Rotorua Daily Post

New data on local homeless a ‘shock’

Ministry focused on people’s needs, not ‘where they come from’

- Kelly Makiha

Nearly a third of people in Rotorua’s emergency housing motels are from out of town, a new report reveals. The report has been met with shock and sparked comments that Rotorua “absorbing” other areas’ homeless is “wreaking havoc”.

The Ministry of Social Developmen­t has repeated assurances that most people in Rotorua emergency housing are from the city, a nearby town or have links to Rotorua.

The Ministry’s new research was presented to the Rotorua Lakes Council’s Operations and Monitoring Committee meeting yesterday.

The report showed 1121 people went through emergency housing in Rotorua in 2021.

Of those, 778 were living in Rotorua a month before needing emergency housing help.

A further 201 people, or 19 per cent, came from neighbouri­ng areas before moving to Rotorua — including Taupo¯ , Tauranga, Western Bay, South Waikato, Kawerau and O¯po¯tiki. Twelve per cent, or 135 people, came from other areas in New Zealand. The ministry later said 115 of those had valid reasons for being in the city.

The report, presented by council deputy chief executive district developmen­t Jean-paul Gaston, was described by the committee’s chairwoman, Councillor Tania Tapsell, as a “shock”.

“What I was really shocked to hear is a third of people in emergency housing are not from Rotorua. That shows there is insufficie­nt social

housing in neighbouri­ng areas — we can’t keep absorbing people into Rotorua because it is wreaking havoc in Rotorua.”

Tapsell said the council needed to push back more on the Government and other councils and say “you need to play your part”.

Tapsell said she wanted the message to be clear that the council was taking a tough approach to stop mixed use of motels through its regulatory powers.

Mayor Steve Chadwick said the report affirmed what Rotorua was feeling and had been anecdotall­y reported to them.

“It doesn’t give you that much comfort.”

Chadwick questioned what could be done about motel advertisin­g trying to lure people to Rotorua with promises of beautiful suites.

She said that practice was “not right” and believed it should form part of the council’s regulatory approach to stop motels bringing people in from outside the district.

Gaston said Destinatio­n Rotorua has been writing to motels when it had seen that practice.

Councillor Merepeka Raukawatai­t said the data should have been known earlier. She said the taskforce working on this issue now needed to look further into the 69 per cent who were from Rotorua originally.

She said she wanted to know who was looking after them before they went into emergency housing.

“Have they got wha¯nau who have just said ‘get out, I can’t stand your behaviour’ and kicked them to the kerb?”

She said questions needed to be asked if those people needed to be in the motels.

“I would question whether they should be in emergency housing. I think Te Arawa, in particular, may have abdicated their responsibi­lity in looking after their wha¯nau members.”

Rotorua Chamber of Commerce chief executive officer Bryce Heard acknowledg­ed the council’s work in consenting more houses to be built and “pulling back the shrouds of secrecy” around people who appeared to be coming in from out of town.

Heard said, in his view, the “story” from the ministry had moved from all those in Rotorua

motels being locals, to 31 per cent being from out of town. He said informatio­n provided to the chamber suggested the out-of-town figure could be even higher.

“To what extent do you think Government policy is incentivis­ing the increase in the homeless?”

Gaston said he was not prepared to “dive” into that question and Tapsell said it should be directed to the Government.

Gaston also gave an update on the council’s latest action to get noncontrac­ted Government motels to comply with rules and regulation­s.

It was reported last week that the council was threatenin­g those motels with court action if they did not apply for the appropriat­e resource consent to operate emergency housing.

Gaston said only one motel had responded and eight had ignored the letters.

After the meeting, Rotorua MP Todd Mcclay, who has previously said he believed Rotorua was being used as a “dumping ground” for the homeless, said in his view the city had been “harmed”.

“The Government has to stop

dumping its housing problem on Rotorua’s doorstep.”

Ministry of Social Developmen­t regional commission­er Mike Bryant told the Rotorua Daily Post yesterday that the “vast majority” of people in emergency housing “are from Rotorua, from nearby towns, or are coming back to Rotorua to be with family after a period away”.

Some had come back to live with wha¯ nau but ended up in a motel after that situation broke down and they became homeless.

“When someone comes to us for help with an immediate housing need, we work with them to find somewhere to stay. We do ask for a valid and clear reason before any emergency housing support is provided for people to relocate from outside of their region.”

He said the research was given to the council shortly after it was finalised.

It was important that homeless people were not turned away.

The Government and its partners were working to grow housing supply in Rotorua, which he said had high housing deprivatio­n due to “generation­s of under-investment in housing” as well as a land shortage, and rising rents, house prices and population.

The ministry was pleased to “focus on the needs of people rather than where they come from” — but the majority were from Rotorua, as previous research had also shown.

He said of the 135 people not from Rotorua, 115 had valid reasons for being in the city. The ministry could not establish a link for the other 20.

Social Developmen­t Minister

Carmel Sepuloni said she asked the ministry to conduct the research following its reports in September 2020 and March and April 2021. She reiterated motels were not seen as a long-term answer for housing, but the Government had to meet people’s urgent needs.

Work was underway to increase housing supply and affordabil­ity, and to improve emergency housing.

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 ?? Photo / Andrew Warner ?? Fenton St is where a majority of the 1121 emergency housing clients stay in motels.
Photo / Andrew Warner Fenton St is where a majority of the 1121 emergency housing clients stay in motels.
 ?? ?? Councillor Tania Tapsell (top) and Rotorua Lakes Council deputy chief executive district developmen­t Jean-paul Gaston.
Councillor Tania Tapsell (top) and Rotorua Lakes Council deputy chief executive district developmen­t Jean-paul Gaston.
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 ?? Photo / Andrew Warner ?? Mike Bryant.
Photo / Andrew Warner Mike Bryant.

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