Whatever happened to “we’re all in this together”?

Written By: - Date published: 7:44 am, April 5th, 2011 - 63 comments
Categories: class war - Tags:

Stuff is reporting that Christchurch residents who have been displaced from their homes will have to pay a minimum of $190 a week, two weeks bond, insurance and power if they want to get into one of the campervans set up as emergency housing.

Never mind many of these people will still be paying mortgages for wrecked homes or that many of them will have no job (and that’s only going to get worse as the government rapidly phases out the wage support scheme) – the message is clear: pay your own way.

Unless you’re a South Canterbury Finance investor of course.

63 comments on “Whatever happened to “we’re all in this together”? ”

  1. Or a Nat MP. They’re getting half a million a year between them in tax cuts on their MP salaries alone. $10,000 a week – that could fund a few campervans, eh?

  2. $190 per week is $5 over the price that McCully spent on a bottle of Pinot Noir using our credit card.
    Expensive pinot for the Ministah, cat food for the elderly and unemployment and bankruptcy for Christchurch.
    New Zealand have you lost that lovin feeling yet?
     
     
     
     

    • sean 2.1

      Ok, say hypothetically Labour was in, and spending like theres no tomorrow as they always do (social welfare, creating public sector jobs etc) – where would the money be coming from to pay for this on top of that?

      Its all very well making hilarious little jokes about bottles of wine, but if this was a Labour/Greens government, there wouldn’t be money to subsidise these caravans either.

      And just to pre-empt you – increasing the top bracket taxes would not bring that money in – it would just increase tax avoidance, which National are trying to get rid of.

      • chris 2.1.1

        To pre-empt eh? Got ANY proof of that.  Like really, any proof of that?

        But really, what i’d love to see is a scandanavian style system where every citizen’s income and tax gets made public.  that would sort out govt. revenue problems nice and quickly.

        • Pascal's bookie 2.1.1.1

          Well I dunno about proof, but when the government just slashed the top rate they made a big song and dance about how ,along side raising GST, it would be revenue neutral.

          Turns out they were wrong, but not in the way sean’s theory would predict.

      • Deborah Kean 2.1.2

        “Ok, say hypothetically Labour was in, and spending like theres no tomorrow as they always do (social welfare, creating public sector jobs etc) – where would the money be coming from to pay for this on top of that?”

        So, don’t you get that these things are the functions of government? Or are people who need social welfare, or who work for government not citizens in your opinion?

         

  3. Hilary 3

    It’s almost as if the Government wants poor people to leave Christchurch, as they are just too inconvenient if they stay there.

    • Kevin Welsh 3.1

      I suspect you are right Hilary.

      Get rid of those pesky Labour voting suburbs of Bexley and Avonside.

      • grumpy 3.1.1

        Meanwhile, in Rangiora (now named Ranganui) I am reliably informed, crime has skyrocketed with The Farmers department store closing on Saturdays due to escalating shoplifting.

  4. Tigger 4

    And again, where are the media here.  Why is Duncan Garner not chasing Gerry Brownlee through the airport to grill him on this?  That sort of treatment was good enough for Chris Carter after all…

  5. Steve Withers 5

    If you think it though, encouraging people to leave Christchurch is the government’s best, cheapest option. In another city they become just regular Kiwis subject to no special circumstances, bounded by the same WINZ policies and competing for jobs with whoever already lives there. It’s an incredible opportunity to offload earthquake support costs while driving down wages and conditions in the rest of New Zealand….but hiking rents due to increased demand. 

    Of course they won’t SAY that….They will make all the supportive noises anyone could ask for. But what they DO (as usual) will give their game away.

  6. Steve Withers 6

    Duncan Garner *LOVES* National. Watch him over time. You’ll agree.

    • ianmac 6.1

      Duncan Garner HATES Winston Peters. His hounding of him prior to the last election was of Paul Holmes proportions. Even his co interviewers were stunned by his outbursts. (Imagine Garner V Holmes in a showdown.)

  7. tc 7

    Duncan Garner is a good example of the bias alot of these journo’s display (Espiner/Armstrong/Holmes also being blatant Nat sycophants) and this is a senior political reporter at the top of the ‘game’……sums up the MSM bias in a nutshell.

    Q&A has become an extension of the govt PR machine as you’d expect under recycling Rick Ellis….so called ‘hard’ interviews about as tough as a sponge.

  8. Lanthanide 8

    Many people will be getting insurance payments for alternative accommodation. Most policies only pay for 6 months though. They were all starting to run out from the September quake and there was starting to be a bit of noise about ‘we need to handle this’, and then the latest quake struck and took all that away. But the situation will be much much worse and bigger now, so we’ll have to see if the government comes to the party with anything – not sure what they can do though.

    That’ll start rearing it’s head in August-September, just in time to put everyone in a good mood for the election, after everyone’s suffered through the interminable Rugby World Cup insanity.

  9. Armchair Critic 9

    Shouldn’t the rent be set at 25% of the income?

  10. chris73 10

    Thats pretty cheap for a roof over your head

    • HDS 10.1

      Going into the southern winter.  Good to know you can save money on not having a fridge.

    • Daveo 10.2

      It’s a fucking campervan you dick. You wanna pay $190 for a 2mX3m room with a chemical toilet in it then go ahead. I’ve got some magic beans you might be interested in too.

      • chris73 10.2.1

        Grow up you penis, its not perfect but its a shit load better then nothing. Theres a finite amount of resources out there so the govts doing the best they can to help as many people as they can as quickly as they can
        No doubt Labour could do sooooo much better but they ain’t in power and won’t have a reasonable chance of getting back into power until at least 2014 so suck it up and stop acting like a little cry baby
         
         

        • lprent 10.2.1.1

          …so the govts doing the best they can to help as many people as they can as quickly as they can

          Oh I’d agree – just shows how inadequate they are. Doesn’t it?

          • chris73 10.2.1.1.1

            Yeah and as I said before Labour would do better wouldn’t they. Phil Goff couldn’t make a decision to save his (political) life yet you suppose he could handle a mining disaster, a global meltdown and two major earthquakes.
             
            Still his hair looks nice, hes got a mid-life crisis bike and a butch walk

            • Colonial Viper 10.2.1.1.1.1

              Hey chris73, how many campervans does English’s $300M blowout on SCF buy again?
               
              Or for that matter, how many 7-series limos?
               

              its not perfect but its a shit load better then nothing. Theres a finite amount of resources out there so the govts doing the best they can to help as many people as they can as quickly as they can

              The big time money is going to big time SCF investors. Hundreds of millions worth. Christchurch homeless and unemployed – peanuts for you. In fact, we’re going to charge you, and private companies can take the profit.
               
              Good to know your priorities Chris73.

              • Daveo

                <i>better then nothing</i>
                Lucky old Christchurch.
                 

              • crude

                Treasury says that the loss was the smallest available to the government given the alternatives, although Bill English admits this loss is still larger then what could be predicted at the time of projections. The government was obligated under the retail deposit guarantee scheme which was an inherited obligation from Labour. What they say is fairly obvious, just that buyers unable to quantify liabilities in the company demanded all of it’s possible losses be offset by the government. That would have meant ongoing payouts by the government over a long period of time as all of the liabilities were unwound, so this is the least bitter of what were a number of pretty bitter pills. I can only imagine how Bill English feels about this, given he has had to find massive funds due to the mendacity of others around Kiwirail, ACC, and now SCF that are in the regions of $2billion. 

                I can’t find out who said SCF specifically should be included in the scheme, but I found an article from March 2010 from National Business Review with Alan Hubbard talking about a pending inclusion. At that time Finance Companies were failing so swiftly and in such numbers the government reluctantly stepped in. Personally, I believe those companies should all have been allowed to fail, but there were pros and substantial cons either way. So many people were getting wiped out the government decided to take the hit instead. I remember one man appearing on close up who had invested $450000 saved over 25 years in a single company and lost everything. It was a pretty terrible decision he made but a pretty tough outcome nonetheless

                $190 does seem like a lot for people homeless and jobless, I imagine there were reasons for not going for cheaper semi-permanent alternatives, but I would like to know what they are, probably there simply aren’t enough of those prefabs, or they are just the structure without self contained facilities, but I don’t know. I don’t think Gerry Brownlee is the right man for this job, given he cannot handle contradiction and is impatient about due process, however he is the Minister and can’t be accused of inaction or a lack of will… whether he does the right things for all that, time will tell.

            • lprent 10.2.1.1.1.2

              Yeah and as I said before Labour would do better wouldn’t they.

              Glad you agree with me… So you’ll be voting Labour this year?

              (I suspect that you should read your comments before pressing submit..)

              • chris73

                Naah the problem with typing is you can’t get that non-verbal communication thing happening but if you try re-reading it out loud with a sarcastic tone I’m sure you’ll get my drift (I suppose I could have added yeah right at the end…)
                 
                (submitting before reading makes it more interesting)

      • sean 10.2.2

        What a pratt.  Where else do you suggest they stay?  Unless you hadn’t realised, everything down there is flattened or uninhabitable.

        Do your magic beans grow houses?

        • Kaplan 10.2.2.1

          These would be a great start and much cheaper for both the people that will inhabit them and the taxpayer to boot.
          http://www.portacabin.co.nz/
          I don’t think national know how to use google. It’s a bit sad.

          • grumpy 10.2.2.1.1

            They are complete shit to live in – condensation is unbelievable!  Anyway, do you think they might have a few hundred lying around?????

    • Steve Withers 10.3

      A Skyline 2-car garage without the car doors and lined with pink bats and plywood walls & ceiling would be plenty warm and fast to build if the need was urgent. More space and cheaper than a motor home. All vehicles are ultimately imported. Also such a building can be made of 100% local (NZ) materials. I lined my garage out on the farm a few years ago..and it made a HUGE difference. I did the lining in a day – thermal paper, batts and nailed up the the ply over the top.

  11. tsmithfield 11

    Sounds like cheap rental for a motor-home. Try renting one from Maui or the likes and see what you’ll pay.

    Anyone seen whats happening to house rentals in ChCh at the moment? $190 for a campervan is quite good compared house prices. Compared to the price for rental houses at the moment, $190 per week is very cheap accommodation. Then again, I guess lefties expect the government to pay for everything.

    • outofbed 11.1

      wtf? is he serious?

      • Colonial Viper 11.1.1

        I think TS is saying that people in Christchurch left homeless after this disaster should count themselves lucky that we aren’t charging them the same rates as rich German or Japanese tourists on tour holidays around the South Island.
         
        That’s what you are saying, right?

        “Then again, I guess lefties expect the government to pay for everything.”

        A decent society does not abandon it’s citizens. A decent society helps those who are struggling. A decent society does not disenfranchise those who have been struck a cruel blow.

        I guess Righties aren’t interested in any of that stuff.

    • vto 11.2

      tsmith, $190 per week is, roughly, about half of what would normally be paid in Chch to rent a full blown working house with some bedrooms, a living room, kitchen, laundry, mayb even a garage, together with a backyard and fenced etc security.

      That makes the campervan-for-housing rent excessive you silly egg.

      • tsmithfield 11.2.1

        “tsmith, $190 per week is, roughly, about half of what would normally be paid in Chch to rent a full blown working house with some bedrooms, a living room, kitchen, laundry, mayb even a garage, together with a backyard and fenced etc security.
        That makes the campervan-for-housing rent excessive you silly egg.”

        Are you seriously suggesting a house can be rented for $85 per week. What have you been smoking? We have just shifted my parents from their written-off home into an old house in Spreydon (a fairly ordinary suburb), which was all that was available. The rental is $420 per week.

        The other thing is that a lot of the tenants in the campervan will be getting accomodation subsidized through WINZ, so it won’t be costing them $190 per week anyway. Also, the government will be renting the campervans from the providers, and I bet the government is paying a lot more than $190 per week, so the accomodation is probably subsidized from the outset.

        • Pascal's bookie 11.2.1.1

          A lot of would bees could bees and you reckons in there t, along with a near perfect confirmation of vto’s point re rental prices.

        • The Voice of Reason 11.2.1.2

          Oh dear, Tim. Read the extract again and then do the maths. Hint: 2 x 190 is not 85.

        • ianmac 11.2.1.3

          It would be very unlikely that the campervans could be allowed to travel anywhere. They would be a very small  one-room spot anchored alongside many one-roomed spots. Hardly a holiday home.

        • Kaplan 11.2.1.4

          tsmithfield.  I can’t believe I am saying this but I suggest you go and read kiwiblog’s post on this.  It’s been demonstrated on there that port a cabins can be source for less than $85 a week.  That is a far better comparison for emergency accommodation that a campervan or a regular house.
          Sometimes you have to exercise your brain muscles a bit to see outside the square you exist in.
          This means that if the government are subsidising them they are wasting a whole shedload of money on something that’s just not suited for purpose.

    • Lanthanide 11.3
      My rent is going up $5/week from the middle of April, on a fixed contract for a year.
      So to answer your question – not much.
  12. Bright Red 12

    I see the righties are taking their line from Farrar.
     
    “Havign some experience with motorhomes, I have to say $190/week for a couple ($85 each) is a massive reduction from their normal cost.
    Going to a rental website, the prices for a week vary from $690 to $1,380. I presume the Government has got some bulk discount for them, but I’d say they are still highly subsidised”
     
    Honestly, what an arsehole. I would assume the government has doen the logical thing and either bought the campervans outright or leased them through the winter months when they would just be sitting idle anyway (aggreviated by the tourism downturn) – so the weekly unit cost should be pretty low and ought to be financed by the government.
     

    • felix 12.1

      A competent govt that gave a shit about governing would’ve done just that.
       
      These assclowns would consider that “interfering in the campervan market” no doubt.

  13. aj 13

    I thought that story was a joke. I had to double check the date to find it wasn’t still 1st April

  14. Peter Martin 14

    So everyone will be housed in more appropriate accommodation by the time the rugby world cup begins…I’m sure I have read where every camper van in the country has been booked…

    • M 14.1

      So everyone will be housed in more appropriate accommodation by the time the rugby world cup begins…

      Not a chance – heard that they would be booted out come August ’cause of the RWC.

  15. marsman 15

    Slimey Key is trying to blame Labour for the SCF cock-up. It was English who demanded, the day he was sworn in as Finance Minister, that SCF be brought in under the scheme set up by Labour. Liars,scammers the lot of them. NZ taxpayers have a right to know the full story on SCF, they are after all paying for it. Corruption?

  16. randal 16

    hey a new generation of trailer trash is on the way while all the pals of HUbbard and the jesus crew get away with it scot free.
    Jesus saves and the best rate of interest too.

  17. Steve Withers 17

    tsmithfield: I’m sure Japan is charging the 400,000 homeless a fair market rate….

    Setting aside the you appear to be a troll, did you intend to come across is a smug prick, verging on the sociopathic?

    Was that the tone you were looking for? Or was it just you being you.

  18. tsmithfield 18

    Just another beat up.

    According to Brownlee, on the radio today, the accommodation in campervans is covered either by insurance, or the $300 pw accommodation subsidy for quake victims that the government is paying. So, the camper-vans will be costing quake victims nothing.

    • RobC 18.1

      A serious question. Is that $300pw accom subsidy one of those subsidies that will be stopped in 8 weeks time?

      • tsmithfield 18.1.1

        I understand there isn’t an end to it. It recognises the fact that accommodation supplements from insurance companies won’t last long enough for people to get rebuilt homes etc. So the government is tiding them over.

    • felix 18.2

      So, the camper-vans will be costing quake victims nothing.
       

      Unless of course they happened to be living in a house before the earthquake, in which case they’re still paying for that.
       
      And if they’ve lost their job/business in the quake…
       
      Oops Timmeh, you quoted the only man in Chch more ignorant and offensive than you.

      • tsmithfield 18.2.1

        Some might be paying mortgages, and still have the obligation to pay. On the otherhand, banks are being very flexible in terms of mortgage holidays etc. Then again some displaced people might have been renting damaged properties. If the properties are uninhabitable, they have no obligation to continue paying rent, so they would be benefiting more from the free accommodation provided by the government than mortgage holders. 

        Don’t know what you expect. However, the government can’t wave a magic wand to make everything better and ensure no-one loses anything.

        I suggest you check the facts yourself before you start accusing others of being ignorant.

    • MrSmith 18.3

      Ts: Only if they have insurance and the $300 pw subsidy is almost over as I understand it?

  19. Deadly_NZ 19

    And also…  maybe the banks have realised that foreclosing on a property that they lenk oh say about 200k on is now a sunken POS worth about 5 bucks.  Yep you can bet your ass they are being flexible, because they cannot afford to be anything but!

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    1 week ago
  • Government backing mussel spat project
    The Coalition Government is investing in a project to boost survival rates of New Zealand mussels and grow the industry, Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones has announced. “This project seeks to increase the resilience of our mussels and significantly boost the sector’s productivity,” Mr Jones says. “The project - ...
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  • Government focused on getting people into work
    Benefit figures released today underscore the importance of the Government’s plan to rebuild the economy and have 50,000 fewer people on Jobseeker Support, Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says. “Benefit numbers are still significantly higher than when National was last in government, when there was about 70,000 fewer ...
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    1 week ago
  • Clean energy key driver to reducing emissions
    The Government’s commitment to doubling New Zealand’s renewable energy capacity is backed by new data showing that clean energy has helped the country reach its lowest annual gross emissions since 1999, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says. New Zealand’s latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory (1990-2022) published today, shows gross emissions fell ...
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    1 week ago
  • Earthquake-prone buildings review brought forward
    The Government is bringing the earthquake-prone building review forward, with work to start immediately, and extending the deadline for remediations by four years, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says. “Our Government is focused on rebuilding the economy. A key part of our plan is to cut red tape that ...
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  • Thailand and NZ to agree to Strategic Partnership
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  • Government consults on extending coastal permits for ports
    RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop and Transport Minister Simeon Brown have today announced the Coalition Government’s intention to extend port coastal permits for a further 20 years, providing port operators with certainty to continue their operations. “The introduction of the Resource Management Act in 1991 required ports to obtain coastal ...
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  • Inflation coming down, but more work to do
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    1 week ago
  • School attendance restored as a priority in health advice
    Refreshed health guidance released today will help parents and schools make informed decisions about whether their child needs to be in school, addressing one of the key issues affecting school attendance, says Associate Education Minister David Seymour. In recent years, consistently across all school terms, short-term illness or medical reasons ...
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    1 week ago
  • Unnecessary bureaucracy cut in oceans sector
    Oceans and Fisheries Minister Shane Jones is streamlining high-level oceans management while maintaining a focus on supporting the sector’s role in the export-led recovery of the economy. “I am working to realise the untapped potential of our fishing and aquaculture sector. To achieve that we need to be smarter with ...
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    1 week ago
  • Patterson promoting NZ’s wool sector at International Congress
    Associate Agriculture Minister Mark Patterson is speaking at the International Wool Textile Organisation Congress in Adelaide, promoting New Zealand wool, and outlining the coalition Government’s support for the revitalisation the sector.    "New Zealand’s wool exports reached $400 million in the year to 30 June 2023, and the coalition Government ...
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  • Removing red tape to help early learners thrive
    The Government is making legislative changes to make it easier for new early learning services to be established, and for existing services to operate, Associate Education Minister David Seymour says. The changes involve repealing the network approval provisions that apply when someone wants to establish a new early learning service, ...
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    1 week ago

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