Bush Telegraph

Country folk poor cousins to city now

STUDY: How urbanisati­on is robbing rural communitie­s of their services

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When Caroline Batley began her study on the decline of rural community services she was surprised to find that “rural New Zealand” wasn’t as big as she thought it was.

In 2020, only 13 per cent of residents in New Zealand lived in rural areas, a drop from 16.3 per cent in 2018, Batley said in her report for the Kellogg Leadership Programme.

Batley found rural communitie­s had experience­d a “hollowing out” since the 1930s despite supporting the primary sector, she told The Country’s Jamie Mackay.

“When I first began my project, I thought that we were quite a rural country but as things have declined since basically the 30s we’ve become more and more urbanised.”

According to Statistics NZ, as of June 2018, urban people made up 87.2 per cent of the population.

Stats NZ classes urban areas as cities, towns and other conurbatio­ns (an aggregatio­n of urban settlement­s) of a thousand people or more:

Urban:

Major urban area: Towns/cities with 100,000-plus residents Large urban area: Towns with between 30,000 and 99,999 residents Medium urban area: Towns with between 10,000 and 29,999 residents Small urban area: Towns with between 1000 and 9999 residents.

Stats NZ also defines rural settlement­s with a population of 200 to 999 people or at least 40 dwellings. Rural:

Rural settlement: population­s of between 200 and 1000 people, at least 40 residentia­l dwellings and a cluster of dwellings with at least one community or public building; and

Rural other: mainland and islands outside rural settlement­s or urban areas.

Batley’s study also found that only 2-3 per cent of the population were farmers and their families.

“It really has declined from being very much a rural country to being quite urbanised.”

Batley did a case study of two rural towns and one forestry area in her report and used those case studies to assess how the 2018 Census data of rural areas tracked compared with national averages.

Many rural centres had lost hospitals, police stations, banks, government department­s, schools, sporting clubs and churches, she said.

Batley’s report explored whether healthcare, employment, crime and education outcomes had worsened for rural residents compared with their urban counterpar­ts due to these changes, and recommende­d enhancemen­ts to public policy to address this.

The healthcare skill shortage was “huge” in rural communitie­s, despite Local Government New Zealand programmes such as Think Rural, Batley said.

“What I found is we’ve got some healthcare discrepanc­ies in rural towns [and that there’s] definitely a lack of health profession­als in rural areas.”

A lack of promotion of higher education opportunit­ies meant rural people were missing out in this area as well, Batley said.

“In my research [there was] a rural education disadvanta­ge that we found. So maybe an increased scholarshi­p programme to attract people that are based in rural communitie­s to higher education and universiti­es [is needed].”

Fewer police officers, poor internet connection­s and high postage prices were also having a negative effect on dwindling rural communitie­s, Batley said.

It really has declined from being very much a rural country to being quite urbanised. — Caroline Batley

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Since the 1930s New Zealand has become more and more urbanised.
Photo / NZME Since the 1930s New Zealand has become more and more urbanised.
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