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RNZ News
04-08-2025
- Health
- RNZ News
Oranga Tamariki practice of motel accommodation continues despite calls to stop
Oranga Tamariki does not know how or when it will be able to avoid using motels. Photo: RNZ Children in Oranga Tamariki care are still being checked into motels despite years of calls to stop. The Children's Commissioner said the "unacceptable" practice had become normalised, and the agency itself agreed it was not okay. But Oranga Tamariki did not yet know how or when it could avoid using motels. "No one really thinks it's ideal that children and young people stay in motels," said tamariki and whānau services national commissioner North Alison Cronin. "I think it's still happening because we really do have a lack of ... immediate resources for children who are coming into care, or their placements may have broken down." Figures released to RNZ showed in 2022, 224 children in Oranga Tamariki care stayed in motels. That dropped to 187 in 2023, then 185 last year. In the first five months of this year, 99 have stayed in motels. Since 2022 the most common length of stay was one night, but the average was 19 nights - which Oranga Tamariki said was skewed due to the few who had longer stays, some for more than 100 nights. Motels were only used as a last resort "following a careful exploration of possible alternatives," the agency said. Some children were placed in motels because of "extremely challenging" behaviours that put themselves or others at risk. For others, Oranga Tamariki said it was better for the children to be in a place where it's easier to keep up family contact, go to school or access support services while a longer term placement was being arranged. The young people - which include babies less than a year old - are cared for by family members, care providers or "briefly" by Oranga Tamariki staff. They were supported to maintain their routines like school, community activities, and contact with family, it said. Cronin said Oranga Tamariki was exploring how to stop the use of motels, but she could not give a timeframe on that piece of work. "We haven't quite got the answers at the moment," she said. "I think one of the the major issues is we don't have enough physical homes or houses or places for children to stay, which is why we end up defaulting to motels." Children's Commissioner Dr Claire Achmad said that it was isolating and unstable for children. "If we look at the data, it's clear that unfortunately this practice has become somewhat normalised over the last few years and Oranga Tamariki needs to focus on it as one of the basics that it needs to get right, and it needs to change," she said. "It needs to increase its availability of pre-approved caregivers and over the long term, I'd really like to see more community based group home living environments available for children in need of care and protection." Achmad also wanted people across the country to consider becoming caregivers. "I encourage people to step up and consider whether they might be able to take on this kind of role, which can make a huge difference for children and young people." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


BBC News
30-05-2025
- General
- BBC News
Scotland's travellers suffered 'cultural genocide', report says
Social experiments on Scotland's Gypsy travellers - including children being forcibly taken into care - were a form of "cultural genocide", new research schemes operated across Scotland in the last century which aimed to "settle" travellers by forcing them to leave their lives on the road for permanent settlements.A draft report of independent research commissioned by the Scottish government suggests there was also a "forced and systematic initiative" to remove traveller children from their families and Scottish government said it recognised that Gypsy traveller communities had been adversely affected through historical policies and would set out its response to the research soon. Efforts to "assimilate" travellers into Scottish society were first documented in the late 1800s, with the authorities wanting to force Gypsies into "normal" operation, known as the "Tinker Experiment", ran from the 1940s to 1980s and was supported by UK governments and Scottish local authorities at the time. In 2023 the Scottish government asked independent academics to research this experiment in the available archives.A draft of their findings was completed in September last year, and has been seen by BBC said that in addition to the well-documented housing issues, there was a "forced and systematic initiative to remove Gypsy/traveller children from their families and communities".This saw traveller children being placed into care, forced to attend industrial schools or adopted by non-traveller families in Scotland and report, produced by academics working for the Third Generation Project at the University of St Andrews, said churches, charities, local authorities, the police and the UK government's Scottish Office all played a role in academics recommend the Scottish government, as the body now responsible for the issue, issues an apology and consider paying compensation to those affected. 'Truths buried for decades' The draft report says that the apology should be for the polices, such as the Tinker Experiments, which "led to the dehumanisation, control, and assimilation" of travellers - as well as "the lack of action to redress these actions that are best characterised as 'cultural genocide'."Members of Scotland's traveller community have been campaigning for an apology for their treatment for years. The report's findings are explored in a new BBC podcast called 'The Cruelty - Stolen Generations'.Presenter Davie Donaldson, who comes from the traveller community, said: "I have spoken to many Scottish travellers whose families have been shattered and split apart because of the forced removal, generation after generation, of their children."This investigation has unearthed truths buried for decades, but now, with the leaked report, we have irrefutable evidence of what survivors and communities have long known - the state was complicit in the removal and segregation of traveller children."For the first time, it is named for what it was - cultural genocide." 'Trying to kill a culture' Martha, who asked for her surname not to be published, said she was forcibly removed from a Scottish traveller camp when she was just six months parents were out working while her grandparents were looking after her and her five siblings and who is now in her sixties, said all the children present were removed and she was eventually adopted by a non-traveller family."Genocide means killing something and that's what they were attempting to do by looks of things," she says."They were trying to kill a culture by taking the kids away, thinking that they would grow up with settled people and be like settled people."I think they should apologise. Because I stand firm in the fact that if it hadn't been for them, I would've known my parents, I would've known my three sisters and my two brothers that we were never told about."Fellow traveller Elizabeth, who also asked for her surname not to be published, said four of her siblings were forcibly removed when she was a 52-year-old said she and two other siblings were only able to stay with their parents because they all hid away in the Fife countryside, away from their traveller said: "We were happy when we were in the camp. We didn't have much, but we were happy."It's kind of destroyed a lot of people's lives, this separating families and taking bairns away from the folk and it should never have happened."They should be made responsible, including the churches and anybody else that was involved in it, because it's affected every one of us. I hope this government we have actually takes action." Understanding events Gypsy travellers were settled on sites across Scotland, including in Aberdeenshire, Argyll, Highlands, Perthshire, Fife and the said it was hard to pinpoint how many were forced from this life, or how many children were forcibly removed from the Scottish government said it had been working with local authorities' body Cosla on a £3m action plan aimed at supporting improvements to accommodation, education, healthcare and access to benefits for the traveller community.A Scottish Government spokesperson said: "We recognise that Gypsy/traveller communities have been adversely affected through historical policies and actions and we want to understand events as fully as possible."We are committed to ensuring the voices of Gypsy/traveller communities are reflected in key decision-making forums and continue to take forward measures in our joint action plan with Cosla to improve outcomes for Gypsy travellers."The spokesperson said the independent archival research had been undertaken to establish key events, decisions and roles and will be officially published in due course, after which the government will consider its next steps.