The New Zealand Herald

Isolation with all the trimmings

Family move to penthouse and pay for hotel upgrade

- Lane Nichols

Afamily are spending their two-week Covid-19 managed isolation in style after being upgraded to a penthouse suite in Auckland’s Grand Millennium hotel.

Officials say the extra cost associated with the stay is being borne by the family, not taxpayers, and they were upgraded by the hotel due to “particular employment and child-based needs”.

While room upgrades for managed isolation do occur, it is only the second time in seven months the suite has been used.

Returning Kiwis are not able to choose where they carry out their isolation. Many are forced to sweat out their mandatory 14-day quarantine in cramped, standard rooms, often while juggling work commitment­s and bored, restless kids.

A newly introduced voucher system has been controvers­ial, with many expat Kiwis desperate to get home unable to secure a spot.

Act leader David Seymour questioned if the same opportunit­ies the family received were available to all returning Kiwi travellers.

“I don’t begrudge people if they have the means of getting a better deal. My only question is where’s the transparen­cy and why isn’t this kind of flexibilit­y open to everybody, not just people apparently in the know?”

A Managed Isolation and Quarantine (MIQ) spokesman confirmed the recently arrived family were upgraded to a penthouse suite on the four-star hotel’s 12th floor.

Standard rooms at the hotel are 36sq m and usually charged out commercial­ly at about $250 a night.

It is not clear which suite the family were moved to. The hotel’s suites range in size from 72sq m for a junior suite with balcony up to an 108sq m suite, which typically costs about $800 a night.

The “elegant apartment-style accommodat­ion” boasts an entrance foyer, floor-to-ceiling windows, spacious separate bedroom with California­n king bed and open plan living.

It also comes with a luxury bathroom, complete with “his and hers” vanities, and views over Auckland.

The MIQ spokesman would not provide details about the family, saying only that “the parent is a New Zealander”.

“A decision to allow the movement to this suite was made to accommodat­e their circumstan­ces. For privacy reasons we will not be providing further informatio­n.”

In August the Government introduced a charge for returning Kiwis to recoup some of the multimilli­ondollar cost of managed isolation.

Incoming travellers must now pay $3100 for the first person in the room, $950 for each additional adult and $475 for each additional child over the age of 3.

The hotel spokesman confirmed the family were paying the extra cost associated with the penthouse suite, but declined to reveal the total price, citing commercial sensitivit­y.

Grand Millennium management made the decision to upgrade the family after recommenda­tions from an Auckland DHB “wellbeing team”.

The hotel and wellbeing team managed upgrade requests and worked with incoming passengers to find suitable rooms.

“Movements of guests to another room does occur in facilities, primarily for wellbeing reasons, such as claustroph­obia, or to provide access to sunlight for pregnant women, for maintenanc­e issues or when couples are separating.”

Families with several children may also request adjoining rooms, or a large room with multiple beds.

“Generally, rooms are allocated according to the capacity of the facility, best use of the room configurat­ion, or to suit [guests’] particular needs.”

The Herald put questions to Grand Millennium management but the hotel did not respond.

Meanwhile, a family of four in managed isolation at another Auckland hotel say they were not offered an upgrade and had to fight to get adjourning rooms.

The father said they were originally put in a tiny single room, making it impossible for him to work or for his two preschoole­rs to sleep. After complainin­g, they were given adjoining rooms but would have to pay extra if they weren’t granted an exemption, he said.

He would have considered upgrading had the hotel offered it, depending on the cost.

 ?? Photo / Sylvie Whinray ?? A family shifted to a penthouse suite at the Grand Millennium hotel.
Photo / Sylvie Whinray A family shifted to a penthouse suite at the Grand Millennium hotel.

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