The Government's flagship welfare policy for Maori, Whanau Ora - worth $40 million this year - is designed to lift families out of poverty and dysfunction, but it has been criticised as a waste of money and an opportunity for some to rort the system. In a four-part investigation, Yvonne Tahana speaks to those at Whanau Ora's frontline.
Joy Daly was drawn by work to Kawakawa in Northland but a lack of decent affordable housing means she's lived in a caravan while her husband and two grandchildren wait in Opotiki for her to find a house for them all to call home.
She's on a waiting list to move into a Moerewa property, one of 11 built by Ngati Hine Health Trust and Housing New Zealand in a joint $1.6 million project where families must sign up to Whanau Ora to be eligible tenants.
The 54-year-old works at Te Mirumiru, an early childhood education centre, but finding anything which could house Mrs Daly's family has been impossible.
Her grandchildren are aged 4 and 2 and the younger has a heart condition. Her husband, Dennis, an electrician, is off work as he has the sole care of the children hundreds of kilometres away from his wife.