The New Zealand Herald

Homelessne­ss this winter the worst in years — Twyford

- Ben Leahy

Homelessne­ss over the past winter was the worst it has been in years, says Housing Minister Phil Twyford.

He said all major measures showed homelessne­ss had increased, despite the Government putting more people into state and emergency housing.

These measures included figures showing nearly twice as many people applied for Government help because they were either homeless or had insecure accommodat­ion compared with a year earlier.

According to official figures released early to the Herald, 2585 people were also placed into transition­al housing during the September quarter, up from 1663 at the same time last year.

An additional 14,017 “special needs grants” were given out to help other families and people pay for emergency accommodat­ion in motels or other short stays, up from 9159 at the same time last year.

Twyford said the figures showed there had been three winters in a row of “very high levels of homelessne­ss”.

“[But] this winter that we’ve just had was the worst of the last three.”

It comes after the Government announced in May it would spend $100 million to tackle homelessne­ss.

This included $63.4m to expand and provide ongoing cash to support the Housing First programme — which puts chronicall­y homeless people into permanent housing — and $37m to be spent during the winter to urgently increase housing supply.

Twyford said these efforts had led to 1300 more households getting access to public housing than a year ago. “In the September quarter, we increased the number of public housing tenancies by 451. We also made 244 more transition­al housing places available and housed 1721 households from [the] public housing waiting list,” he said.

“There are also 413 homeless people or families now in stable housing through the Housing First programme in Auckland, Christchur­ch and Tauranga.”

Through its building programme, the Government grew the public housing stock to 66,235, up from 63,511 two years ago.

But Twyford said issues of homelessne­ss were not likely to disappear soon. In the last quarter, 2186 people applied for Government help because they were homeless, while 4613 sought help because they had insecure accommodat­ion.

This was up from 1098 homeless a year ago and 2515 who had insecure accommodat­ion.

“The call by the Prime Minister in May that our Government would do all it could to help the homeless has led to a steady stream of people coming forward, confident they will get help,” he said.

“The continuing demand for public housing and other housing support shows that it’s going to take a concerted effort over many years to end homelessne­ss. The housing crisis was created over a decade and isn’t going to be fixed overnight.”

 ??  ?? Phil Twyford
Phil Twyford

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