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  1. This clearly shows the rot within our society now when people will be so greedy to place tenants in such pitiful living conditions, to live amongst rats, we should put these greedy landlords into boats that are full of rats now and cast them out to sea.

  2. “What did he think of what he saw? (‘He’ being the land agent)

    “I was with a group of architects and everyone was pretty impressed with the views of the Waitakeres,” he said.”

    Ah, yes, the view.

    But anyway, the issue is that these are people who are probably not able to maintain a ‘normal’ tenancy, even in the best of circumstances, and certainly not in this brutal market driven housing market.

    We need a programme to build permanent housing that is delivered alongside access to Mental Health services and Welfare Needs advocacy for those wanting/needing such things.

    This article is worth reading…an interesting, non judgmental attitude to housing, in Utah of all places…

    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/02/housing-first-solution-to-homelessness-utah

  3. John Key and the ‘cusp of a brighter future’…

    And then he left.

    Rats off a sinking ship…

    Hmmmm …. Ratssssss …

    Bill English and ‘ we should be glad we have a low wage economy as that encourages foreign investment’ , …and an out – of – control immigration policy pushing up housing bubbles and speculators running rampant …

    Ratsssssss ….

    Yes,… Ratsssssss…. very , very big Ratsssssss….!

  4. This is now happening in various places all over Auckland, where pieces of land are sold as rezoned land, capable of “intensification”. For instance whole blocks have been zoned for Terrace Housing and Apartment Building (THAB) construction and development around Royal Oak, same around much of Onehunga, near where I live.

    Development potential is the new selling phrase, and as Council has thrown out many rules, developers can build almost any kind of housing they like, either mansions, maximising prices, or multilevel studio apartments, at the minimum size, with little storage and parking, and poor outlook. Imagine what pressures it will create on public transport, on other transport, on water and electricity and other infrastructure needed.

    Schools and ECE centres are already bursting at their seams, and wait, those new dwellings, they will not come cheap, certainly not in the suburbs close to the CBD, nothing will be truly affordable, that word itself, was torn out of the Proposed Auckland Unitary Plan, as it did not suit the agendas of the developers.

    Prepare for more development of poor standards, more ghettos and more social and other issues, Auckland is heading there where other failed cities have ended.

    But of course, some make huge profits, including the real estate agents, who are keen as a rat smelling bounty of food, to get stuck into it. Thank you Nick Smith, thank you National, for neglecting state and social housing, and serving primarily for the interests of the vested interest holding parties, and upper middle class small fry speculators also, now many being property “millionaires”.

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