Rotorua's Spa Lodge was issued two dangerous building notices in November. Photo / Ben Fraser
Maggots on the floor. Human excrement on bathroom walls and floors. Rodents so common one resident gave them names. These are among new descriptions of living conditions at Rotorua’s Spa Lodge revealed in documents obtained by Local Democracy Reporting,as a former resident speaks out. The lodge owner says she took good care of ‘the majority’: ‘You can’t please everyone’. Laura Smith reports.
Photos of maggots on the carpeted floor of Rotorua’s Spa Lodge kicked off a series of events that led to the former backpackers being shut down, new documents reveal.
The photos were part of a health complaint from the mother of a lodge resident sent to Rotorua Lakes Council on November 6.
“Nothing has been done about anything … I’ve seen young [babies] running around mum’s with p-pipes and [a] beer bong,” the complaint stated.
The complaint was in a cache of documents and emails relating to Spa Lodge obtained by Local Democracy Reporting (LDR) from the council under official information laws.
Approached for comment in response to claims in this story, lodge owner Emilyn Dubouzet defended the good care she provided to “the majority”. She said she knew her own actions and did not need to “prove or disprove anything”.
Rats, mould, poo and $600 rent
Notes from a council inspection of the 28-unit lodge after the mother’s “standard health complaint” said the visit “revealed more than expected”.
Among inspectors’ concerns were mould in rooms, missing and boarded-up windows, rotting floors and “bad odours” coming from wet carpets, marijuana and cigarette smoke, food left out and full rubbish bags.
A resident told them he paid $600 a week to rent a room for his family, while two other residents said they each paid $430 a week for their “small rooms”. One said they only had $70 left over after paying rent.
A woman told an inspector “rodents” came into her room so often she named them.
The notes recorded that, throughout the inspection, a lodge staff member “constantly” tried to justify problems by blaming tenants.
Similar uncleanliness was noted, however, in rooms inspectors were told had been cleaned.
Other council documents included reports of human excrement on toilet floors and walls, the lodge’s two kitchens being too dirty to use and regular rat sightings.
He said he did not understand why the deadbolts were installed but speculated it was to stop people coming in and staying for free.
Newson described the behaviour of some lodge residents as “unstable” and “volatile”, and said he worried for the children.
He claimed when he tried raising issues such as broken elements in the kitchen and general hygiene with owner Dubouzet, it seemed to him that she “didn’t want to deal with it”.
“We care about them and are here to give them stronger wings,” she said at the time.
In her view, some accommodation providers were “just in it for the money”, but Dubouzet said it was her passion.
Who lived at the lodge?
A lodge staff member told a council report writer in November all 20 residents were MSD clients “to provide emergency housing”.
MSD, however, said the last time the lodge was used for emergency housing was in October 2022.
MSD ministerial and executive service general manager Magnus O’Neill said it had nine clients, aged 19 to 50, at the lodge when the second building notice was issued.
MSD had dropped 28 of its 35 Rotorua emergency housing suppliers, including the lodge.
MSD could not tell clients where to live or inspect their living arrangements, rather it provided advice about their options and financial assistance eligibility, O’Neill said.
What’s next for Spa Lodge?
Emails between council staff and a Spa Lodge representative included discussions about reopening the lodge.
The council confirmed a resource consent would be needed to reopen as non-tourism accommodation, as the lodge had only been lawfully established as tourism accommodation.
Whether reopening for tourists or tenants, the building would first need work to meet requirements.
These included rectifying issues raised in the dangerous building notices; addressing damp and uncleanliness; removing cooking appliances from bedrooms and appointing an on-site manager.
The business was given two months, until February 7 to do the work, and failure could result in a “cleansing order” being served.
Asked if the works had been done, council community and district development group manager Jean-Paul Gaston said it continued compliance involvement with the owner and the lodge remained closed for business.
Laura Smith is a Local Democracy Reporting journalist based at the Rotorua Daily Post. She previously reported general news for the Otago Daily Times and Southland Express, and has been a journalist for four years.
- LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.