometimes not in keeping with the quality of the house - one she looked at was more than $500 per week but had no insulation.

When she moved to Taupo¯ she was a single mother with two children and said nobody would even look at renting to her. She eventually found a nice rental in Turangi for $280 per week which she liked, but moved back to Taupo¯ last year where she says some landlords were asking “ridiculous” rents of up to $560 per week for houses of poor quality.

She’s happy with the home she and her partner have found - for $460 a week it has three bedrooms, a big lounge and kitchen area, a garage and is fenced.

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 ?? Photos / Laurilee McMichael. ?? There is a shortage of affordable home ownership opportunit­ies for low and middle-income families in the Taupo¯ district.
Photos / Laurilee McMichael. There is a shortage of affordable home ownership opportunit­ies for low and middle-income families in the Taupo¯ district.
 ??  ?? The stock of public housing in the Taupo¯ district is lower than the national average.
The stock of public housing in the Taupo¯ district is lower than the national average.
 ??  ?? Renters looking for somewhere to live have found that rents in the Taupo¯ district have increased faster than incomes.
Renters looking for somewhere to live have found that rents in the Taupo¯ district have increased faster than incomes.
 ??  ?? Enterprise Great Lake Taupo¯ general manager Kylie Hawker-Green.
Enterprise Great Lake Taupo¯ general manager Kylie Hawker-Green.

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