This
in a country that a generation ago was one of the most egalitarian in
the world and which topped the OECD for living standards.
Christchurch was a fine place to grow up.
Poverty
'rampant' in quake hit Christchurch
Horror
stories of Christchurch families living in garages and tents continue
to surface almost two years on from the February 2011 earthquake.
TVNZ,
29
January, 2013
Some
families are still stranded in sheds or illegally overcrowding
friends' and relatives' houses.
Meanwhile,
rental housing prices show no sign of abating and welfare agencies
believe this year could be worse than the last.
Demand
on Christchurch's social services continues to increase: people who
have never needed help before are queuing up at food banks and many
families still face impoverished living conditions.
City
Missioner Michael Gorman said the unprecedented demand on the
mission's alcohol and drug services, foodbank and night shelters "has
not eased at all".
"There
is a lot more money going into rent and a lot less money going into
living."
The
number of people approaching the mission suffering from poverty or
mental health issues was rampant, he said.
One
of his social workers had a week-long waiting list of families
needing assistance with school uniform grants. Another had recently
been supporting a young family living in a tent, and a couple renting
a washhouse.
A
desperate woman with a newborn baby emailed Gorman last week asking
for any free food because she said she was "paying so much rent,
I can't afford to live".
"We
are seeing many, many new people. Some who may actually own property
but are so stretched by having to be out of their houses and pay
horrific rents," he said.
Pacific
Island Evaluation social worker To'alepai Louella Thomsen-Inder said
she was growing tired of "fighting day and night" for her
clients.
Before
Christmas she dropped food parcels off to 10 struggling families and
said she could "smell the poverty as I walked in the door".
"I
saw the reality. Some people had just a twig in a corner for a
Christmas tree," she said.
"Some
homes have no curtains, babies are crawling around on rotting carpet,
it's damp and the children are running around with no shoes on and
with visible skin conditions."
Tenants
Protection Association manager Helen Gatonyi believes this year is
"shaping up to be the worst".
"When
winter strikes this year, we predict it's going to be very difficult
for a large number of people."
Some
owners had been renting out cramped, damp three-bedroom homes for
more than $500 a week, she said.
"The
behaviour of some landlords is totally unacceptable. They are renting
homes for an arm and a leg, knowing there will be a queue of people
lining up to view the place."
Gatonyi
is calling for a warrant of fitness and code of practice to be placed
on Christchurch rental properties and said the association was about
to launch an in-depth inquiry into the living conditions of tenants
in the city.
The
Government's investigation into overcrowding, homelessness and
unsuitable living conditions in Christchurch was kick-started in June
last year, but the results are yet to be released.
The
Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment had hoped to have the
report finalised by the end of last year.
A
spokeswoman said the release had been pushed back to ensure the
information was correct and the report "robust".
According
to recent ministry figures, rents rose between 7 and 21 per cent in
Christchurch last year, depending on suburb.
SOLO
MUM JUST WANTS A CHANCE
You
don't have to look far to find a Christchurch family living in
poverty.
Amber
Breiter and her 1-year-old daughter inhabit a standalone garage in
Linwood.
There
is no heating. There is no carpet. And the windows do not open.
The
22-year-old mother was renting a two-bedroom house in Waltham last
month with her daughter, Bella, and 4-year-old son, Jesse, but said
she had to give it up because she could not afford the rent, power
and food bills.
A
week before she moved out, she rang Housing New Zealand and asked to
be put on the waiting list.
Breiter
moved into her mother's shed with her daughter, and her son now
sleeps inside the four-bedroom house - with seven other relatives.
She
pays $300 a week for food, power and rent for the one-car garage and
said she looked on Trade Me every day for an affordable rental
property.
She
has been to 15 flat viewings in the past two weeks but has had to
compete with more than 60 prospective tenants every time. With two
young children and a bad credit rating, she said there was little
hope.
Breiter's
message to landlords was: "Give the little person a chance."
"I
am down on my hands and knees, saying 'Please'."
Raising
her children in impoverished conditions was soul-destroying, Breiter
said.
"Jesse
asks why I don't love him any more. He thinks I am trying to punish
him by doing this."
Breiter
went on the domestic purposes benefit after she was injured at work
in the June earthquakes in 2011 and has sought help on budgeting
advice and finding employment from welfare agencies.
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