The Nation: Housing New Zealand CEO Andrew McKenzie
On Newshub Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Housing
New Zealand CEO Andrew McKenzie
• Andrew
McKenzie denies Housing New Zealand had a cultural problem.
"As an organisation, we were placing emphasis on different
things. If you're a landlord, you think of those things that
you've got to get a balance...you're looking after a home,
you're making sure the tenants are safe and healthy, you're
looking after their well-being, you're complying with the
legislation."
• He says the culture within Housing New
Zealand is already changing. "All big organisations will
occasionally have pieces of the organisation, whether
processes or people, who will let them down. But I can tell
you very, very clearly that the organisation's modus
operandi, the policies we work to, the processes we work to,
are all being changed to align with keeping people in
homes."
• He estimates 1200 to 1500 of the tenants
evicted from Housing New Zealand homes under its zero
tolerance methamphetamine policy were children.
• He admits HNZ does not know what became
of many of those evicted, and they are now trying to contact
them through social agencies.
• He believes he is the
right person to lead HNZ through the process of enshrining
its social objectives in law. "Since I've been here, I've
made and led some very positive changes to the
organisation."
• He said Minister of Housing Phil
Twyford has "every confidence" in the Housing New Zealand
board. "He has appointed some new members to the board. So
he's taken some action there."
Lisa Owen: The
Government has now announced Housing New Zealand's social
objectives will be enshrined in law. The eight objectives
include being a fair and reasonable landlord and supporting
tenants to live with dignity. I asked Housing New Zealand
chief executive Andrew McKenzie how he is going to change
the culture at the agency.
Andrew
McKenzie: As I say, we've been changing for the
last two years. And we haven't evicted any tenants now for
over a year. So we have moved already to implement that
change. It became very clear when I arrived as chief
executive that decisions to move people out were simply
passing costs on to other parts of the social support
system. If they're not living in one of our homes, somebody
else will have to put them up somewhere. And it could be
with special needs grants. So we made the decision over a
year ago that we would not evict people, and where homes
were unsafe, we would look to rehouse them. So we have
already begun that process. We've begun the change. We're
working to line ourselves up with a whole lot of other
social agencies who are expert at helping people with some
of the issues you face. It's not just methamphetamine use
that will cause issues for a tenant, in terms of the
stability of their lives. It could be alcohol addictions. It
can be mental health issues. So DHBs, Ministry for Social
Development, Corrections, police — they're all agencies
who we're working closely with so that those people are able
to stay in their homes.
Lisa Owen: All right,
so it's going to be about degrees of change. You say you've
started to make some change. But here's the thing. If we
look at what has happened with the meth-testing regime —
it was a policy based on bad science, but let's put that
aside for a moment — the testing and eviction process was
deeply flawed as well. There were no baseline tests, in most
cases, done before tenants were moved out. They were robbed,
in many cases, of their rights to natural justice. That kind
of looks and sounds like bullying behaviour. Was
it?
We've certainly apologised for the way
in which tenants were treated. My personal view, as I say,
when I came in, is that we weren't doing it
right.
Was it bullying
behaviour?
I don't know that it was bullying
behaviour. The lack of a baseline test is really about
attributing whether or not that tenant caused the harm.
Where the organisation was unable to determine that the
tenant had caused the harm, they would rehouse them. Where
it was determined that they did cause the harm, then
they made the decision, for that period of time, not to
rehouse. We've changed that behaviour, and we now focus on
keeping them in the homes. They are rehoused where the house
is not safe to live in. You need to understand that at the
essence of this was ‘when is a house safe for somebody to
live in?’ And that was the reason that the organisation
went out and looked for these standards and
guidelines.
But you were getting conflicting
information over a period of time, and challenges to those
guidelines. Yet you enthusiastically applied them. So can
you see how some people will find it difficult to believe
that, because you have changed a few things, and a few
things have changed on paper, that you are actually going to
change your whole culture and
attitude?
Yeah, I can understand that people
would be concerned, absolutely. The organisation has — and
it has very openly said — we did not do the job that we
should do as a public housing landlord.
You
had a culture problem.
I wouldn't say we had
a culture problem. As an organisation, we were placing
emphasis on different things. If you're a landlord, you
think of those things that you've got to get a balance
between—
Yeah, but you're more than a
landlord—
If I could just finish, you're
looking after a home, you're making sure the tenants are
safe and healthy, you're looking after their well-being,
you're complying with the legislation. All other landlords
are affected by this too. And they too were subject to the
Tenancy Tribunal decisions which said that if you put
somebody into a home that had contamination above the
guidelines for manufacturing, but even if it was due for
use, then the landlord was liable for damages against those
tenants. So that's the environment that the organisation was
working within. And in terms of the change, we have begun
that already. As I have said, it is over a year now since we
evicted anyone. We have moved on. We have changed. We've
stopped seeking damages from tenants. So the organisation is
different, and it will continue to change and improve. And
there are some very concrete steps outlined in our report
which we will be taking to make sure that we embed that
change in Housing New Zealand.
But you keep
saying you're a landlord, just like other private landlords
were held to these standards. You're more than a landlord,
and you were more than a landlord then too. Your kaupapa was
to build lives by housing people — 'build lives', that's
from your own website and your own statements.
Yeah, 'Building lives and communities by
housing New Zealanders', which is—
But you
didn't do that, though, did you?
That is the
vision for the organisation. We developed that at the end of
last year to reflect our move from being a landlord to being
a public housing landlord. As I say, I arrived here two
years ago. The first thing I did when I got here was look at
the direction of the organisation and understand whether we
were operating in a way that was aligned with exactly that
vision. So we developed it, so that's been there in the last
two years. And because of that vision, and because of the
direction we're taking around keeping people in homes, we
came to the decision that we would move from evicting and
not rehousing to keeping people in homes, rehousing them,
finding agencies that could support people to deal with the
issues that were causing them problems.
And
that's your approach in the last year.
For the
last two years we've had that approach.
Are
you telling people that the entire culture of your
organisation has been sorted in 12 to 18 months, and
everything is all good?
So, we're a big
organisation. And all big organisations will occasionally
have pieces of the organisation, whether processes or
people, who will let them down. But I can tell you very,
very clearly that the organisation's modus operandi, the
policies we work to, the processes we work to, are all being
changed to align with keeping people in homes. That's why we
decided last year not to evict people. That's why we are now
working and we have very close relationships with other
agencies who are supporting these people in our homes. One
of the things that you need to realise is that when you come
and live in one of our homes, you come normally supported by
a multiplicity of other government agencies. And we're
making sure we are working with them so that we're able to
support them, cope with the different slings and arrows that
life has thrown at these people who live in our
homes.
So you don't evict people now, but you
did. So how many children were kicked out of their homes
under that meth-testing regime?
So, we know
that post-2013 around 800 households were moved out
and—
Yeah, how many were
children?
Well, we don't know the exact
numbers, because our records are kept based on the lead
tenant, who will be an adult. On average, there would be
three people in each of our homes. So we're talking probably
1200 to 1500 of the tenants affected would have been
children.
Right. And you don't know what
happened to most of those people, do you? Most of those
people that you evicted, you have no idea what became of
them.
That's correct. So there are some
households that we're unable to contact.
So
with all those children in those households that were kicked
out, you sent them off, you don't know what's happened to
them. Is that because you simply just didn't care enough
about them?
I think— Again, I go back. The
organisation was a landlord, and while you were living in
one of our homes, we obviously kept the records and we
understood what was going on. Once you had moved out and you
weren't living in one of our houses, then the organisation
didn't keep—
These are our most vulnerable
people, and you were responsible for
them.
We were responsible for housing
them. And when we stopped being responsible for housing
them, we obviously didn't keep those records. What we're now
doing is reaching out, using those other agencies that are
supporting those families, to find out where they are, so
that we can go and ensure that they have the assistance and
support they need in their lives.
So,
obviously this happened over an extended period of time, as
you pointed out. But you started in early 2017, didn't you,
in this role?
Well, late 2016,
yeah.
OK, so you— it continued on your
watch. The enforcement of the policy continued on your
watch, until you changed.
So, yeah. So, what
happened— There's a lot of issues that you need to get
right here. One of them is staff health and safety, and that
was one of the key concerns that drove the previous approach
taken. So once we had established that we could safely —
and we had staff lined up, so that they were comfortable
with the new approach we were taking, were able to implement
it.
So do you think you're the right person to
stay on and do this job, given that you were part of a
process that is now recognised as being grossly
flawed?
I think if you listen to— The
decision as to whether I'm not appropriate is something that
the board, obviously in discussion with the Minister, will
make. You heard him yesterday say he has confidence in the
board. He's got confidence in the direction the organisation
is taking, with my leadership.
What about you?
Do you think you're the right
person?
Certainly I think that, since I've
been here, I've made some very positive changes, and led
them, to the organisation — positive for our tenants,
positive for our employees.
Are you 100%
comfortable and confident in the board? Because they were
complicit in a lot of the decisions made. The report has
said they basically abdicated, in some cases, their
decision-making responsibilities to people in management. It
kind of sounds like they were asleep at the wheel. So do you
have confidence—?
It's not my role to have
confidence in my board.
You've got to work
with them, though.
That's the Minister's
role, so he'll determine who he is comfortable with leading
the board. And as he said yesterday, he is comfortable with
the board and has every confidence in them. He has appointed
some new members to the board. So he's taken some action
there. But he certainly expressed confidence in the board
yesterday. That is not my role to make that
judgement.
But change comes from the top,
doesn't it? Change, especially in culture, has to come from
the top. And if most of the people at the top are the people
who were at the top when things went horribly wrong, people
will question whether you are able to make those
changes.
So I think, first of all, the
people who are at the top are the people who have led the
change already, and changed approach, and that's certainly
something that's been acknowledged by the Minister and is
clearly set out in the report — that the change process
had begun, people were doing thing differently, the
organisation was doing things differently. So that changed
had happened.
So this report, now, says that
you'll be paying out discretionary grants, basically — up
to $3000 to affected tenants.
That's not
correct. Just to be really clear, what we'll be doing is
we'll be providing assistance to tenants and it will be
treated on a case-by-case basis as to how much money they
should be provided.
It's capped, though, isn't
it?
No, it's not capped. In the report, the
indicative numbers, based on the assistance we provided to
other people — because obviously people want to know,
what's it going to cost us?
So you could pay
more than that figure?
Absolutely, we will.
There will be some larger households where we'd certainly
expect it. So that was the average on the assistance that we
provided to people in the past when they were moved out of
their homes—
It is based on material loss,
though, isn't it?
Yeah. So, if I could just
finish, the compensation was paid to people who were deemed
not to have caused contamination, and it was based on
putting right the cost that they had incurred through loss
of goods and for any moving costs. And so we will be
following the same approach. We think it's fair and
reasonable to do exactly the same to those tenants who were
moved out and weren't rehoused.
Right. So, on
average, it was around $3000. You are prepared to pay more
than that, depending on what the losses
are.
We did pay more than that in the past,
and we expect to do that.
But it's material
losses, isn't it? Like costs of moving, if your belongings
were destroyed as a result of contamination. I'm just
wondering, what about the emotional stress, the loss of
mana, the trauma, the having to house your kids again, and
maybe them having disrupted education — what about all
that stuff? What's that worth?
So, the
assistance we're providing is, exactly as you've said, to
compensate them for the material loss. Those other elements,
we've been in, we've reviewed how government pays... assists
people in these circumstances, and the approach we have
taken fits with what government has done in the past. Of
course, if there are other redress people are seeking, then
they are still able to do that. This is simply about
-
You mean through legal
action?
This is about putting right what
we've done, in terms of those costs we have caused to those
households through moving them out of their homes. As part
of the assistance, we'll also be looking to rehouse them.
And we are also looking at how we work with the other
agencies who are supporting them, to make sure that is done
in a way that deals with any issues that they have, as a
family or as a person.
You're no longer going
to have to return a profit to the government. So that is so
that, Mr Twyford says, you can build more houses and also
meet your welfare obligations to your tenants. What kind of
money will that mean is directed into those areas — the
looking after the welfare of your
tenants?
So, if you look at the welfare of
our tenant, the first thing that we have is we have to give
them a safe, healthy home. So, our stock is old. We're in
the middle of a huge renewal period of time for our homes.
Over the next 20 years, 45,000 of our 60,000 homes that we
currently own will be renewed. They'll be insulated
properly. They will be refurbished completely, throughout.
So that is a massive programme of work that we're underway.
And that money that the Minister's talking about will help
us pay for that. In terms of the tenancy support, we've
already increased significantly the level of tenancy
managers we have in the organisation. We have specialists
who are now dedicated to dealing with particular tenants who
require additional assistance. We've got a really exciting
development in the middle of Auckland, in Greys Avenue,
where we'll be building a 279-home complex that will include
homes dedicated to those people who have been chronically
homeless. And there will be space for the Common Ground,
Housing First type of services to be provided out of that.
So those are all things that we're introducing in an effort
to make sure that, as a public housing landlord, we can keep
people in our homes and support them to have the dignified,
stable lives that the Minister has talked
about.
All right. Just before we go, you have
acknowledged that, for some families — and this includes
families with kids — that the damage that has been done
may be irreparable in some cases. So I want to give you the
opportunity to speak directly to those people. The camera is
just over there. What would you like to say to
them?
Certainly, to them, we have apologised
for the disruption we've caused to their lives. And we want
to make sure that we assist them to get back into a position
of stability. And we will work with those other agencies who
are supporting them to help deal with the issues that they
have in their lives.
So to those people, what,
you're sorry?
We absolutely
apologise.
You are
sorry?
I apologise. I mean, as an
organisation, we did not do what we should have
done.
Thank you for joining us this morning,
Andrew McKenzie, head of Housing New Zealand. Appreciate
your time.
Thank you.
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