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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Housing Minister Phil Twyford apologises to tenants over meth-testing debacle

Isaac Davison
By Isaac Davison
Senior Reporter·NZ Herald·
31 May, 2018 08:53 PM2 mins to read

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Phil Twyford & Peter Gluckman discuss meth testing.

Compensation is not being ruled out for tenants who were needlessly evicted from state houses because of methamphetamine contamination.

Housing Minister Phil Twyford apologised to affected tenants today and promised a full review of Housing New Zealand's response to the issue.

He has previously said compensation was not an option, despite calling for it while in opposition when the evictions took place.

But today he appeared to change tack.

"I'll look at the facts, then we can have that conversation," he told Radio New Zealand.

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"I'm not ruling it out, I'm not ruling it in."

The inquiry follows a report by Chief Science Adviser Professor Sir Peter Gluckman which said residue from methamphetamine use posed no health risks.

That meant Housing NZ had needlessly evicted tenants over relatively harmless traces of meth, and in some cases required them to pay remediation costs.

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Twyford confirmed today that in the two years to August 2017, 136 tenancies were terminated over meth contamination concerns and 363 individuals were suspended from applying for social housing.

"I want to apologise to people who were affected in this way," he said.

"I think it's appalling what happened."

Transport Minister Phil Twyford during his media conference at Parliament, where he admitted using a cellphone on a commercial flight after the doors had been closed, Wellington. 24 May 2018 New Zeala
Transport Minister Phil Twyford during his media conference at Parliament, where he admitted using a cellphone on a commercial flight after the doors had been closed, Wellington. 24 May 2018 New Zeala

The blame was laid squarely on the National-led Government, who Twyford said had "played along with the hysteria" over meth contamination and had "failed to provide any kind of leadership".

Former Social Housing Minister Paula Bennett was "gutless" for not fronting up and apologising, he said.

The inquiry would be exhaustive, looking at how many houses were tested, what the results were, and why each tenant was evicted.

Gluckman's report found that remediation in most cases was needed only in homes that had been former clan labs producing the drugs and where meth has been heavily used.

"I can't see the point of testing, full stop, unless the police or the forensics suspect it has been a place of synthesis," he said.

His report says that levels that exceed the current standard of 1.5mcg/100cm2 should not signal a health risk and exposure 10 times higher (15mcg/100cm2) would also be unlikely to have any adverse effects.

Because the risk is so low, testing is not warranted in most cases, the report said.

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It is likely to spell the end of the meth-testing industry, which has grown in recent years as alarm has over the effects of third-hand meth exposure.

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