Data and research consistently show that renters in our motu live in the worst houses. Rental homes are more likely to be cold, damp, draughty, and unaffordable for the people living there. As these households spend more of their income on rent, they have less to spend on power bills, which adds to how unhealthy rentals can be.
Tenant advocates are professionals who work either one on one or with a systemic approach to support tenant rights that meet the needs of the renting population. In Ōtautahi Christchurch, we have a network of tenant advocates who meet regularly and work together.
There are also national groups working to protect tenants health and wellbeing. People living in social rental housing, owned and rented out by the Government or funded by the Government, have better health and wellbeing compared to people living in private rentals. This is because social housing is more likely of better quality, so warmer and drier, and because these are secure tenancies that will only end if residents start making too much money to qualify for this house.
The Healthy homes standards set the quality standards that private rentals must meet to keep rentals warm, dry, and healthy for tenants. It is much harder to enforce these standards on private rentals as ownership is so spread out around our population. This means that currently tenants need to stand up for their own rights to a healthy home and understand what the standards are.
Related links
Christchurch Tenants Advocacy Network members — Will need to add product number to document so we can upload to HealthEd and link to it there.
Healthy homes — Tenancy Services
Wellbeing in public housing vs. private rentals — Public Health Communication Centre Aotearoa
Finding a good rental property — Aratohu tenant advocacy
Tools — Life When Renting