A petition signed by 1200 residents and visitors to Ohakune opposing a controversial Kainga Ora social housing
development in the tourism town was presented to Parliament today.
Kainga Ora and Ruapehu District Council (RDC) plan to build a large, high-density social housing estate of around 150
dwellings over three stages.
The plan is being sold to the community as a mix of social housing, ‘affordable first homes’ and ‘worker accommodation’.
However, Official Information Act requests show no plans, policies or documents exist to support the claim of mixed
housing, meaning it could easily become a full-scale social housing scheme in the small Central North Island tourist
town, population just 1000.
The deal, which has a conditional sale of public land to the state housing agency, was kept secret from the community,
with many residents still unaware of what is being proposed.
Barry Murphy, spokesperson for those directly affected – a group of over 150 concerned residents – says the location of
the development and secrecy surrounding it has angered many.
“Not only does Ohakune have limited social services and job prospects, it’s very expensive to build here because of its
isolation. This also adds extra costs to things like food, fuel and power for heating – it’s an expensive place to live,
where jobs are seasonal,” he says.
“There is no medical centre, let alone a GP in Ohakune, so this is just going to add extra financial burden to those who
have to travel for basic medical care.
“This is a ludicrous location for a development of this size, made worse by the fact there are only 13 individuals or
families in need of housing in Ohakune. These people could be housed tomorrow in warm, dry and safe dwellings if RDC and
Kainga Ora would consider existing housing stock currently on the market, but they simply won’t.
“RDC and Kainga Ora keep carping on about an ‘urgent need’ for housing, and projected growth, but when asked for data to
support that claim they’ve repeatedly failed to produce anything, which suggests it is mythical.”
Mr Murphy says many signatories are equally concerned about the social housing scheme being located right next to the
famous Carrot Adventure Park.
“Aside from Ruapehu, the Carrot Park is the town’s top tourism attraction and pulls in over 100,000 visitors annually.
It is a regional and national icon, and many residents and tourists to Ohakune are worried about the social impacts that
invariably accompany these large-scale housing schemes.
“There is concern that this will have negative flow-on effects for the town’s other tourism ventures, which will hurt
local businesses already battered by Covid and the uncertainty hanging over the future of the ski fields they rely so
heavily on.
“We’ve seen what’s happened to Rotorua, where the town’s image has been severely impacted and many tourists have turned
away. We don’t want that for our town.”
Mr Murphy says many residents and ratepayers are appalled by the lack of transparency from the local council, as well as
the absence of foresight and leadership.
“They’ve tried to push the consent for this project through unnotified, claiming there are no affected parties, and
there’s been zero consultation. Only now, after they’ve lodged the consent, are they calling meetings to ‘hear from the
community’ but the reality is, they’re just telling the community what is going to happen. We find that offensive, and
so is the dismissive way they have treated any concerns raised by members of the community to date.
“RDC should be safeguarding the future of the Central Plateau’s top tourism town, but they’ve proven to be a visionless
council blinded by the Covid cash they were handed from the Government for this pointless project.”
The project has been further marred by revelations that one of Kainga Ora’s lead planners for the Ohakune development
failed to reveal a conflict of interest – owning a holiday house on the boundary of the Kainga Ora site where he
positioned a large reserve that would buffer his property from the proposed dwellings.
“This speaks volumes about the way Kainga Ora has handled the project,” says Mr Murphy. “It’s hardly surprising though.
Nationally, Kainga Ora has a track record of riding roughshod over communities - it’s an organization out of control and
it appears they can print their own money and do whatever they want.
“A line needs to be put through this project to save tourism and save our town – that is what the petition is asking of
Parliament.”
- For more information, visit: saveohakune.com