Dunedin city leaders are clamouring for care to be given to a vulnerable teenager discharged from Wakari Hospital yesterday, with no home to go to.
A 65-year-old homeless man, whose life in a boarding house room was photographed by the ODT last month, has been rescued from living under a bush - and his many belongings have been thrown in in a skip.
A 65-year-old homeless man, whose life in a boarding house room was photographed by the ODT last month, has been rescued from living under a bush - and his many belongings have been thrown in in a skip.
Homelessness can be "grappled" with through state housing and wraparound support services, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said in Dunedin yesterday.
A government guide pointing Dunedin’s homeless people to some of the city’s worst boarding houses has been exposed, branded "disgraceful" by city leaders and its contents ripped up.
Eleven Dunedin boarding houses are to be scrutinised by government — after the Otago Daily Times’ ongoing "Houses of Horror" investigation exposed the city’s hell holes.
Volunteers providing life-saving help to Dunedin’s homeless say a solution must be found to end "devastating" homelessness in the city.
Homeless people stuck in the infamous Carisbrook Hotel are starting to get out of it with the help of officials, after the Otago Daily Times exposed the building’s grim conditions.
Dunedin's Stafford Gables Hostel — lambasted in the media this year for being a terrible place to stay — is a boarding house for the homeless, while also still claiming to be a backpackers.
The former Carisbrook Hotel has been branded by the government "not a suitable option" for emergency accommodation — and the government has stopped pointing homeless people to its slum rooms.
Hell and hardship are not hard to come by in Dunedin's boarding houses. Reporter Mary Williams exposes the stories of lives usually hidden behind crumbling walls.
Telling homeless people’s stories took the Otago Daily Times into Dunedin’s darkest boarding houses — as well as some places of hope.
Chronically sick and addicted homeless people are being left abandoned in Dunedin horror houses at risk of injury and death, an Otago Daily Times investigation exposes today.
The recently closed Carisbrook Hotel has been transformed into a horror house for the homeless funded by the Ministry of Social Development.