Rotorua Daily Post

Elders gutted as homes damaged

Incident pushes opening of new papakāinga back months

- Kelly Makiha

The hurt cuts deep for hapū descendant­s as they look at the mess left by burglars around the 15 Rotorua homes they had built to help struggling families.

“Sick, down, wild, angry.”

That was how kuia Minnie Vercoe described her feelings when she got the first phone call about Ngāti Uenukukopa­ko Iwi Trust’s papakāinga being targeted overnight on Monday.

The homes, on iwi land opposite Rotorua Airport, were to be finished by January and are earmarked for hapu¯ descendant­s with children who are living in emergency housing or cramped and rough conditions.

Now, it will be at least another two months before the damage is fixed.

“I wanted to cry,” Vercoe told the Rotorua Daily Post.

“For someone to do that to our hapu¯ and our iwi when we are trying to do something for our community, I think it stinks.”

Vercoe and other hapu¯ members were at the site yesterday morning to tautoko (support) trust chairman Nireaha Pirika.

For him, the shock was even greater.

He lives on the site and woke up Tuesday morning to discover their dreams had been shattered.

“I got up about 6.30am and noticed the kitchen door was open.

“I thought it was strange and closed it and put the jug on.” Then he noticed two laptops were missing among other items around his house.

When he went outside, he saw his truck and the trust’s 10-seater boat were gone. Then, he walked around the property shocked to find the damage to about 13 of the nearly-finished two and three-bedroom homes.

“I thought, ‘whoa, this is bigger than someone taking my computers’.”

The boat and trailer were used to do taiao mahi on Mokoia Island, a programme run by the trust and community partners to benefit hundreds of children daily at 10 Rotorua primary schools.

Among the items claimed to have been stolen were native bird monitoring gear, generators, constructi­on equipment, tablets, bluetooth speakers, binoculars, chargers and master keys. The stolen items alone were estimated to cost up to $20,000 to replace.

The two laptops carried at least 10 years’ worth of iwi informatio­n that wasn’t backed up anywhere else.

Pirika said gates to the property were smashed and there was extensive exterior damage to at least one of the homes.

Undergroun­d water and electrical piping was damaged as the thieves moved their vehicle or vehicles in to get to the homes.

Window and door frames of 13 of the homes were bent and damaged to gain access inside to get appliances such as Haier ovens and Fisher and Paykel dishwasher­s.

The appliances, along with prepackage­d showers, were left on the decks. Pirika said it looked like it was planned to take them and the burglars either got spooked or wanted to come back later.

Pirika said the builders’ container shed had been broken into on Sunday night and he wondered if whoever was responsibl­e scoped out the property and returned the next night.

Pirika said the 1ha site, which was originally Nga¯ti Uenukukopa­ko land, was bought in 2012 with the dream of building the papaka¯inga.

A deal was struck with the Government to run a housing scheme that could see their descendant­s living in the homes by January, paying rent of just 25 per cent of what they earned.

The Ministry of Housing and Urban Developmen­t put $4.8 million towards the project and the trust took out a loan of $3.2m to top up the building and developmen­t costs.

Pirika said Rotorua company Lockwood was contracted to provide the homes and some local Nga¯ti

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 ?? Photos / Andrew Warner ?? Nireaha Pirika at the damaged papaka¯ inga on the outskirts of Rotorua. Inset: Minnie Vercoe.
Photos / Andrew Warner Nireaha Pirika at the damaged papaka¯ inga on the outskirts of Rotorua. Inset: Minnie Vercoe.
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 ?? Photos / Andrew Warner ?? Damage to an exterior wall will be expensive to fix.
Photos / Andrew Warner Damage to an exterior wall will be expensive to fix.

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