Community groups gather for emergency meeting on youth homelessness in Auckland

4:45 pm on 28 March 2025
young homeless boy sleeping on the bridge, poverty, city, street

File photo. Photo: 123RF

Community groups throughout Auckland gathered for an emergency meeting on youth homelessness on Friday.

Dozens of frontline service workers and recently homeless rangatahi spoke at the hui hosted by Mā Te Huruhuru and Manaaki Rangatahi at the Lifeskills campus in Māngere.

Though invitations were sent to all politicial parties, Green co-leader Marama Davidson was the only politician to attend.

RNZ has approached key representatives in the National Party for comment.

A representative for Minister for Social Development Louise Upston said she did not receive an invite directly.

"It is [disappointing], I actually wish government politicians were here today to hear directly how their decisions are making things worse for young people and how their decisions are going against crime prevention, against violence prevention," Davidson said.

"Why are they not here? Why are their local MPs not here? Why are they not here seeing the beauty and the solutions that community organisations have to offer them? I thought they cared."

Manaaki Rangatahi lead Bianca Johanson said she was not satisfied with the coalition government's interactions with community groups.

Lead co-ordinator of Manaaki Rangatahi Bianca Johanson.

Bianca Johanson speaking at an event last year. Photo: Felix Walton/RNZ

"Not at all, we have had one hui with Minister Tama Potaka and we did ask to brief him and update him about what's happening for rangatahi... We were really disappointed he wasn't able to follow through with that relationship," she said.

"We're in a crisis... So we've called everybody we know in the sector and brought in our rangatahi so that we can develop a strategy to give to the ministers and the Ministries [of Housing and Social Development]."

With New Zealand's resources, Davidson said there was no excuse for rampant homelessness.

"There has never been any excuse for anyone in this country to live with anything but dignity," she said.

"We have enough in Aotearoa to make sure everyone has a home, what we have instead is an economic system that keeps a few wealthy and keeps many, many, many more struggling."

Many speakers at the hui highlighted the stark difference between a 'house' and a 'home.'

"Emergency housing, while it's required to respond to the issue of homelessness it's not a sustainable and long term solution to housing insecurity in Aotearoa," said Manaaki Rangatahi spokesperson Brooke Stanley.

She said homeless people, particularly young people, needed a home they could feel safe and secure in.

"Within Kainga Ora... They're evicting people, they're also looking at selling Kainga Ora housing and they're not committing to any new builds," she said.

"It doesn't offer any kind of affordable or long term sustainable housing for communities who experience homelessness and poverty."

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