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Bin Enquiry FormAs agreed with its partners, the Lower Hutt Homelessness Strategy aims to:
Work together to end homelessness. Ending homelessness doesn’t mean that no-one will lose their home again. It means that we have a response in place to prevent homelessness whenever possible and that if homelessness occurs, it is rare, brief, and non-recurring.
Homelessness is defined as a living situation where people have no option to acquire safe and secure housing. This includes sleeping rough or in vehicles, living temporarily with friends or family or in hostels, motels or overcrowded or unsafe dwellings.
The underlying causes of homelessness are structural - poverty, a lack of affordable homes, and government policy. There are also a number of personal triggers and interrelated factors that can contribute to people losing their homes and these include poor physical or mental health, inadequate income and financial problems, relationship breakdown or family violence, and alcohol and drug abuse. Age is also a factor, with young people being particularly vulnerable to homelessness.
All it can take to push a family out or its home is redundancy, unexpected costs, relationship breakdown, or a period of illness.
Homelessness is difficult to accurately measure. Data for Lower Hutt shows homelessness has been increasing since the 2006 Census, with housing register data, the number of households in emergency and temporary accommodation, and data from non-governmental organisations all increasing in recent years. As homelessness includes people who are in transient and insecure situations, the real number of those affected is higher than official data indicates.
Census figures suggest it increased in Lower Hutt by 41 per cent between the 2006 and 2013 censuses to 913 people. However, there have been increases in the number of people in temporary and emergency housing – including hostels – over the past two years. As homeless people are often in transient situations or difficult to contact, the true number is higher than official data indicates. Social service agencies and the Ministry of Social Development believe housing hardship and homelessness have increased over the last two years.
Housing data that helps illustrate homelessness and high demand for rental accommodation in Lower Hutt includes:
Council has provided a funding package of $1.6 million over three years. This funding has been divided between three actions which will be delivered by partner organisations.
Officers will continue to work with our partners, both in relation to the three Council-funded actions and more broadly to improve the response to homelessness. This includes working with government and partners on the response to temporary accommodation and support to people sleeping rough in our city.
An insufficient supply of suitable and affordable housing is at the root of homelessness. Together with responding to our immediate homelessness crisis, Council is working on its housing strategy to improve housing supply and affordability in the city.
Council completed research into homelessness in Lower Hutt in April 2018. This was done by engaging with people with a lived experience of homelessness, social service agencies working with people who are homeless, as well as a range of other partners in the city and government ministries.
View the homelessness research paper (PDF 2.3 Mb)
We conducted a second round of engagement with social service agencies and people with a lived experience of homelessness. The resulting report and its recommendations were approved by Council's Policy and Regulatory Committee on 26 November 2018. The Homelessness Strategy was approved at a full Council meeting on 11 December 2018.
View the homelessness strategy report (PDF 412 Kb)
Council officers, together with Council’s community partners, put together a range of options for Council to contribute to the homelessness response.
At the Community Plan Committee meeting on 11 June 2019, Council voted to provide $1.6 million to fund a package of measures to prevent homelessness in the city, and to work with partners, including government and non-governmental organisations, to contribute to assisting people and families without a home.
View the summary of the actions.
Council has published a series of stories on homelessness.
For further information, please contact:
John Pritchard - Principal Research and Policy Advisor
T: 04 570 6838
E: john.pritchard@huttcity.govt.nz