People camped out at the Classics Museum in Hamilton. Photo: Google Maps
Pensioners camped out in a Waikato carpark are facing an uncertain future after years living on the site, and the carpark owner says most of them cant afford to go anywhere else.
The Classics Museum in the Hamilton suburb of Frankton has allowed people living in campervans to park on its land for $50 a week.
Hamilton Classics Museum owner Tom Andrews said for the first eight to 10 years he had let people stay there for free, later adding a small charge to try and dissuade masses of people from staying there.
Many of them are elderly and on low incomes, with around 20 people staying in the carpark at the moment.
"Some of them are pensioners with no money, [and] have had to sell their houses [and] move into busses," Andrews said.
Under the Classic Car Museum's resource consent, it is allowed three allocated parking spaces that can be provided for campervans. It also allows for overnight stays only for people visiting the museum, but these are confined to the three allocated areas.
Andrews said the council over the years have turned a blind eye to a lot of the overstaying.
The council disputes this, saying they have raised the compliance issue with Andrews a number of times, the first being in 2018.
"For a long time, staff have acted with kindness and patience towards resource consent breaches at the site," Hamilton Council planning guidance director Grant Kettle said.
However, Kettle said staff had received a complaint that raised a serious fire safety risk at the site due to the number and proximity of the campervans being allowed to stay there.
"We have raised with the owner the breach of the resource consent conditions, which were brought to our attention as a result of investigating the fire safety risk," Kettle said.
Andrews said there is no fire safety issue as there is around 1.5 acres of land for the campervans to space out, and rather that was a "red herring".
"If they want the campervans further apart, all they have to do is ask," Andrews said.
Hamilton Council said its staff have provided Andrews with an option which could see campervans stay there under different conditions to the current resource consent. This would require a campground registration for the site, and applying for a new resource consent.
"Council has not taken any formal enforcement action as a result of the breach of the resource conditions the site should operate under. No one is being forced out by the council," Kettle said.
Kettle said staff had asked Andrews to let council which option they were intending to take within a couple of weeks of the initial meeting on 25 June.
"Council has not heard from the owner about what their ongoing intentions are for the site. The owner, not Council, has given the campers until 17 July to end any long-term stays in accordance with the consent conditions. Council is more than willing to work with the owner around the timeframes for when compliance is met," he said.
However, Andrews said under the consent process would be costly.
"Under that process, they'd make me spend well in excess of $100,000 to make, what they consider, the site compliant with toilet blocks etc., which I am not prepared to do," he said.
"We're obviously not getting revenue much from it, and really doing it as a service."
Andrews added the people staying at the carpark currently are all self-contained.
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