This,
and not Richard Prosser's diatribe, is what should be getting world
attention.
Government
gets a 'D' for child poverty
The
Salvation Army is giving the Government a 'D' for child poverty,
housing supply and youth employment in its latest State of the Nation
report.
13
February, 2013
Child
poverty has been hovering around 21 percent for the past five
years, while youth employment has fallen to its lowest level in more
than 10 years, Newstalk ZB reported.
Salvation
Army spokesman Major Campbell Roberts said Auckland had built up a
housing deficit of more than 16,000 dwellings over the past five
years.
"If
our children came home with a 'D' from school, most of us would have
a vigorous plan of action to turn it around. That same vigour is
needed from our political and Government agency leaders."
Roberts
said we needed to stop saying, "She'll be Right" and start
saying, "It's not alright" when it came to these issues.
He
said poverty amongst children wasn't improving and more than 21,000
children suffered abuse or neglect in the past year.
"And
no light is emerging in this picture despite much talk and many
proposed solutions."
Roberts
said families, especially in Auckland and Christchurch, were living
in housing that was unhealthy, unsafe, temporary or unaffordable.
Deputy
Prime Minister Bill English, who is a member of the Ministerial
Committee on Poverty, defended the Government's action, saying many
of the Salvation Army's indicators had improved in the last year.
"We
agree with the Salvation Army about a lot of the diagnosis," Mr
English told Radio New Zealand.
"If
setting up committees and spending more government money would solve
all these problems then they would have been dealt with 50 years ago.
"We're
focussing very strongly on a set of results the Government has
publicised which is clear political leadership.
"In
the end this is about changing the stats on the ground family by
family, person by person, and even the Salvation Army has indicated
some progress is being made.''
Labour's
Social Development spokeswoman and spokeswoman for children, Jacinda
Ardern said the Government "seems content to sit back while
things steadily get worse for our kids".
"Giving
[the Government] a below average 'D' for progress on child poverty,
the report makes specific reference to the Ministerial Committee on
Poverty's lack of action, yet the Government continues to claim the
committee is making a difference," Ardern said.
"That's
just rubbish. Both the White Paper on Vulnerable Children and Paula
Bennett's welfare reforms have been heavily criticised for either
ignoring poverty or for making it worse."
Green
Party Co-leader Metiria Turei said the report made "shocking
reading".
"It's
shocking, but not really surprising, to see poorer kids slipping
behind when their parents may have lost jobs, or been forced to move
because the National Government has overseen a shedding of export and
manufacturing jobs and huge increases in the cost of housing,"
Turei said.
"Central
to the right of every kiwi kid to have a good life and a fair future
is a strong public education system. But instead of investing in
public education, the National Government has been undermining it,
even building charter schools so business can make a buck by
employing untrained people teaching our most disadvantaged kids.
"We
believe it is unacceptable for the Government to read reports showing
kiwi kids are hurting without acting urgently to change that."

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