"Tony Ryall's feeble excuses for the housing crisis documented in yet another report today are typical of a Government
that has denied the needs of low-income people for nine years," says Labour's housing spokesperson Graham Kelly.
"Confronted by a steadily growing mountain of evidence that its housing policy is a prime cause of overcrowding and
poverty, this Government offers nothing but token gestures and weasel words from smug yuppie ministers."
Today's report from the New Zealand Council of Christian Social Services brands the Government's housing policy a
failure, saying market rents, state house sales and the "one size fits all" accommodation supplement have contributed
directly to rising housing costs and a shortage of decent and safe housing.
"The facts speak for themselves," Mr Kelly says. "This government has sold about 11,000 state houses for almost $1
billion. It has decimated the public housing built by generations of New Zealand taxpayers.
"National has also let public housing go to ruin. Just in the past two months the National Health Committee has reported
South Auckland tenants living in damp, cold, rat-infested homes and Parliament's Social Services Committee has reported
Housing NZ's failure to meet demand in Northland and East Cape, where families are living in caravans, sheds, garages,
derelict houses and even cars.
"Today's report and last month's Family Centre poverty survey have hammered home the message that high housing costs are
the main cause of poverty in New Zealand. Government policy has raised those costs, but Mr Ryall and his colleagues are
wedded blindly to their mad market rentals.
"A token neighbourhood programme and a few new political show-homes in Auckland don't scratch the surface of this
country's housing problems. As today's report says, the Government's "tinkering around the edges" has negligible impact.
"Labour's commitment to return to income-related rents for low-income state house tenants is urgently needed. Our plans
for housing action zones in areas like Northland and East Cape will make a real difference to the health and social
cohesion of low-income families."