Housing NZ will not be restructured, says Labour
Housing New Zealand (HNZ) will not be restructured into a government department, as Labour promised in its election campaign.
Labour Housing Minister Phil Twyford said since his party took power, he had realised the social housing provider was already moving in the right direction, and that a restructure could just end up slowing things down.
The state social housing provider is currently run as stateowned enterprise, housing 64,500 families.
‘‘Housing New Zealand is full of people who are motivated by the best of intentions,’’ Twyford said. ‘‘It’s about being pragmatic.’’
Since taking over the portfolio, Twyford had been impressed by two strains of work: better tenant care and rapid house construction.
‘‘We are developing a new approach to the Housing New Zealand landlord role, based on the idea of sustaining tenancies and taking a more compassionate approach.’’
In practice, this has meant a recent loosening of the rules on pets so tenants can own dogs and cats.
‘‘Pets can be incredibly important to people and their quality of life. HNZ has had a pretty tough policy in the past, where owning a dog was an exception not the rule. We are flipping that around.’’
There has also been a shifting of attitudes when it came to methamphetamine.
‘‘The first reaction now to meth consumption is not to make them homeless by kicking them out but to treat them for addiction.’’
‘‘That’s really about recognising that state house tenants in some cases have complicated lives. A good landlord does everything it can to sustain people’s tenancies and not end them.’’
Twyford said he was surprised to find that many Housing New Zealand employees were already offering pastoral care to their tenants outside of work hours. He wants to see this tenant care work become a part of the main job.
The other strain of work Twyford does not want to slow down is Housing New Zealand’s rapid construction programme, run out of the corporation and a subsidiary which built Hobsonville Point.
‘‘They have really been gearing up for this challenge and have developed impressive capacity,’’ Twyford said. ‘‘It’s a priority for us that they continue that work with all possible speed.’’
He didn’t rule restructuring the body at a later date but this would not occur in the short to medium term.
The decision was made by Cabinet on Monday, as the minister was keen for staff to not have a restructure hanging over them through Christmas.