Begging and rough sleeping will be banned within 5m of any Tauranga retail or hospitality premises under a proposed council bylaw. Photo / Getty
As I'm approaching the woman in the green jacket, she says hello and politely asks for $4.
Her name is Cleo, and she is sitting on a park bench outside Greerton Hall.
Next to her sits Wednesday's edition of the Bay of Plenty Times and clearly visible is the article on pages two and three.
It is about Tauranga City Council's proposed begging and rough sleeping ban and how those two things will be banned within 5m of any retail or hospitality premises under a proposed bylaw.
On Tuesday, the council's community and culture committee voted 6-2 for the ban, meaning it will be included in the draft Street Use and Public Places Bylaw, which will go out for consultation later this year.
After apologetically declining Cleo's request, I introduce myself as a reporter for that same newspaper and explain that I'm working on a story about the proposed ban.
I ask her if she is living on the streets at the moment.
"Noooo," she replies quickly in a surprised tone. "I've got a roof over my head, love."
Cleo says she is in Greerton for the day; she comes here every week – usually on a Friday and Saturday.
She says she is on the benefit and lives at a rest home in Pyes Pa.
"Meant to be for old people, really, but [they] had me in because they didn't want me on the streets with all my stuff."
Cleo says she has spent time living on the street in Auckland before she moved back home to Opotiki and then Greerton and finally Pyes Pa.
"This is my hometown. I've got mates here," she says.
I mention her asking me for money a little earlier.
"Well, that's not begging, I'm only asking, love," Cleo says with a laugh.
Can you explain why you ask, I say, why you need the money?
"I use it for a cup of tea, babe, I always have a cup of tea all the time. Or a doughnut. That's all I do, that's it, I don't do anything else. And I thank them for that."
"The trouble with them ... they should get a job or go on the benefit.
"I can see what they're doing, and it's putting me right off. When I go up and ask someone, a nice person, to give me four dollars to get me a cup of tea or a doughnut, some people go and get me a feed."
Cleo says that group of beggars even ask her for money for smokes.
"And I say no, it's got to last me, to keep me going."
All of a sudden Cleo greets, with plenty of enthusiasm and noise, another woman walking past. Cleo asks for and gets a hug.
She introduces the woman to me and then asks her if she has a smoke.
"But all I ask is to see it from our side as a retailer. I've invested a lot of money in this business to be here, I'm quite passionate about Greerton and to see these people outside my shop disrupting my customers is really upsetting."
A few doors down, Andrew Linn, owner of Artisan Manufacturing Jewellers, says the proposed ban is a "step in the right direction".
Linn, who has also owned his store for about 16 years, says he is still a bit concerned about how enforceable it is.
"Apparently it's not. You can't have rules if you can't enforce them. It's a waste of time having rules if you can't enforce them."
However, he is hopeful it will allow something to be done about the beggars.
"If they can afford to smoke, they can buy a pie."
Further down Chadwick Rd, I walk past some people soaking up the winter sun outside the post shop. The cherry blossom trees around them are bare.
Others are in line at eftpos machines, are walking past talking on their phones, or are sitting in cars waiting. I can hear children playing outside at Greerton Village School. It is lunchtime.
There's a man sitting on a bench reading and security guards walk ahead of me in high-vis yellow jackets.
And then, there's Cleo again.
"See, I'm walking around now," she says to me, before greeting another passerby. "Hello, dear."
"Because the police can't do anything at the moment."
The shop owner says her husband has invited online critics down to the store on a Friday afternoon so they can see what goes on.
"There are a lot of people up in arms against the bylaw; those people aren't experiencing what we have to every day."
I ask her, like I did Belinda, if she thinks this could affect genuine homeless people as well.
"I believe there's a lot of help for those genuine ones and if they want to make the right decisions and take that road, then there are plenty of services out there for them."
Heading back up towards Cameron Rd, I see Cleo a third time.
"Boo," she says with a laugh. She places a hand on my arm as I pass.
The man on the bench is still reading his book in the sun.
Back near Greerton Hall on Cameron Rd, I speak to Mike Prince, who says he has been homeless and living on the street with his two teenage sons for more than a year.
The 51-year-old says the proposed ban is "not too good".
"It's going to cause a lot of trouble I think, more than anything else. People still need places to sleep, eh, and it's the only places that are dry. That's all they're looking for."
Mike says the people the council actually need to go after are "the aggressive beggars".
"They're the ones that go and ask. There's a lot out there that just use cardboard boxes and signs, and they don't ask, they don't get into trouble. It's up to the person to give it to them."
There are a lot of problems involving those aggressive beggars in Greerton, Mike says, and the trouble started when they were pushed out of town.
He says the Greerton community is lovely, generous and good-hearted.
Mike thinks the hīkoi on Monday is a good thing and he expects a large turnout.
"It's going to let the people out there know who's out there. There are more than rough sleepers – people living in cars and that; I'd say they'll be there too."