Rotorua Daily Post

Housing report heads to Cabinet

Unclear when emergency housing review to be public

- Felix Desmarais Fighting for ROTORUA

Cabinet will soon consider a report on a review of emergency housing but when it will be made public remains unknown. It follows months of ministers’ referencin­g the review when asked questions about Rotorua’s emergency housing issues, and is revealed from parliament­ary written questions submitted by Act Party housing spokeswoma­n Brooke van Velden, provided to Local Democracy Reporting.

Van Velden says a successful review would include a recommenda­tion to end the mixed use of motels and would ensure children’s safety.

The Government says it won’t release informatio­n about the review before it’s been before Cabinet, but says it’s part of learning “what is working and what isn’t” to improve the system.

Van Velden asked Social Developmen­t Minister Carmel Sepuloni and Housing Minister Megan Woods questions including what progress had been made on the emergency housing system review, when it would be made public and if the Government would end the practice of mixed-use motels, and if so, what alternativ­e model would be adopted.

Woods responded that she and Sepuloni had taken a paper to Cabinet in August titled “progressin­g the emergency housing system review” and received “the final stage of advice” on it in October.

The next step would be reporting back to Cabinet, which she planned to do this month.

Woods said Cabinet papers on the review would be proactivel­y released to the public “once final Cabinet decisions have been taken”.

In another response, Sepuloni said she was advised the Ministry of Social Developmen­t was “working closely” with the council and government agencies through the Rotorua Housing Task Force to reduce the number of motels used for emergency housing and “improve the level of support” provided to people in emergency accommodat­ion.

She said the number of motels had reduced from 35 to 29 in recent months and most of those motels were no longer mixed-use.

Sepuloni said decisions would be announced shortly after Cabinet considered the recommenda­tions of the emergency housing system review in December.

On Monday, van Velden said the responses revealed the Government was “finally making progress” on the emergency housing review, and a successful review would include a recommenda­tion to end the mixed use of motels and would ensure children’s safety.

She believed it needed to assess whether the Government was adequately sharing data across agencies in relation to emergency housing and

measuring cost against the value of a service a contracted motel provided.

“We need to track how often a kid in a motel is changing schools and making sure that family has support to get that kid to school.

“We are setting and forgetting, and allowing people to live their lives permanentl­y in emergency accommodat­ion.”

Van Velden wanted more informatio­n shared with the public as soon as possible on the review, “so we can have a fulsome discussion on what the next steps should be”.

She did not believe the Government had its priorities in order.

“We have thousands of people living in temporary accommodat­ion for extended parts of their lives and it’s not safe and it’s not where we should be housing people long term.”

She believed the Government was distracted by what she termed as ideologica­l and “race” issues.

“None of this goes any way to helping people with the real issues they face day-to-day on the ground.”

On Tuesday, Woods told Local Democracy Reporting the Government recognised the difficulti­es of people living in emergency housing and population numbers meant that while the Government had a “large programme” of building under way, demand was still outstrippi­ng supply.

The Government had built 230 public homes in Rotorua, and 117 transition­al homes, she said, with a further 300 public homes under constructi­on or “in the pipeline”. The Government had also invested $120 million in housing-enabling stormwater infrastruc­ture, Woods said.

“Something that will help more housing get built in Rotorua is the medium density rules the city is adopting, and which the Act Party opposes.

“Cutting red tape to allow more new housing to be built at a denser scale in urban areas is a sensible solution to New Zealand’s lack of housing.”

She said the Government was “realistic” the need for emergency housing wouldn’t be solved “overnight” but was aiming to significan­tly reduce the demand for it within five years.

Among wraparound support for the 105 children in emergency housing in Rotorua at the end of October was a school bus service aimed at providing “normality” to children, which Woods said had been “very successful” and well received.

Woods said the Government was applying lessons from its trial directly contractin­g motels to its emergency housing review, but she would not “get ahead of any Cabinet decisions”.

“The review is a continuati­on of the work we started in 2019 to complement the Homelessne­ss Action Plan.

“It’s focused on the government­funded elements of the emergency housing system, namely emergency housing special needs grants, transition­al housing, and other related forms of emergency housing — as in Rotorua, and motels used in the Covid-19 response.

“It also acknowledg­es the need to enable Ma¯ori-led solutions in the delivery of appropriat­e accommodat­ion and support services.

“We won’t be able to solve the housing crisis we inherited overnight but we recognise we need to learn from what is working and what isn’t, and improve the system.”

 ?? Photo / Andrew Warner ?? Aerial view of Rotorua.
Photo / Andrew Warner Aerial view of Rotorua.
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 ?? ?? Housing Minister Dr Megan Woods.
Housing Minister Dr Megan Woods.
 ?? ?? Act MP Brooke van Velden.
Act MP Brooke van Velden.
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