Charities see alarming levels of poverty as families struggle
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.
Unaloto Latu.
Photo:
RNZ / Marika Khabazi
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."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

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

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
BBQ gas bottle used to heat home in winter
Taranaki residents are using gas bottles usually used on BBQs for the home energy. File photo. Photo: 123rf Ruth Olliver ordered a 45 kilogram bottle from ELGAS on 10 July, but was still waiting on delivery more than two weeks later. "I've had to hook-up - or my husband has not me because I wouldn't know what I'm doing - just hook-up the little wee BBQ bottle. "But, you know, when I say to them 'I've go no gas' they say 'oh well we can't do anything for you'." The Ōpunake resident had been using gas for heating, hot water and cooking for the past 18 years. "The heater takes quite a bit at this time of year. I go through one a fortnight, a 45kg bottle a fortnight, so I was sort of running out." ELGAS said deliveries to Taranaki had been impacted by illness and recent severe weather. It warned customers not to interfere with the gas cylinders themselves. "We strongly encourage customers to avoid handling 45kg home gas cylinders themselves. "This is best left to our people who are trained in safely connecting and disconnecting these bottles and conduct leak checks when exchanging cylinders." Olliver was not the only ELGAS customer having delivery issues with several commenting on social media. "Yes, it took three and half weeks to get one swapped. Poor service and no follow-up," said one person. Another was in the same boat. "Agreed. I've been waiting three weeks now. Just about need my other one swapped! Useless." One customer had waited almost a month. "Ordered on 30th June... three phone calls [later] finally delivered 24th July." Olliver said communication with ELGAS had been difficult. "Just no response every time I ring they're just like 'we'll send an urgent message' but I've got no reply, no communication back. Nothing." ELGAS eventually offered to supply her an emergency bottle. "They did say to me we can get another bottle and get an urgent truck down to you, but it will cost you $250 for the truck and I said, 'well I'm not paying it'." Olliver's gas usually cost about $150 per cylinder, including delivery. An emergency delivery had also been offered to one of the social media commentators - at a cost. "Waited 21 days then was told I would have to pay emergency fee to get it that day... So I emailed an official complaint... It came that day. "They told me it would cost $250 for emergency fee. I refused." ELGAS said it appreciated its customers' patience as the company worked through these challenges. "We are proactively shifting resources to meet local demand and expect service to return to normal shortly." Olliver had in the meantime swapped to another provider who had delivered fresh gas cylinders on the same day. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero], a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Celebrating one hundred years of Rural Women New Zealand
This story takes us back to 1925 in Wellington where, at tea-party for wives of delegates to a Farmers' Union meeting, sixteen women agreed on the need for their own organisation. The inaugural meeting of the Women's Division of the New Zealand Farmers' Union was held the following morning, 28 July 1925 - one hundred years ago today. While there's since been a name change to Rural Women New Zealand, the organisation continues to play a vital contribution to supporting and advocating for women and the farming communities. Sandra Mathews is the president of Rural Women New Zealand speaks to Jesse. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
7 hours ago
- RNZ News
More Pasifika households denied emergency housing
Manaaki Rangatahi marked World Homeless Day 2024 on October 10 with impactful art activations led and inspired by rangatahi. Photo: Manaaki Rangatahi A new report on homelessness in Aotearoa shows more Pasifika families were denied emergency housing due to ineligibility than were accepted in the month of March. Te Tūāpapa Kura Kāinga - Ministry of Housing and Urban Development - has published its latest insights report, dated June 2025 . The report said there were 60 Pacific peoples' households in emergency housing in March 2025, while 75 Pacific peoples' households were denied. Read more: "An emergency housing grant decline represents an application that has been processed and considered ineligible," the report said. "The number of declines should not be considered representative of unmet demand for services, as we do not know the level of need that does not progress to a processed application." It said where people are declined emergency housing assistance, the Ministry of Social Development may provide other options, such as a referral to transitional housing, or housing support products that provide financial assistance. When it comes to Housing First clients in Auckland, nearly half the households waiting had a primary client who is Māori, while over a quarter (26.7 percent) are Pasifika. Housing First supports people living without shelter, with high or complex needs, to access and maintain stable housing and address trauma and other challenges. The report said the ethnicity comparisons are based on the primary client rather than the overall household - for example, there could be a household of Pasifika, but if the primary applicant identifies as Māori, that will be recorded. For Māori - who make up more than half of emergency housing clients - the number of households with a Māori primary client granted emergency housing was approximately 380 granted to 260 declined. A household can also be granted emergency housing and declined emergency housing in the same month. Census data suggests there were at least 112,500 people in Aotearoa who were severely housing deprived on 7 March 2023, including 4965 people estimated to be living without shelter. "However, the data and observations we have collated from around the country indicate this has increased," the report said.