logo
More women living without shelter in Aotearoa

More women living without shelter in Aotearoa

RNZ News28-07-2025
Lisamaree Peerdemen has just got her first home after 18 months of living under a bridge, and most of her life on the streets.
Photo:
RNZ / Amy Williams
There is a disproportionately high rate of women without shelter in New Zealand, particularly in Auckland, people working with the homeless are warning.
Auckland Council's Community Committee will meet to discuss the region's
homelessness crisis tomorrow
, as well as a report showing the number of homeless people rose to 809 in May this year - a 90 percent increase since last September.
Lisamaree Peerdeman moved into state housing this month after living under a bridge in Auckland's city centre on-and-off most of her life.
"I've just got my first home after 18 months of living under the bridge. I had my four bedroom household lot under there, set up like a house just no walls, but I could light my fire and that's what made me feel like home."
Having been homeless for decades, she has noticed there are now more women sleeping rough and it concerns her.
"Terrible increase in wahine and they're all old school and if they're not old school, they're young. They're beaten children, accused and abused. Their home environment behind the doors is not good."
She keeps an eye out for the young women on the street and makes sure outreach teams working with the city's homeless know they are there.
Peerdeman pops into Manaaki Tangata most days - it is a
wellbeing space in downtown Auckland
that the Māori wardens run under the stewardship of Matarora Smith.
There is a washing machine and shower and the wardens provide plates of hot food - something Peerdeman said helped her budget now that she was paying rent.
"I'm $120 a week now after I pay my rent, power and gas and if it wasn't for nanny Matarora and the women's yard I'd be really in trouble. Not really though, because I'm the one that will tell you which bins to go to to get your kai."
The wellbeing space is among the initiatives funded by Auckland Council - a snippet of its half a million dollar annual spend on groups supporting the city's homeless.
Research by the Coalition to End Women's Homelessness late last year found 46 percent of women suffering homelessness in New Zealand live in Auckland.
Auckland City Missioner Helen Robinson will talk to tomorrow's committee meeting as a representative of the coalition.
Auckland councillor Angela Dalton chairs the community Committee, which on Tuesday will discuss the latest numbers showing a 90 percent increase in those sleeping rough in Auckland since September last year.
This followed the release of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development's latest
Homelessness Insights Report
, which showed some of the 14 percent of people leaving emergency housing may be homeless.
"There will be an inequity in the money that is being invested at this point in time so I would like to know what is it that council can contribute to, that will make a real change or a shift for women who are struggling to find a safe place to live."
Another woman who is homeless in Auckland, whom RNZ agreed not to name, said the street is no place for women.
She said the car she was living in was stolen a few weeks ago and she does not feel safe sleeping rough.
"I feel so sorry for the females because there is no place for the females in this, the males can look after themselves - we can't, we're vulnerable. I've been through 17 years of domestic violence and I'm still going."
New to Auckland, she said there are women on the street who need help.
"I've only met a few women on the street I don't know how many women there are on the street but the women I have seen on the street they seem to like it, they know what they want. It's up to them if they want the help, but I know there are women out there that need the help."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Turning Taupo green
Turning Taupo green

RNZ News

time44 minutes ago

  • RNZ News

Turning Taupo green

Project Tongariro was established as a living memorial for five people who died in a tragic helicopter accident. Last November, the project turned 40 years old. Over those four decades, activities have expanded beyond Tongariro National Park and into the wider area, including urban restoration through tree planting and predator trapping. Claire Concannon visits the TaupÅ-based projects that Project Tongariro is supporting as they prepare for Greening TaupÅ Day - their biggest planting day of the year. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

NCEA changes: Some aspects like 'a step backwards in time'
NCEA changes: Some aspects like 'a step backwards in time'

RNZ News

time11 hours ago

  • RNZ News

NCEA changes: Some aspects like 'a step backwards in time'

The National Certificate of Educational Achievement will be gone by 2030. File photo. Photo: 123rf The government's plans to replace the NCEA system are on a tight timeline and will require a lot of support, say teachers. After more than 20 years as New Zealand's official secondary-school qualification, the government has pulled the pin on the NCEA . The National Certificate of Educational Achievement will be gone by 2030, replaced by a basic literacy and numeracy award at Year 11, and the Certificate of Education and Advanced Certificate of Education at Years 11 and 12. 'Achieved', 'not achieved', 'merit' and 'excellence' will be replaced by marks out of 100 and letter grades A, B, C, D and E. The new certificates would be standards-based, like the NCEA is, meaning every student passes if they demonstrate the required knowledge or skills, but they would have to study at least five complete subjects and pass four of them to get their certificate. This year's Year 8s would be the first cohort through the new system, starting with the foundation award in 2028, which might look a lot like the current NCEA literacy and numeracy tests. Teachers in a secondary school staffroom told RNZ they were still getting to grips with the announcement - and while some could see potential in the proposed changes, others were more cautious. "My big concern is around the kids that currently school doesn't really work for them," said one teacher who feared NCEA's flexibility would be lost. "The students are the ones that get harmed when people are just choosing to try things out," said another. Several teachers worried the new system would rely to heavily on end-of-year exams. "I don't think it's an improvement. High-stakes assessment is incredibly stressful for a number of people. The well-being of students has to be considered," said one teacher. Every teacher RNZ spoke to warned the timeline for introducing a new curriculum next year followed by the new qualification from 2028 through to 2030 was incredibly tight and would require a lot of support. Several said their curriculums had still not been written and the ministry was asking teachers to work on the new documents for free. Another pointed out that the government was asking teachers to do a lot of extra work at the same time as it was making low offers in pay talks. "Teachers got a one percent pay offer from this government and then there's four to five years of new and extra work, incredible amount of work, and those two don't marry up," she said. Papakura High School principal Simon Craggs said some aspects of the proposed changes 'such as marks out of 100 and stopping students from choosing standards from many different subjects - looked like "a step backwards in time". Craggs said he was pleased to see the government was looking at a new foundation qualification at Year 11 because the current system of online tests in reading, writing and maths was not working for many students from poor communities. He said it was critical the government listened to schools that served Māori and Pacific communities, because by 2050 they would account for half the population. "If we design a qualification that excludes them from success in our society, then we're going to have a real problem on our hands," he said. "NCEA for all its flaws, it has created a lot more opportunities for people from poorer communities to access qualifications they wouldn't have had access to before." Wellington Girls College principal Julia Davidson said NCEA needed an overhaul and the proposed changes had potential. However, she said whatever came next had to be flexible and provide choices for teenagers, especially those who struggled with exams. "That's the bit that worries me. What happens to your kids who are neuro-diverse, what happens to your kids who have got anxiety issues, what happens to kids who fall apart on the day. There has to be more flexibility," she said. "I have some concerns about the marking-by-number thing. What's the difference between 54 and 58, what does it really tell you?" Davidson said the workload for teachers of introducing a new curriculum and a new qualification system would be significant. "I've had my first teacher tell me that probably they'll leave.. wondering whether this is what they want to do," she said. Consultation on the proposed qualification changes closes on 1 September. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

NCEA qualification to be replaced with new system
NCEA qualification to be replaced with new system

RNZ News

time12 hours ago

  • RNZ News

NCEA qualification to be replaced with new system

After more than 20 years as New Zealand's official secondary-school qualification, the government has pulled the pin on the NCEA. By 2030, the National Certificate of Educational Achievement will be gone. It will be replaced by a basic literacy and numeracy award at Year 11, and the Certificate of Education and Advanced Certificate of Education at Years 11 and 12. No more achieved, not achieved, merit and excellence - instead there will be marks out of 100 and letter grades like A B and C. Education correspondent John Gerritsen reports. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store