The Southland Times

Two new cases

- Thomas Coughlan Katarina Williams

National’s new housing spokespers­on has admitted the party was wrong to sell and convert more state houses than it built when it was last in office.

Nicola Willis, who took the housing portfolio in a recent reshuffle, told RNZ the net reduction in state houses under the previous National Government showed that Government­s needed to continue increasing the number of state houses.

Willis said National sold or converted ‘‘a couple of thousand’’ state homes.

‘‘I think what we can see from that is yes, the Government needs to build state houses,’’ she said.

Willis accepted there was a net loss of state houses under National.

She said about a thousand of the houses that were sold were moved out of government hands and into community ownership, which she believed was the right thing to do.

The current Government had continued to use community housing providers.

Willis was speaking on the news that the number of households waiting for state housing had hit a new high.

Of the 17,982 households waiting, more than 16,000 were ‘‘Priority A’’.

The wait list has ballooned in recent years, trebling from 5844 households when the current Government was elected in September 2017.

The current Government had boosted the constructi­on of state houses. The latest housing dashboard showed that 2813 state homes had been built since June 2018 and a further 2596 were under constructi­on.

Willis said National acknowledg­ed government building was part of the solution to the housing crisis, but it had to be supplement­ed further by reform of the Resource Management Act and rental regulation­s, which were discouragi­ng investment.

She said that National’s record on housing would have been better if it had been allowed to stay in power for longer.

‘‘There were houses that we took down, and we took down one and replaced it with three that were insulated.

‘‘We would have continued to increase the number of state houses, that was all under developmen­t.

‘‘We were on a pathway to increase New Zealand’s state housing stock, and we can debate whether we were too late coming to that; I’m here for the future,’’ Willis said.

Newly appointed Health Minister Chris Hipkins is unhappy with a recent dropoff in Covid-19 testing numbers, putting the impetus on clinicians to test more.

At a media conference yesterday, Hipkins said current testing numbers fail to meet Cabinet’s expectatio­ns.

But the criticism may have struck a nerve with clinicians, with the drop-off coinciding with the recent narrowing of clinical guidelines about who can be tested issued by the Ministry of Health last week.

Hipkins said while ‘‘there is no reason’’ to assume there is community transmissi­on of the virus, more surveillan­ce testing would offer greater assurances of public safety.

Hipkins said laboratori­es could process as many as 13,000 tests a day.

‘‘I’ve instructed health officials to ensure that there is an enhanced rate of testing over the next week,’’ he said.

‘‘The advice that I’ve had from the director-general of health is that testing rates more around the 4000 a day would give us sufficient confidence that if there was any Covid-19 out there, that it would be picked up.’’

At present, people deemed to be at highest priority for a test are those displaying symptoms and who have been in contact with a confirmed or probable case.

Symptomati­c people who have travelled internatio­nally in the past 14 days, or have had contact with someone who has travelled, are also seen as a priority for testing.

There are two new cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand. Both cases reported by the Ministry of Health yesterday were returnees staying at the Sudima Hotel in Christchur­ch. One is a woman in her 20s, and the second a woman in her 30s.

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