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To: The House of Representatives

Put children and whānau wellbeing at the heart of welfare

This campaign has ended.

As a country, we value compassion and kindness, but our welfare system is letting us down.

Low wages, high rents, and successive governments gutting our welfare system has left hundreds of thousands of people in Aotearoa trapped in poverty.

We, the undersigned, are calling on the House of Representatives to make the following changes that put children and whānau wellbeing at the heart of welfare:

1. Substantially improving core benefits;
2. Removing all sanctions;
3. Ensuring that all benefits and all part of Working for Families (WFF) are indexed annually to prices and wages;
4. Removing the hours of paid work criteria from the WFF In-Work Tax Credit and extending it to all low-income families;
5. Treating adults in the benefit system as individuals without penalising them for being in a partnership;
6. Ensuring that all applicants to WINZ receive all the assistance to which they are entitled.

Why is this important?

In good times and in hard times, we should all have the dignity and security of a roof over our head, healthy kai on the table and the essential things we need.

A stable whare (house) is the foundation for a good life. None of us can go about our lives, raise a family, go to work or stay healthy without a warm, dry and safe place to call home.

But right now, due to the way in which successive governments have run down the welfare system, and taken a hands-off approach to the housing market, New Zealand’s homes are some of the least affordable in the industrial world. Families are having to choose between rent and food.

When people lose their job, get sick or end a relationship and then can’t keep a roof over their heads, we are seeing the failures of an unkind, unjust and unbalanced economic system. When corporations are taking in record profits, but there hasn’t been a real increase in income support for a generation, and more and more people can’t make ends meet, our society is out of balance.

These statistics should both astound and compel us into action:

➡️ The wealthiest 20 percent of people in New Zealand hoard 70 percent of the wealth, while the poorest 40 percent have just three percent.
➡️ Two New Zealand billionaires have more combined wealth than the poorest 30 percent of people in this country.
➡️ Over 50 percent of all people in New Zealand who receive an Accommodation Supplement to pay for their housing needs are spending more than half their incomes on housing, while four out of every five renters cannot afford to pay their rent comfortably.
➡️ The median Pākehā has $114,000 of wealth. The median Māori has $23,000. That’s a gap of $91,000. The median Pasifika person has even less at $12,000.
➡️ Between 2004 and 2010 the wealth of the richest one percent - about 34,000 people - increased from $94billion to $147billion; that’s $4,323,529 per person. Meanwhile the poorest 10 percent of people saw their net debt increase from $5.7billion to $7.4billion.
CEO pay is increasing at almost five times the rate of the average worker.
➡️ 27 percent of New Zealand’s children live in poverty, where poverty is defined as having less than 60 percent of the national median household income (after housing costs), while six percent (70,000) of all children live in severe hardship.
➡️ There are now at least 41,000 homeless New Zealanders, more than half of whom are younger than 25.

There is too much wealth in too few hands while everyday New Zealanders struggle to make ends meet and the cost of living continues to soar.

We need government intervention to end the poverty trap and rebalance our economy. We need government intervention to ensure that everyone one in this country has enough pūtea (income) to live with dignity and participate fully in the community.

If we are to fulfil the Coalition Government’s goal for Aotearoa to be the best place in the world to be a child, then all parents, whānau and caregivers must have a liveable income.

A hands-on government can fix our broken economic system. A hands-on government can change the rules to make our economy fair, kind and just. A competent and caring government can ensure that every child and whānau flourishes.

Read more: http://www.welfareforwellbeing.org

Image credits: Serena Stevenson Photography

How it will be delivered

We will deliver this petition once it hits 10,000 signatures.

Partner

Updates

2019-09-06 18:19:12 +1200

5,000 signatures reached

2019-01-26 16:42:23 +1300

1,000 signatures reached

2018-11-28 12:51:37 +1300

500 signatures reached

2018-11-15 23:29:00 +1300

100 signatures reached

2018-11-15 21:33:24 +1300

50 signatures reached

2018-11-15 21:06:24 +1300

25 signatures reached

2018-11-15 18:28:39 +1300

10 signatures reached