Bay of Plenty Times

‘A disgrace’: Pensioner has days to find rental

Devastated family running out of time to find their mum a home

- Carmen Hall

The family of a Tauranga pensioner in her 70s say they are wracked with guilt after a desperate and fruitless battle to find her a home. She now has less than two weeks to find somewhere to live after her rented home of eight years was sold in December.

The family has been applying for private rentals for months as well as approachin­g social agencies, retirement villages, the council, and the Ministry of Social Developmen­t.

The Bay of Plenty Times agreed not to name the family because their mother was “embarrasse­d” about her situation, but her children wanted to highlight an issue they believed was affecting many elderly.

Wiping away tears, one daughter said: “I’m so stressed, especially when my mum rings me up and she is crying saying I want to die.”

Competitio­n had been fierce, with 20 people at one viewing for a twobedroom rental. Her mother also has a small therapy dog and most landlords do not allow pets, she said..

“I have never seen it this bad for old people.”

Her mother wanted to live independen­tly but may have no choice if they cannot find a single-level one to two-bedroom unit for no more than $500 a week.

The alternativ­e would have her moving between her children’s homes due to their work commitment­s.

The daughter said they were wracked with guilt and “at our wit’s end”.

“You start thinking, we haven’t done enough.”

Another daughter said her mother did not want to rely on family members..

“She would rather hold on to her independen­ce, keep her dignity, and keep doing what she is doing for as long as she can.”

They understood they would eventually have to take over their mother’s care, but said the timing of that decision had effectivel­y been taken away due to the housing crisis..

The latest Ministry for Social Developmen­t data had 423 people on the public housing register in Tauranga waiting for a one-bedroom state house.

Nationally, 2844 people on the register were aged 65 plus and 3333 were aged 55 to 64..

In December the Bay of Plenty overtook Auckland as the country’s priciest area for tenants.

The median weekly rent for a one to two-bedroom home in Tauranga was $600, up 13.2 per cent year-onyear, according to Trademe data.

Rotorua pensioner ‘desperate’ for home

Age Concern Rotorua manager Rory O’rourke said it was “common” for tensions to arise when elderly relatives moved in with family. “Most families are caring but people who have lived by themselves for a long time have their little idiosyncra­sies that get up their nose.”

O’rouke said the organisati­on was approached by a pensioner feeling “desperate” and without options after moving in with family and the find the situation began to sour.

“Love” was not enough, the elder told Rourke: “I need to go but where?”.

The rental situation in Rotorua was dire and he was aware of elderly living in motels, motorhomes or couch surfing.

It comes as Age Concern’s pocketsize­d neighbourh­ood for elderly in need would soon welcome its first tiny home recipient, who would pay $120 per week.

Ministry for Social Developmen­t data shows 390 people were waiting for a one-bedroom state house in Rotorua.

Trade Me data showed the median weekly rent for a one to two-bedroom home in Rotorua in January was $455, up 13.2 per cent, year-on-year.

Gerontolog­ist Carole Gordon said vulnerable elders were stressed due to housing policy “negligence”.

“We have an elder housing care crisis, there is no solution in sight. “It’s a disgrace.”

People were living longer which drove the need to design rental homes for elders, she said.

Her research found rentals had become unaffordab­le “forcing more people including elders to live under bushes, in tents, toilets, cars garages or couch surf”, according to a paper she prepared for a healthy ageing forum.

Elderly men more likely to stay in shared accommodat­ion

Te¯ Tuinga Whanau Support Services Trust has two transition­al homes in Tauranga to help house the growing elderly population.

Whare Patariki opened in 2022 and accommodat­ed about five men, while Whare Kaa opened in August and could house up to five women.

Transition­al housing leader Sophia

Murray said its kuia/kauma¯tua programme was successful but highlighte­d shared living tended to suit men better because many women were used to being the head of their households.

“Suddenly they have to move into a bedroom with shared common spaces that is not always to their liking.”

Age Concern Tauranga general manager Tanya Smith said some elderly living on superannua­tion alone could not afford rent.

The Government should take “more ownership of that”, she said.

Minister for Seniors: Housing for over 65s a key challenge

Minister for Seniors Casey Costello said providing living options for people as they aged was a key challenge she wanted to address.

“I mean everything from people being able to stay in their existing family home right through to there being suitable places for older New Zealanders to live and receive health or dementia care.”

Costello said she wanted the Building Act amended to make it easier to build granny flats or other small structures up to 60m2.

The Government had also committed to increasing social housing places.

State homes allocated on need, not age

Ka¯inga Ora Bay of Plenty regional director Darren Toy said 364 Ka¯inga Ora tenancies were held by people aged 65-plus in Tauranga, Rotorua and the Western Bay of Plenty.

Matching a person to a home was based on individual needs, not age.

Toy said need and individual circumstan­ces were considered when one of the 197 one-bedroom units for older people transferre­d from Tauranga

High demand for council homes

City Council to Ka¯inga Ora became available.

Housing provider Accessible Properties’ chief executive Greg Orchard said about 19 per cent of its 1196 public housing homes in Tauranga and Te Puke were occupied by tenants aged over 65.

Research it funded in 2020 found the market responded poorly to the needs of older renters.

“It will have only increased by then.”

Tauranga City Council began selling its elder housing villages in 2018. Seven of the nine villages were sold to Ka¯inga Ora for $17.2 million.

One was sold to Sanderson Group for a proposed new retirement village and the final village’s sale was still being finalised.

The council expected to have $47.8m in total from the sales and $22.1m had already been put towards work to increase public, social, affordable and elder housing, a spokeswoma­n said.

Rotorua Lakes Council has 152 pensioner units and 29 were empty. It had 37 people on the waiting list.

Corporate services group manager Thomas Colle said four had been refurbishe­d and it was working to tenant them, while the remainder awaited refurbishm­ent.

“Our waitlist is always full due to ongoing high demand and we cap it [at 40] so people can find other alternativ­es rather than having to wait for up to two years for one to become free.”

Carmen Hall is a news director for the Bay of Plenty Times and Rotorua Daily Post, covering business and general news. She has been a Voyager Media Awards winner and a journalist for 25 years.

 ?? Photo / 123rf ?? Elderly people in Tauranga and Rotorua are struggling in a tight rental market, advocates say.
Photo / 123rf Elderly people in Tauranga and Rotorua are struggling in a tight rental market, advocates say.
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 ?? ?? Age Concern Rotorua Manager Rory O’rourke.
Age Concern Rotorua Manager Rory O’rourke.
 ?? ?? Ka¯ inga Ora BOP regional director Darren Toy.
Ka¯ inga Ora BOP regional director Darren Toy.
 ?? ?? Advocate for the elderly Carol Gordon.
Advocate for the elderly Carol Gordon.
 ?? ?? Minister for Seniors Casey Costello.
Minister for Seniors Casey Costello.

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