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NZSports10 days ago

What needs to be done to tackle child homelessness in Aotearoa?

A report by the Coalition to End Women's Homelessness highlights that 28.8% of people experiencing homelessness in Aotearoa are Māori. The report indicates that 33,192 children and young people lived in severe housing deprivation during the 2023 census. These children faced higher rates of abuse, poorer health outcomes, and increased interactions with the justice system compared to their peers. The report emphasizes the disproportionate impact on Māori and Pacific children and calls for urgent action to address the issue.

Tamariki and rangatahi Māori in state care continue to have unmet care and protection needs and receive less timely responses from Oranga Tamariki.

Aroturuki Tamariki the Independent Children's Monitor released its second annual report on the performance of the oranga tamariki system on Tuesday.

Chief executive Arran Jones told RNZ the report found poorer outcomes for Māori compared to young Māori that aren't in the system, and clear disparities when compared with other ethnicities within the system.

"So the conclusion is that actually if you want to address these disparities and ultimately improve outcomes, prevent intergenerational involvement, what we're saying is that better responses are needed at the earliest opportunity to help tamariki, rangatahi and their whānau to prevent further involvement in the system and escalation within it."

While most Māori have no involvement with Oranga Tamariki, data in this report shows that despite being only one quarter (27 percent) of the youth population, tamariki and rangatahi Māori are over-represented in every part of the oranga tamariki system.

57 percent of reports of concern were for tamariki and rangatahi Māori.

68 percent of tamariki and rangatahi in care are Māori.

59 percent of police proceedings against those aged 10-18 were for tamariki and rangatahi Māori.

80 percent of tamariki and rangatahi in youth justice custody are Māori.

Aroturuki Tamariki Independent Children’s Monitor Chief Executive Arran Jones.

Jones said it's quite clear within the report that outcomes only get worse the more involved in the system you get.

For example, most tamariki and rangatahi Māori who had a report of concern made about their safety or wellbeing in the last year had a previous report of concern made - one quarter had 10 or more.

The majority of reports of concern are made by government agencies and NGOs that work with whānau and have concerns for the wellbeing, for the safety and the care of young people, they will then contact Oranga Tamariki for help, Jones said.

"What we know is about a half of those reports of concern that get made result in no further action because there just isn't the capacity in the system to be able to respond to the level of need. And so we talk about then disparities through the system, you've got a disproportionate number of those reports of concern are about tamariki Māori. But then what you then see is that disparity grows the further into the system you get."

When a report of concern is made, and if it's considered to be critical or very urgent, there is a disparity already in terms of the level of response that is activated.

"For Māori, 16 percent of those critical or very urgent reports of concern [are] not being responded to on time, when you compared to non-Māori, it's only 10 percent. So there's something happening in the system, which is leading to a slower response," he said.

"By far the majority of young Māori aren't involved in the system, but when they do we just need to make sure we have a system that helps them at the earliest. And the thing that I'd also point to is that we know the aspirations of young Māori... that have become involved in the system, aren't any different from those that aren't. They have very high aspirations for their future. And the question is, how can the state, when it has this opportunity to help, help them realise those aspirations?"

Jones said they haven't seen any change in the data when compared to last year.

"When you're looking at outcomes, the change will take some time. The important thing is that we keep looking at it and keep reporting on it to see whether things are changing."

Oranga Tamariki acknowledges Māori over-representation is evident

Oranga Tamariki in its formal response to the report, which is a statutory requirement, acknowledged more needs to be done to respond to the needs of tamariki and rangatahi Māori to address the impact of over-representation in the system.

"Overrepresentation of tamariki and rangatahi Māori in the system is evident. Additionally, there are significant wider socio-economic issues that disproportionately affect Māori and have a significant impact on the likelihood of child abuse, family harm, and tamariki becoming involved in the system. These factors include the ongoing impact of colonisation, inter-generational involvement with the criminal justice system or the oranga tamariki system, worse health and education outcomes, and higher instances of mental health issues and substance abuse.

"The system itself does not have the resources or the mandate to address many of these factors which require a coordinated and sustained effort from across government to address."

The response said Oranga Tamariki is committed to continuing the work identified in the response.

"We are confident these work programmes will contribute to addressing the report's findings and improve outcomes for tamariki and rangatahi Māori and their whānau over time.…

Read the full article at RNZ (Radio New Zealand)
Source document: Coalition to End Women's Homelessness Report

3 reports

RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicCenter10 days ago
What needs to be done to tackle child homelessness in Aotearoa?

A report by the Coalition to End Women's Homelessness highlights that 28.8% of people experiencing homelessness in Aotearoa are Māori. The report indicates that 33,192 children and young people lived in severe housing deprivation during the 2023 census. These children faced higher rates of abuse, poorer health outcomes, and increased interactions with the justice system compared to their peers. The report emphasizes the disproportionate impact on Māori and Pacific children and calls for urgent action to address the issue.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual data from a report by the Coalition to End Women's Homelessness, highlighting the issue of child homelessness in Aotearoa. It does not exhibit clear bias through loaded language, one-sided sourcing, or omission of context. The content remains focused on presenting the 's

Official sources cited

RNZ (Radio New Zealand)State / PublicCenter12 days ago
Rangatahi Māori getting less timely help from Oranga Tamariki system - report

A report by Aroturuki Tamariki, the Independent Children's Monitor, highlights ongoing disparities in the Oranga Tamariki system, showing that Māori children and rangatahi (young people) in state care face unmet care and protection needs and receive less timely responses. The report indicates that despite making up only 27% of the youth population, Māori are overrepresented across all parts of the system, including reports of concern, placements in care, and involvement in youth justice.

Bias read (Center): The article presents statistical findings from an independent monitor without overtly biased language or selective sourcing. It reports on systemic disparities without taking a stance on policy solutions or assigning blame to specific groups or parties. The framing remains neutral, focusing on data.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Aroturuki Tamariki Second Annual Report
The SpinoffIndependentCenter13 days ago
Our hidden child homelessness problem

A new report highlights that over 33,000 children and young people in New Zealand are experiencing severe housing deprivation. The findings come from a study conducted by analytics firm Taylor Fry using data from the 2023 Census, commissioned by The Coalition to End Women’s Homelessness. The article discusses differing perspectives on New Zealand's homelessness issue, ranging from concerns about public safety and tourism impacts to systemic failures in social support.

Bias read (Center): The article presents information without overtly favoring any political perspective. It outlines multiple viewpoints on the homelessness issue and focuses on presenting the statistical findings rather than advocating for specific policy solutions or criticizing particular groups.

Official sources cited

  • study Report on Child Homelessness in Aotearoa
  • government 2023 Census Data

Go to the primary sources (4)

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