The New Zealand Herald

New staff hit rent hurdle

Overseas teachers bunk with boss in scramble to find accommodat­ion

- Simon Collins

AWest Auckland school principal has opened her own home to two new staff as teachers recruited from overseas struggle to find homes in Auckland’s squeezed housing market.

A Fiji-trained teacher who arrived on Saturday with his wife and 1-yearold child is staying with his principal at Flanshaw Road School in Te Atatu¯ , Dr Cherie Taylor-Patel.

Taylor-Patel is also housing a New Zealander who returned from Brazil two days before school started.

Separately, a newly arrived Canadian teacher at Greenmeado­ws Intermedia­te in Manurewa, Michael DiTommaso, is staying in a hostel in downtown Auckland until he can find somewhere to live.

Barfoot & Thompson director Kiri Barfoot said other teachers and profession­al people were struggling to find a home they could afford in a region where the average threebedro­om rental was now $564 a week.

“It’s expensive to rent in Auckland if you’re on a teaching salary, and in January and February there is always more demand for property because students come back and want to rent. Teachers, police, fire people — it’s tough. There potentiall­y does need to be an Auckland subsidy because we need those people.”

One in six Auckland schools was still advertisin­g for teachers when school started this year, despite a government-sponsored global recruitmen­t campaign which brought in 225 teachers from overseas by late January, including 150 in Auckland.

Taylor-Patel said she had only “a limited pool” to choose from to fill three vacancies for the start of this year and ended up filling all from overseas, including another returning Kiwi who had family in Auckland to stay with.

“For the teachers from Brazil and Fiji, the Auckland housing market is such that I just said to both of them: ‘Don’t worry about where you are going to live, we need you to come,”’ she said. “We had just moved into a big house, so we had room for them.”

She employed the Kiwi who had been teaching at an internatio­nal school in Brazil late last year, but could not get here until two days before the term started on February 1. The teacher from Fiji, described by Taylor-Patel as “a high-flier in his own system”, did not arrive until Saturday because he had to give notice of leaving the Fijian system and could not apply for a work visa here until he had a job offer.

“So he arrived last Saturday

Teachers, police, fire people — it’s tough. There potentiall­y does need to be an Auckland subsidy because we need those people. Kiri Barfoot, Barfoot & Thompson

evening off the plane. On Sunday he was in a class. On Monday we had him working with a New Zealand teacher who actually started the class for the first two weeks,” she said.

DiTommaso, 26, who arrived from Toronto in early January, said he had visited flats for rent but decided to stay in a backpacker­s hostel until he could find somewhere with quiet space to work in and close to a train station because he had arrived without a car. “It’s easy enough to find a shack, but why take a shack when you can hold out for something a bit better?” he said. “I have been looking . . . but, at the end of the day, the most important thing is the students. My No 1 task is getting to school every day and having a space to work in.”

He said Toronto’s housing market was also “insane” so he was used to it. “It’s actually not too different here,” he said. “I’m in my element, being from one of the most expensive cities in the world.” DiTommaso said he was paying about $25 per night to share a room and that he’s looked at a couple of places that are more permanent.

His principal at Greenmeado­ws, Cathy Chalmers, said DiTommaso was one of nine newly arrived overseas teachers who started at the school this year, along with two others who were teaching at other New Zealand schools last year.

The 11 overseas teachers make up almost half her teaching staff of 24.

She said the recruitmen­t agencies told her that many of them would have preferred to go somewhere else in New Zealand if they could have.

“A lot of them can’t believe how expensive it is to live here in Auckland and they are struggling, particular­ly as they are having to do it from their own currency at the moment.

“Some have not been paid yet because we are still trying to get that sorted.”

Ministry of Education deputy secretary Ellen MacGregor-Reid said 239 overseas teachers had accepted roles across New Zealand, including 155 in Auckland.

“Currently, our recruiters are working to fill 254 lodged roles, of which 162 are in Auckland. Some roles lodged are for term 2.”

 ??  ?? Teacher Michael DiTommaso has opted for a backpacker­s until he can find somewhere to live.
Teacher Michael DiTommaso has opted for a backpacker­s until he can find somewhere to live.

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