
Charities See Alarming Levels Of Poverty As Families Struggle
There are a dozen people in the Latu household in the Auckland suburb of Mangere, but not enough beds for everyone.
Three of Unaloto Latu's children have to sleep on couches in the living room.
"Those three big chairs over here, our younger children sleep here... we know that sometimes it's hard for them but they have no choice."
She and her husband have eight children aged between six and 18, and two relatives staying.
Her husband has been off work with a knee injury for about three years and their household income, reliant on the benefit, is always stretched.
They are not alone - social services said they are seeing an alarming level of poverty as families struggle with the cost of living.
Four agencies RNZ spoke to said they regularly hear of families sleeping in one room and turning off the power during the day as they try to stay warm and pay their electricity bills.
Charities - including the city missions, Variety, Kids Can and Family Works - are running winter appeals to help support families facing hardship.
Latu sells her homemade cakes to help pay for eggs and milk for her family - but it is not enough.
"Kids can go without milk, meat and bathroom stuff, cleaning stuff. Sometimes they need clothes and shoes, broken, husband can fix it he says he can get another two weeks from that."
The power and internet bills are paid but Latu said dinner is sometimes just rice - her children's schools are part of the government lunch programme.
"Sometimes if we have, we have. If not, they come [home] and just go in their room," she said.
"It's crazy right now and it looks like everything in the shop is going up each week...milk, before i can buy six [bottles] milk a week for our kids but now two."
Latu said she sometimes struggles to remain positive.
"It is so hard but I always say to my friends and family I don't want to sit down and focus on that side, because I'm a very emotional person I'm going to cry the whole day not doing anything thinking of those things. I try to keep moving forward."
Latu said she is grateful to Variety for sponsoring her children, meaning they each receive $50 a month as a contribution to household costs.
Stats NZ figures show electricity costs have gone up almost 9 percent since June last year. Petrol has gone up 15.5 percent over the same period.
Consumer NZ's annual energy retailer survey found seven percent of New Zealanders have had to take out loans to pay their power bills - unchanged since last year.
Chief executive Jon Duffy said the number of people concerned about the cost of electricity has jumped 10 percent in the last year.
"These financial concerns have led us into a dire situation where 11 percent of people are underheating their homes."
Duffy said the underlying market structure needs an urgent overhaul in order to slow down the growing number of New Zealanders experiencing energy hardship.
This week, the Electricity Authority announced it would force big electricity retailers to offer cheaper prices for off-peak power use prices, and fair prices to people who sell surplus power to the grid from roof top solar panels at peak times.
It is changing sector rules to require retailers with more than five-percent market share to offer time of use prices from the middle of next year, after a report by a joint task force of the Authority and the Commerce Commission.
The changes were aimed to give consumers more choice in how and when they use power, and put downward pressure on prices.
Presbyterian Support Northern general manager of social services Grenville Hendricks said this winter is worse for those on the breadline.
The organisation is helping 800 fewer families after its government funding was cut by $1.5 million last year.
"Agencies are struggling to keep their services running, let alone try and support people coming in," he said.
"It's also a challenge when there's been issues around benefit payments, there's been reductions in the numbers of available social housing."
Hendricks said that all contributed to people struggling to pay their bills, including power.
"People are trying to manage as best they can, but given all the other circumstances that are currently happening in New Zealand with the cost of living, unemployment, reduction in social services, it means that actually the power challenge becomes exacerbated."
He said they have heard of families sleeping in one room and children sharing beds to keep warm, and that the health of those not sleeping in beds or in damp mouldy houses was suffering.
Zero Hunger Collective executive officer Tric Malcolm said she is hearing examples across the country of families struggling to pay for basics.
"What is normal now, most people wouldn't have even dreamed of several years ago."
She said for the first time in almost a decade they were hearing stories of families across the country struggling to keep their power on this winter.
"I haven't heard these stories since the global financial crisis. Families are putting the heating on in one room and sleeping in that one room so that they can save energy," Malcolm said.
"It's those moments that cause me worry and make me feel sad because people aren't able to access good dry, warm homes because they don't have enough funds in their household income."
She said people then reduce the amount that they eat.
Auckland City Missioner Helen Robinson said its services are experiencing increased demand and people would often cover their rent and utilities before buying food.
"People are making terrible, terrible choices. Do I send kids to school, do I have the power on? Do I pay for the washing machine to be fixed, do I have the power on? Do I get food?" she said.
"What we know is that the demand for food, so therefore the inadequacy of people's weekly income, is significantly increasing, so much so that we can't meet the need and I am deeply distressed to acknowledge that."
Variety sponsors about 10,000 children and chief executive Susan Glasgow said the wait list has more than 3000 children living in material deprivation.
"Unfortunately these are children all throughout New Zealand who are living in material deprivation, in cold, damp homes, sleeping on the floor, not having enough school uniforms to go around all the children in a household, they're living in really tough times."
Glasgow said they hear from families regularly who are struggling to afford to heat their homes, and they often sleep in one room sometimes with the oven on for warmth.
"New Zealand is teetering on the brink. I think if we don't take some pretty severe steps very soon we're going to see more children plunged into poverty and the long term outcomes for New Zealand are going to be dire," she said.
"We want a healthy, vibrant group of young people who can contribute to our economy, who are well educated, who can support us in our dotage. You know, it's just good for New Zealand to invest, and it's not about charity, it's about investment in our future as a country."
Unaloto Latu dreams of a bright future for her children and encourages them to help others.
"Our hope for our children, we always teach them to go to school and study hard so you can get a job that will give you what you need."
And when they have grown up, Latu has dreams of her own.
"For myself, my hope and dream is when my kids are all in good places I want to travel around the world."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Ten years of boiling water in Kāeo: 'They just can't rely on the water'
Kāeo chef Anna Valentine demonstrates the rigmarole involved in getting drinkable water. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf It has been 10 years since residents in the small Far North town of Kāeo were placed under a boil-water notice - but it is not a milestone anyone is celebrating. Chef and cooking teacher Anna Valentine, who lives on Kāeo's main street, is among those affected. She said she had never been able to drink from the tap, and at times she could not even use the water for laundry. "I wasn't able to do my washing without it turning brown, basically. And every now and then it would just be super-brown, and then it would get clearer, and sometimes it would go off, and we wouldn't know, so we'd be out of water and we'd be calling up to see what happened. It's just been a roller coaster." Valentine said the colour of the water had improved in recent years, but it was still no good for drinking. In July 2015, Northland's Medical Officer of Health issued a boil-water notice due to levels of E. coli bacteria found in the water. That notice had never been lifted. Kāeo Water supplies just under 30 customers - a mix of homes, businesses and public facilities such as the toilets and community hall - on State Highway 10, the town's main street. Rather than face the cost of constantly boiling water, the Valentines have rigged up a tank for catching rainwater and every day they use it to fill up bottles for drinking water. Valentine said she had organised public meetings and lobbied the council in the past, but little had changed. "The water needs to be drinkable out of the tap, for the kids that go to the community hall, and the people coming through town. They don't know that it's not drinkable. The businesses in town, a lot of them have installed their own rainwater tanks because they just can't rely on the water." Kāeo chef Anna Valentine says her children have never known what it's like to drink out of a tap. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf Until the year 2000 Kāeo's water supply was owned by the Far North District Council. The council sold it to Doubtless Bay Water, which quit in 2008, saying it was not economically viable. It was then taken on by Wai Care Environmental Consultants. Kāeo Water operator Bryce Aldridge said it was difficult keeping up with ever-changing drinking water standards, especially for a small scheme like Kāeo's. "And the government's not assisting with the upgrading that's needed to meet those standards, because of the size of plant that we are." Aldridge said he had never put up the price of water, and only a small minority complained about the quality. "It's actually only one client … I have spoken to the other clients, and this is their fear [if the system is upgraded]: the water price going up, and the battle of having to put fluoride in our water, so a boil water notice actually protects us there." The Ministry of Health has recently ordered the Far North District Council to add fluoride to its Kerikeri and Kaitāia town water supplies, but a spokesperson told RNZ the ministry did not order fluoridation of privately-owned water supplies. Aldridge said the discolouration was caused by iron and manganese naturally present in the source water from the Waikara Stream. Removing iron and manganese completely was difficult and required multiple treatment stages. He said the next step for the water scheme would be to move the plant to a new location, and introduce UV treatment. He told RNZ he had secured a new location just last week, but that had yet to be confirmed. Kāeo's private water treatment plant, on School Gully Road, draws from the Waikara Stream. Photo: RNZ / Peter de Graaf Aldridge said he welcomed media scrutiny because it had caught the attention of Taumata Arowai, the national water authority, and had bumped Kāeo's water supply up its priority list. Taumata Arowai head of operations Steve Taylor said even a small private drinking water supply such as Kāeo's had to meet the requirements of the Water Services Act 2021 and other rules. The authority had sent a letter outlining its expectations in March, but a meeting scheduled that month had been cancelled by the supplier. Expectations included boil-water notice communication with consumers, and providing a confirmed, funded plan for achieving compliance with legal requirements. Taylor said those expectations had not yet been met. The authority had set a new date of 23 July for meeting the supplier and inspecting the plant. Taylor said boil water notices were only meant to be a temporary solution, because over time people could forget and risked drinking contaminated water. The authority could take action if it believed a supplier was not responding adequately to concerns about unsafe drinking water or failed persistently to comply with legal requirements. That could include requiring the local authority, in this case the Far North District Council, to take over the supply. All Kāeo Water's customers are based on the Far North town's main street. Photo: RNZ/Peter de Graaf Te Rūnanga o Whaingaroa pou arahi, or cultural manager, Raniera Kaio said the scheme had suffered from buck-passing between the council and the operator as to who was responsible. He believed the only way to fix it was by the council, the operator and iwi working together. "My personal opinion, indeed my professional opinion, is that the operator lacks the resources to fix it. Lacks the resources to fix it alone . It has to be a collaborative solution." Kaio said the water plant had been inundated in the 2007 floods and never fully recovered. The boil-water notice also had a financial effect on the rūnanga, which spent $300-$400 a month on bottled water for staff and manuhiri [visitors]. He said Kāeo's water woes were emblematic of the neglect suffered by many rural, Māori-majority towns. The effects went well beyond the cost and inconvenience of having to boil water or buy it by the bottle. "It's about the dignity of Kāeo, the mana of Kāeo. And whānau in Kāeo have lived with daily anxiety around whether their water is safe to drink, that really affects not only your health, your hauora [wellbeing], but it sort of affects your own self-worth and your identity as being from Kāeo." However, Kaio said he was buoyed by news that Taumata Arowai was about to meet the operator, and hopeful a solution could be found. Meanwhile, Anna Valentine just hoped one day soon her children would be able to drink water out of the tap. "I mean, we live in New Zealand, but it feels like we're in a bit of a third world country up here in Kāeo, having to go out every day and fill our plastic bottles from a water container that we collect off the roof. It's just crazy, actually." Kāeo's boil-water notice is not the longest-running one in the country. A 2024 Drinking Water Regulation Report stated 74 long-term "consumer advisories" - which include boil-water notices - were in place at the end of last year, and 20 council supplies serving a total of 7000 people had advisories in place for three or more years. "The persistence of long-term consumer advisories represents a significant regulatory and public health challenge," the report stated. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
Large fire destroys farmhouse in Rangitikei District
Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon A farmhouse in the Rangitikei District has been destroyed in a large fire on Sunday night, which took over seven hours to extinguish. Fire crews were called to the two-storey building in the Bulls township about 9.24pm. Seven fire trucks and nearly 30 firefighters tackled the blaze at its peak. Fire and Emergency said everyone in the house had been safely evacuated. Crews left the scene about 5.30am. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Otago Daily Times
2 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Fear more students will leave without NCEA qualifications
By John Gerritsen of RNZ Principals warn the number of school-leavers with no qualifications could spike in poor communities this year. One South Auckland principal said as many as a third of teenagers leaving schools in Northland and South Auckland could have no NCEA certificates - double the normal figures. Their warnings followed the release of results from high-stakes NCEA literacy and numeracy tests held in May. Before the Covid-19 pandemic, 14%-17% of school-leavers in Northland and South Auckland had no qualifications. The after-effects of the Covid lockdowns drove that figure to 21% in 2023. Principals had been hoping numbers would improve, but said pass rates of 39%-49% for Northland and South Auckland teens in NCEA reading, writing and maths tests did not bode well. Looking at the socioeconomic factors, 34% of students from the third of schools facing the highest barriers passed the numeracy assessment, 41% passed reading and 35% passed writing. Students could attempt the tests again in September, but Papakura High School principal Simon Craggs said it was likely a significant number would fail and leave without an NCEA qualification. ''A third would probably be realistic because you're going to have students in year 13 who still haven't achieved the corequisites despite having year 11, year 12 working toward them,'' he said. Craggs said schools were working hard to help students over the line - either by preparing them for the September tests or through the 20 English and maths credits they could use until 2027 to meet the benchmark. Aorere College principal Leanne Webb said she had hoped the unqualified school-leaver rate would improve this year, but there was a danger more young people would leave school unable to enrol in further study because they had failed the tests. ''They'll walk away from school, there'll be no recognition of what they have achieved at school and when times are tough, and times are tough, and there aren't sufficient places in tertiary organisations for them, who gets shoved to the bottom of the heap? It'll be the kids that don't have a qualification. "What is there for them then? Do they just get to roam the streets?'' Webb said her students' achievement of the literacy and numeracy co-requisite had improved, but for many that was due to the alternative 20-credit pathway rather than the online tests. The problem with that option was the 20 credits could not be counted towards the 60 required for an NCEA certificate, she said. ''If you take away 10 credits out of their English achievement and 10 credits out of their maths achievement, they then have to get another 20 credits on top of their programme in order to get NCEA - that's the problem. ''Last year, while we were pleased with our results. It came at the expense of achieving NCEA.'' Both principals said their students were doing better than last year, but government-funded assistance had not been much help. Webb said her school did not take up the offered training because it did not fit with the school's timetable and Craggs said the training was of limited use. "I don't think the on-the-ground support that we have been looking for has really been provided. So we're just doing our own thing and working within our own resources to improve," he said. "There's certainly a lot more interest from our senior advisers at the ministry in our results and how things are going, but not a lot in the way of support." The next round of literacy and numeracy tests is scheduled for September.