A new tenancy agreement requiring people on parole or bail to apply to live in certain state houses is discriminatory, the Green Party says.
A clause in the agreement, introduced by Housing NZ this month, requires the department to be notified before people paroled, on bail or serving home detention move into a state house.
The department has the final say on whether approval is granted.
Green Party housing spokeswoman Sue Bradford said today the measure was a recipe for increased crime and poverty.
"This is not the best way to ensure state housing tenants are safe. It will have the opposite effect, creating crime by separating families and pushing vulnerable Kiwis into homelessness," she said.
However, Housing NZ chief executive Lesley McTurk said the new agreement addressed concerns about vulnerable families being able to sustain tenancies when people not usually residing at the property were bailed or paroled there.
The agreement retained the right of people who usually resided at their state house to be bailed, paroled or serve a sentence of home detention there.
"However, where a person who does not normally live at the property seeks to do so, the tenant will need permission from Housing New Zealand for them to stay at the address under those conditions."
Dr McTurk said neighbours' peace, comfort and privacy also needed to be taken into account.
"As a responsible landlord we need to know who lives in our houses in order to manage tenancies, set correct rental levels, prevent overcrowding, and look after the interests of the community and staff.
"This is about knowing who lives in state houses, not judging what they've done."
Ms Bradford said the move also assumed all people on bail were guilty before it had been proven in court.
"The Green Party believes people should not be presumed guilty before conviction; nor should they be penalised twice for offences, once by the courts and once by Housing New Zealand."
She called on Housing Minister Phil Heatley to reverse the agreement.
A spokesman from Mr Heatley's office said agreement could protect, for example, against a gang member applying to inadvertently live next to a rival, or a convicted paedophile living in an inappropriate situation.
There would have to be a legitimate reason for Housing NZ to say "no" to someone requesting to live at a certain address, he said.
- NZPA
Housing NZ bail clause discriminatory - Greens
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