9 Mar 2021

Emergency housing: $1m-a-day spend a 'disgrace' - National

6:53 pm on 9 March 2021

The government is spending a million dollars a day on transitional and emergency housing such as motels and boarding hostels.

National Party housing spokesperson Nicola Willis.

National Party housing spokesperson Nicola Willis. Photo: RNZ / Dom Thomas

Last quarter, $82.5 million was spent on emergency housing grants for accommodation in motels or similar - equalling more than $900,000 a day.

In addition, almost $155,000 was spent on motels for transitional housing.

National's housing spokesperson Nicola Willis said the figures were a disgrace.

"Emergency housing has spiralled out of control on Labour's watch.

"Thousands more New Zealanders are being squeezed out of the private housing market by escalating prices and a shortage of housing options," she said.

Willis said Housing Minister Megan Woods and her colleagues had repeatedly said a motel was not an appropriate form of housing.

"Crowded motels are becoming hotbeds of dysfunction with families reportedly being forced to raise their children next door to gang members, drug-dealers and criminal activity.

"This is happening on the government's watch and it must take responsibility for fixing it."

Housing Minister Megan Woods.

Housing Minister Megan Woods. Photo: RNZ / Dom Thomas

When questioned about this by National during Parliament's Question Time, Woods defended the government's track-record on homelessness.

"What we are is a party and a government that is committed to finally owning up to the fact we have a homelessness problem in this country, that we have a housing crisis and that we are putting the actions into place.

Woods said those homeless people were previously sleeping in cars, garages and on the street.

"I do not think motels are ideal, but I would put anyone up in a motel over them sleeping on the street any day of the week."

The government has funded the provision of 6641 transitional housing places, which would triple what was available, she said.

She said National had refused to acknowledge that there was a homelessness problem when they were in power.

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs