Rural communities in Northland are struggling to find suitable housing and some are resorting to living in derelict homes, car ports and other makeshift housing. Photo / RNZ / Dan Cook
About 60 people were at the Northland Housing Forum Hui in Whangarei yesterday, many of them representatives from organisations helping the public to get into housing.
They spoke about feeling forgotten and wanting to work collaboratively with government agencies to find solutions.
Te Hā Oranga social worker Christiane Rudolph-Anania said people were living in car ports, garages, lean-tos, old cars, derelict homes and building makeshift housing in trees.
"Sometimes I feel like I'm just one social worker on the end of the phone with many others trying to get through a gateway that's impossible. And when I say gateway, I'm talking Housing New Zealand, MSD. There seems to be no empathy."
She was desperate for housing solutions in rural Northland and said whānau are having to deal with unimaginable circumstances.
Ms Rudolph-Anania was just one of the many people who spoke yesterday at the forum, which was attended by Minister Nanaia Mahuta and Labour MP Willow Jean Prime.
Housing advocates told the government representatives about their mahi and the challenges they faced at the hui in the Open Arms homeless centre on Robert Street.