"Most are not sleeping on the streets, nor should they have to for the New Zealand Government to show concern and take substantive action. People living in garages, moving in and out of camping grounds over winter months, three families living in a home designed for one -- these are severely inadequate housing situations that New Zealanders should not have to experience," she says.
"The Government has attempted to distract the public from the housing crisis by focusing on the semantics of the word 'homelessness' and by attempting to 'prove' that people living in cars do not want help. These are disturbing displays of the Government continuing to avoid responsibility for a severely disadvantaged population who are at the hardest edge of our housing crisis."
Amore says homelessness is growing in size and scale, and that the prevalence of homelessness grew by 15 per cent between the 2006 and 2013 censuses, compared with a 9 per cent increase between 2001 and 2006.
"There are now at least 41,000 homeless New Zealanders, more than half of whom are younger than 25." she says. "These numbers reflect the internationally-recognised official definition of homelessness that was developed by our Government.
"We all pay a chunk of our incomes to the Government to address the large scale issues that we cannot address individually, including housing, healthcare, and education. We expect better approaches to homelessness than ad-hoc knocking on car windows and motel rooms."