The refuge is also providing a residential transition programme for up to 10 ex-prisoners to live at a Te Whakaruruhau home. It will be a home for six to 12 months where social and living skills are taught, relationship and personal counselling are provided and advocacy for employment is provided alongside training and accommodation.
There's not a lot of money around for programmes such as Te Whakaruruhau's which so far has been partially government-funded for a year, Ms Albert said.
Zane Wharewaka, 36, was released from Te Ao Marama in February and counts himself lucky he lives at the home. He's setting simple goals for himself - to get a job on his own, settle down, sit on an aeroplane for the first time, complete a computer course.
Te Ao Marama was the beginning of change for him. It "unlocked" a place where he'd shoved his Maori identity away. He'd been in jail three times but the unit taught him skills he'd never had before: How to communicate with a person properly and expect the same in return. Te Whakaruruhau is an extension of Te Ao Marama and it's a haven for him. He volunteers at the refuge. It's a sobering experience cleaning up homes after a woman has been beaten.
"I never had respect for women but now I can see what they go thorough and how hard it really is for them to put up with all the bulls***, looking after the kids when you're gone to jail."