Boult not sheepish about need for rezoning

Queenstown Lakes Mayor Jim Boult plans to skydive, dressed as a sheep, next week to promote a...
Queenstown Lakes Mayor Jim Boult plans to skydive, dressed as a sheep, next week to promote a petition to Parliament to amend Accommodation Supplement zoning in the Wakatipu. PHOTO: TRACEY ROXBURGH
Queenstown Lakes Mayor Jim Boult will go out on a high next week.

Mr Boult, Salvation Army Queenstown community ministries director Andrew Wilson, Queenstown Lakes District councillor Niki Gladding and Southland MP Joseph Mooney, of Queenstown, are the driving forces behind a "#peepsnotsheeps" campaign and subsequent petition to Parliament, pushing for a review of the Wakatipu’s Accommodation Supplement zoning.

At present, it was estimated more than 700 people living in the resort could not access their fair share of assistance because boundaries had not been reviewed since 1992.

Because there was no housing development in areas such as Lake Hayes Estate, Shotover Country and Hanley’s Farm 30 years ago, they are still classified as "Area 4", or "farmland", as far as the supplement is concerned.

That affected how much financial help residents in those areas could obtain.

For example, in "urban" areas of Fernhill-Sunshine Bay, Queenstown, Frankton, Arrowtown and Arthurs Point, a family with one child or more can access up to $305 a week.

In the "rural" area that is $120.

For a single person, there is a $95 difference between the two areas, from $165 in Area 1 to $70 in Area 4.

Mr Wilson said the petition was a "last resort" to get the Government to act on the inequitable situation for Queenstown residents.

"As agencies across the Wakatipu Basin, we’ve tried letters, we’ve tried face-to-face meetings with the Government, essentially, we’ve exhausted all other options ... we don’t want to have to petition the Government, but it’s what we’re having to face in order to see the change that we know is needed."

The petition seeks Parliament to amend a clause in the Social Security Act 2018 so urban-rural zoning, for the purposes of supplement eligibility, was based on most recent population statistics.

Mr Boult said he had been trying to get the Government to act on the issue since he was first elected to the mayoralty in 2016 "and got nowhere".

"I would describe it as being given a pat on the head and told to sit in the corner and wait."

He said given the largest concentration of young families in the Wakatipu now lived in the Area 4 locations, and they would most benefit from some assistance in meeting housing costs, "surely [Government should] extend the coverage to include those areas".

"We’ve gone back to Government on numerous occasions and pointed this out and kind of got a response saying, ‘Yeah, we understand that, but we’re not shifting things at this point in time’.

"We don’t understand that."

Mr Boult, who finishes his term next Friday, is planning to skydive with NZONE before then — along with Mr Mooney and Mr Wilson, dressed as a sheep, a dog, and, possibly, Little Bo Peep, respectively — to promote it further.

"Call it a parting shot," Mr Boult laughed.

tracey.roxburgh@odt.co.nz

 

 

 

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