Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka says it is a "privilege" to live in taxpayer funded social housing (file photo). Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka has lauded a government directive to crack down on abusive Kāinga Ora tenants as a success, citing improved tenant behaviour.
Potaka said in a release that in Kāinga Ora's Sustaining Tenancies Framework, which was ended in March last year, had effectively allowed tenants to stay in a Kāinga Ora home regardless of abusive or disruptive activity.
"Living in a taxpayer-funded social house is a privilege. The vast majority of social housing tenants are respectful of their home and courteous to their neighbours, but unfortunately they are let down by a small minority who threaten and abuse their neighbours or wilfully damage their home," Potaka said.
In the past 10 months, 63 Kāinga Ora tenancies had been terminated as a result of abusive, threatening, or persistently disruptive behaviour, Potaka said.
There had also been a 600 percent increase in formal warnings when compared to the previous financial year, with 1463 issued in 2024/25 so far, Potaka said.
"Around 80 percent of warnings - known as section 55a notices - have been first notices and 18 percent were second notices. Third notices, which can trigger the end of a tenancy, made up just 2 percent of warnings.
"I'm also pleased to see that the time taken to address complaints to Kāinga Ora about tenant behaviour has reduced significantly. In January 2024 it took an average of 60 days to take action in response to a complaint. In April 2025 it had reduced to less than 12 days," he said.
This data showed that tenants were taking the warnings seriously, Potaka said.
"The government is taking an approach that ultimately benefits everyone involved, by reducing negative behaviour through formal warnings and following through with real consequences in the rare circumstances that behaviour doesn't improve."
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