Pregnant, living in car with kids
Jessica Bankart described it as the month from hell.
At 30-weeks pregnant, the single mum was homeless and living in a car with her two children under the age of 2.
Her son asked to go home incessantly, she said.
‘‘... But there was no home to go back to.’’
The Auckland woman resorted to living in her car for a month while Work and Income tried to find her accommodation close to her midwife. Her son would get so frustrated he would bang his head against the window – a habit he was yet to grow out, she said. Bankart moved into a Housing New Zealand home on October 27, just three weeks out from Bankart’s due date.
While homeless, Bankart and her two children survived on fish and chips, takeaways, cheap pies and cereal out of the box. Nappies and formula took up most of her benefit and she could not afford to keep a mobile phone, she said.
‘‘We were paying to live a rich man’s life [but living] in a car.’’
They ran out of clean clothes and had no shoes, she said.
Bankart’s troubles began in August when she was living in a West Auckland rental. A rent payment dispute with the landlord meant she had to leave the home at short notice and put most of her belongings in storage.
Work and Income organised emergency accommodation for her, but the young family was made to move at least three times during this time. Over the next five weeks, she was put up in motels and with a housing provider in the North Shore, where she was required to take budgeting and parenting courses.
Bankart said she missed the sessions because she had midwife appointments in West Auckland and had to care for her then ailing mother. She was asked to leave the North Shore facility after failing to attend the courses and breaking house rules, according to Work and Income.
The pregnant mum was offered accommodation with another housing provider in South Auckland. But Bankart said she could not manage living so far from Waita¯ kere and her midwife. She declined the offer of a house in South Auckland and that was when she ended up on the street.
On October 27 she was allocated a Housing New Zealand home near her midwife.
‘‘It’s good to be in a house. I guess the first thing I will do is have a shower.’’