This is in my own backyard and it's not going to be fixed.
Homelessness
in Lower Hutt an invisible crisis affecting everyone and increasing
by the day
NZ Herald,
12
June, 2019
An
invisible crisis is happening in Lower Hutt.
Homelessness.
It's
affecting children, the elderly, the employed and unemployed and
people in between.
No
region is immune to the problem across New Zealand but Lower Hutt,
which sits across the harbour from Wellington and has a population of
100,000, has had a troubling increase in homeless people over the
past few years.
The
Hutt City Council is taking a stand against the growing problem. On
Tuesday, it confirmed spending about $1.5 million to improve the
response to homelessness over the next three years.
The
city currently has a record number of people on its Public Housing
Register and a record number of Emergency Housing Special Needs
Grants (EHSNG) approved.
Ministry
of Housing and Urban Development figures show in March 2019 there
were 370 applicants on the Housing Register.
The
households on the register included 442 adults and 363 children.
That
figures increased by 143 per cent since March 2017.
Private
sector rents have also been increasing and bond data shows there's
very little turnover of tenancies.
Lower
Hutt had also been seeing a number of people moving from Wellington
City to live in the Hutt because of cheaper rents, which was
contributing to the demand.
The
council doesn't have a number of the people sleeping in cars,
improvised shelter or staying with family but are aware of
individuals and families sleeping rough in locations across the city.
It
also knows homelessness is likely to increase in the short-term, with
the limited supply of affordable homes and pressure on rented
housing.
Wainuiomata
community board member Keri Brown has worked with hundreds, or
thousands, of families who've experienced homelessness over the past
five years.
She
advocated the city council for a homelessness strategy and action
plan to be put in place.
"Many
children and families are invisible, they're the invisible face of
homelessness.
"We've
got a relatively low-income area compared to the sky-rocketing rents,
so people are struggling to get into a rental. It's just everyday
people here.
"They're
hidden because they're living in places like motels and sheds. They
can feel quite ashamed and embarrassed at the situation they're in,
through no fault of their own."
She
said the strategy was about everybody taking ownership of the problem
and have everyone take part in the conversation.
The
strategy will see $560,000 spent in 2019/20 and $520,000 spent in
both the second and third year after that.
It'll
see the council working with government, housing providers and NGO's
to improve the response to the problem.
The
strategy would include helping access to private rented
accommodation, providing housing advice and advocacy and the
prevention of homelessness.
The
current situation meant support agencies didn't have the capacity to
focus on prevention and were instead taking a reactive approach.
On
Tuesday, councillor Josh Briggs said it was a crisis.
"There
needs to be a significant amount of work done around prevention and
reduction of homelessness in our city before we stop hearing the
stories of children and young people and their families sleeping in
cars and sleeping in tents."
Deputy
mayor David Bassett also put through a recommendation, which was
carried, to make a call to central government for support.
Councillor
Margaret Cousins said they needed to keep the pressure on government.
"We
have a huge amount of empty government land on the eastern side of
the city, and in other places. We need to get those developments
going."
Residents taking it into their own hands to help
Lower
Hutt residents who had their own experiences with homelessness are
going out in the community to give a helping hand.
Edwina
and Junior Simi have gone out and mapped the situation around the
city, offering hot bread and soup to those who need it too.
"We've
discovered families with children living in their cars. We've
discovered people in their tents in the backyard of the council
building. Many of them are waiting for housing. Many of them don't
even know what they're entitled to," Edwina Simi said.
Sandy
Jenson and Princess have also been scoping the situation and offering
advice and advocacy to those affected.
"We
know that's not the answer but at least it's a start."
In
the space of an hour, they saw 22 cars with rough sleepers near the
Petone foreshore area.
"We're
seeing up to three or four carloads where there's been two or three
children in the car as well. We've also noticed it's not just
unemployed but it's employed people as well who are unable to afford
housing and have to deal with it by sleeping in a car."
Jenson
said they needed to start addressing the cause, rather than putting a
band-aid over the problem.
"The
funding is an absolute necessity but where that money goes and how
it's spent is just as equally as important as the amount that's
coming."
Other departments feeling the pressure
The
Hutt Valley District Health Board said it was seeing a steady
increase in patients presenting as homeless.
Trish
Chivers, the DHB's professional lead for social work, addressed
councillors on Tuesday and said they supported the strategy after
seeing increasing pressure on their workers.
In
2017, they undertook a six-week study where they encountered 24
people who were homeless through the DHB. Workers said it was a quiet
period.
Social
workers were spending an average of 11 and a half hours in that time
helping with housing needs.
Delays
in discharging were also impacting on the hospital. On average
homeless patients were having discharging delayed by nine and a half
days because of a lack of housing.
Chivers
said in the past six weeks they had an elderly woman come in who was
evicted from her home.
"She
came to the hospital because she had nowhere else to go. She stayed
with us for three to four weeks while we tried to source her
accommodation and she had to leave the region because we couldn't
find any in the Hutt Valley."
"We
also had a child come in with a respiratory illness... speaking to
that mother, she had twin children at home as well. She was homeless
and living with her sister. Her sister had three children and they
were living in a two-bedroom property with six children under five."
Government support for the growing issue
Wellington
City, which has double the population of Lower Hutt, had 364 grants
approved in the same time.
Andrew
Plant, deputy chief executive of strategic purchasing and public
housing supply, said the council was aware of people living in hotels
and motels.
"While
our preference is to see people placed in stable, long-term
accommodation such as public or transitional housing, the EHSNG is
available to meet the cost of short-term accommodation, usually a
motel, for individuals and families with an immediate housing need."
Community
housing and transitional housing providers were also feeling the
pressure.
Philippa
Wells, Hutt City women's refuge manager, said the refuge was putting
more time into supporting women finding housing, when it could be
doing better things.
"The
women sometimes give up and return to the abuser because it just
takes too long to find housing. The women feel very disillusioned and
as staff we also feel this, although perhaps not to the same degree."
The
council had agreed to participate in the Governance of Housing First
in the Hutt Valley and Wellington along with partners.
Housing
First is a government-funded programme targeting the sharp end of
homelessness – people who are sleeping rough and had been sleeping
rough for the past 12 months.
The
Government announced additional funding in the Wellbeing Budget for
the programme in Wellington. Services for up to 200 people in
Wellington City and the Hutt were expected to start this month.
The
council said after conversations, it had no date for when it would
start in Lower Hutt, but believed practical implementation may begin
later this year.
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