The New Zealand Herald

Scheme to pay basics for 3400 Kiwi kids

- Simon Collins Visit variety.org.nz for more informatio­n

Private sponsors will soon be paying for the basics for 3400 Kiwi kids whose parents are often struggling with rising rents.

More than 2800 needy children are already being sponsored by the charity Variety’s Kiwi Kids scheme, launched in 2013, and a further 600 are on its waiting list — 350 of them in Auckland.

The charity’s chief executive, Lorraine Taylor, says many of the sponsored families are paying more than half their income on rent.

“We know from speaking with hundreds of low-income families in Auckland that housing costs are a huge issue, even when parents are working, and that financial stress affects children too,” she said.

The latest household economic survey found that 27 per cent of Auckland renters, but only 21 per cent of renters in the rest of the country, pay more than 40 per cent of their income in rent.

Auckland’s lower-quartile rents have risen 21.2 per cent in the past five years, from $312 to $378 a week, while Aucklander­s’ average wages rose only 14.1 per cent.

One Iraqi-born family on Variety’s waiting list is paying $575 a week to rent a four-bedroom house on the North Shore near the wife’s sister and her family, who came here 20 years ago, and their ageing parents.

Ziyad, 51, who ran a bookshop in Baghdad, and his wife Yusra, a trained accountant, arrived as refugees last March and are living on welfare while they attend English classes.

Their two daughters, aged 23 and 18, are not working yet because they are still learning English.

They have applied for sponsorshi­p for their two sons Badri, 13, and Abdullah, 11, to pay for basics such as clothes, school stationery and football fees until the adults can speak English well enough to get jobs. “We don’t have enough for food. Sometimes we wait until the next benefit,” said Yusra. The family has fled from wars in two countries — first from Iraq in 2006 to Syria, which was then a safe country, and then from Syria after civil war broke out in 2011. They were accepted for resettleme­nt in New Zealand in 2014 but had to wait because Yusra’s father, 89, had a fall and was unable to travel until last March. The boys’ faces and other identifyin­g details cannot be published because Kiwi Kids sponsors can’t meet the children they support — a rule designed to protect the children and to shield sponsors from requests for more help.

 ?? Picture / Dean Purcell ?? Yusra and Ziyad with their sons Badri, 12, and Abdullah, 11, whose faces can’t be shown as, under Variety’s Kiwi Kids scheme, sponsors can’t know the identities of their recipients.
Picture / Dean Purcell Yusra and Ziyad with their sons Badri, 12, and Abdullah, 11, whose faces can’t be shown as, under Variety’s Kiwi Kids scheme, sponsors can’t know the identities of their recipients.

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