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Housing need report galvanises joint action in western Bay of Plenty

Housing need report galvanises joint action in western Bay of Plenty

13 December 2017

It will only get harder for people to own and rent a home in the western Bay of Plenty unless a range of actions are taken now, according to a new Housing Demand and Need research report released today by the SmartGrowth Partnership.

The independent report by Community Housing Solutions and Livingston and Associates, paints a picture of eroding home ownership and increasing rental demand from couple-only and single person households.

The report also predicts a big increase in senior renters. Those aged over 65 and renting are set to increase by 222% over the next 30 years in Tauranga City, and by 182% in the Western Bay of Plenty District.

Key findings

Key projections

The report suggests a number of key response areas for the SmartGrowth Partnership including

New Special Housing Areas could trial a retained affordable home product based on household income and finance costs.

SmartGrowth independent chair, Bill Wasley, says the new data, analysis and research gives the Partnership a better and more fine-grained understanding of short and long-term housing trends and possible responses. “It puts the numbers behind an issue that is the biggest future challenge we have in the Bay – how do we supply not only the right number of homes but also the right types of homes people need now and in the future, at a range of price points whether renting or owning?

“The SmartGrowth Leadership Group – a joint committee of council leaders and tangata whenua – today approved developing a comprehensive Smart Housing Action Framework to bring all the work we are already doing together. We’ll need to look at new short and long term actions too. This report predicts a stressful picture of our future unless we act together with others in the housing space,” he says.

“We need to crack this hard nut of giving a growing community like ours a choice of housing including smaller and more affordable housing for renting and owning. That is important if we are to continue attracting and retaining key workers like teachers, health care providers, horticultural workers, students, older renters and many others. Councils certainly can’t do this alone – and neither do we think the market will deliver the entire range of housing we’ll need for smaller, but also lower and middle income households.

“We hope the Government will help us to fund and pilot new kinds of housing models involving central government working with housing trusts, councils, iwi, community housing providers and developers,” he says.

Ends

Note to editors: The Housing Demand and Need Research Report was commissioned jointly by SmartGrowth, Tauranga City Council, Western Bay of Plenty District Council and BayTrust. Click here for the full report as well as further statistics in the 2017 SmartGrowth Development Trends Report.

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