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Battle To Find A Place To Live In Idyllic Coastal Town

A lack of rental accommodation has been blamed for limiting the growth of a coastal Southland town where holiday homes are king.

Oraka Aparima Community Board chair Michael Weusten believes Riverton is being held back by the issue, which is preventing young people from establishing themselves at the seaside township, 35 minutes' drive from Invercargill.

“There’s only one or two properties ever for rent out here, that’s why it’s such a killer,” Weusten said.

“If we’ve got any young people wanting jobs out here, they can’t find anywhere to live.

“And it’s like town rental prices, $400 - $450, or dearer if they’re more upmarket houses.”

Part of the problem was the high number of holiday homes in the area.

Weusten said driving through the town at night during winter proved his point — the lights weren’t always on.

According to the most recent data from Stats NZ in 2018, 36 percent of private dwellings in Riverton were unoccupied.

But not everyone in the town shared his enthusiasm for boosting the population.

“I’ve gone on record on Facebook saying we need more people in Riverton, but there’s a few locals that don’t agree with that, because they like to keep it the way it is for themselves.

“And it is idyllic, but at the same token, people like to see the cafes open all the time.”

Weusten had previously shared his concerns with Southland District Council at a public meeting, saying young people couldn’t work locally because they couldn’t live locally.

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Donna Leighton, a property manager at T and T Property Management, said she’d noticed a significant downturn in Riverton rentals over winter.

It was much easier to fill places in the summer months, she said, as evidenced by the difficulty she was having with a current property.

Of the approximately 360 houses the Invercargill-based company managed, only five were in Riverton.
Properties in Invercargill filled quickly because of higher volume and job security, she added.

“With Riverton, it’s hard to know what the job prospects are out there.”

Harcourts Invercargill manager Wayne Ellis said it was slim pickings in Southland for both rentals and purchasable houses.

He believed part of the reason was a rise in demand, with an increase in the number of first home buyers entering the market.

“Riverton’s just a small, rural township, so it’s probably heightened the challenge that they’ve got.”

Ellis said a quick look on TradeMe revealed less than 100 properties for rent in Invercargill compared to about half a dozen in Riverton.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air

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