The Timaru Herald

Unit a symbol of housing protest

- CHRIS HARROWELL

Housing campaigner­s have taken the issue of homelessne­ss into their own hands by placing a unit on vacant land in South Auckland.

The organisati­on Build Up Emergency Housing placed the one-bedroom unit on a lot in Manukau to pressure the Auckland Council to build more emergency housing.

The unit also served as a ‘‘demonstrat­ion project’’ of how the lack of housing could be addressed through innovative design, the campaigner­s said.

The 24-square-metre, plywood house was largely pre-assembled at Ormiston Junior College in Flat Bush and placed on the section.

Build Up spokesman Alan Johnson said the group believed homelessne­ss in Auckland ‘‘is going to get worse before it gets better’’.

The previous government did ‘‘a lot’’ to provide emergency accommodat­ion but it was ‘‘turning out to be semi-permanent accommodat­ion’’, he said.

‘‘We think a whole lot more can be done.’’

Johnson said the council should construct small housing units on vacant land it owns and let them sit there for up to five years.

The empty section in Manukau was an example, he said.

‘‘This site is massive and what use is being made of it? We reckon there are dozens of sites like this around Auckland which are unused.

‘‘The council says they’ve got plans for them but they’re happy to let grass grow on them [while] people live on the streets,’’ Johnson said.

‘‘We say give us access to that land for five years and don’t charge us costs for consent fees, and let us off the connection fees that Watercare charges.’’

Johnson said the Housing First Auckland initiative, which was launched in March 2017 by the previous government and Auckland mayor Phil Goff, was ‘‘good, but it doesn’t build houses’’.

It has the goal of ending homelessne­ss in the city and began with a two-year pilot aimed at getting 472 rough sleepers into permanent housing.

The initiative received $3.7 million from the previous government and another $1m from the council.

‘‘The thing that’s going to cure homelessne­ss is houses,’’ Johnson said.

‘‘Even modest little things like this [the unit in Manukau].

‘‘We think we can get it up for $50,000 or maybe $60,000 if we use solar power and recycled water.’’

The unit has since been donated and moved to Te Puea Memorial Marae in Ma¯ngere Bridge, South Auckland, to assist with its work to house the homeless.

It is being completed with funding from the nongovernm­ental Auckland Housing Associatio­n.

An Auckland Council spokesman said the council was concerned about homelessne­ss.

It was supporting a range of initiative­s by providing them with funding and resources, he said.

Actor admits drink-driving

Actor Pua Magasiva has been sentenced after pleading guilty to a drink-driving charge. Magasiva, 37, was sentenced in the North Shore District Court on Wednesday to 80 hours of community work, 12 months of supervisio­n and was disqualifi­ed from holding a driving licence for 13 months. On the night of the offence, Magasiva, who plays nurse Vinnie Kruse on television programme Shortland Street, hosted a children’s Halloween party at his house with his fiancee. The pair argued and Magasiva left on his motorbike but returned after 20 minutes. When he got back, police were waiting and he was found to have a breath-alcohol reading of 569 micrograms, more than twice the legal limit. It was Magasiva’s third drink-driving offence.

Identity confirmed

Police have confirmed the body of Canterbury woman Emma Beattie has been found nearly four months after she disappeare­d from her home. Beattie was last seen at her home in Fernside, a small community near Rangiora in the Waimakarir­i District, about 11pm on December 1, 2017. The search for the 20-year-old was called off on December 9. Her body was found on the northern banks of the Ashley River during a search and rescue training exercise on Saturday. Search and rescue coordinato­r Sergeant Phil Simmonds said the area where Beattie was found was examined during the original search ‘‘but not covered to a high degree’’. Her death has been referred to the coroner.

Fatal farm accident

The man who died in a farm accident in rural Marlboroug­h on Tuesday afternoon was Jeremy Bruce Turnbull, 52, of Seddon, south of Blenheim. Emergency services were called by his family to a property off Redwood Pass Rd, about 13 kilometres north of Seddon.

Highway curfew to end

The earthquake-damaged State Highway 1 between Picton and Christchur­ch will be open around the clock from the end of April. Work crews will be pushing for the next four weeks to make sure the road will be ready in time, with a short closure of the section south of Kaiko¯ura planned for mid-April. About 1 million cubic metres of material fell across the highway during the magnitude7.8 earthquake in November 2016. The road reopened on December 15. Night-time closures have been in place since.

Guilty of murder

Turiarangi Tai has been found guilty of murder over the shooting of his girlfriend, Chozyn Koroheke. Tai was convicted in the High Court at Auckland on Wednesday. He fatally shot Koroheke, 22, on April 4, 2017, in her Pakuranga home. Witnesses said he beat the mother-of-two with a rock, stabbed her and threatened to shoot her in the months leading up to her death. Tai will be sentenced on June 29.

 ?? PHOTOS: CHRIS HARROWELL/STUFF ?? The organisati­on Build Up Emergency Housing placed this small unit on vacant Auckland Council-owned land in Manukau to highlight what it says is a lack of action by the council to address homelessne­ss. Inset: Build Up spokesman Alan Johnson.
PHOTOS: CHRIS HARROWELL/STUFF The organisati­on Build Up Emergency Housing placed this small unit on vacant Auckland Council-owned land in Manukau to highlight what it says is a lack of action by the council to address homelessne­ss. Inset: Build Up spokesman Alan Johnson.

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