Ministry of Housing and Urban Development


The Ministry of Housing and Urban Development is a cabinet-level public service department responsible for overseeing the New Zealand Government's housing and urban development programme. It formally came into existence on 1 October 2018 and assumes the housing policy, funding and regulatory functions of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, the Ministry of Social Development, and the New Zealand Treasury. It is headed by the Minister of Housing Megan Woods and the Minister of Urban Development Phil Twyford.

History

On 8 June 2018, Housing Minister Phil Twyford announced the creation of the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development to coordinate the New Zealand Government's efforts to combat the country's housing shortage and to facilitate the provision of affordable social housing. The new ministry was established on 1 August and commenced operating on 1 October 2018. While Twyford argued that the new ministry would "restore the basic right to healthy, affordable housing for all New Zealanders", the opposition National Party Housing Spokesperson Judith Collins and housing lobby group the Property Institute's Chief Executive Ashley Church questioned its effectiveness.
In mid-January, the Head of KiwiBuild Stephen Barclay resigned following a disagreement with Twyford over transferring oversight of the building programme from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment to Housing and Urban and Development. Later reports indicated that staff, advisers, and contractors were dissatisfied with Barclay's management style and leadership. In response, Barclay announced that he was filing a "constructive dismissal case" against the Ministry alleging they had breached his privacy. This development accompanied the Housing Minister's acknowledgement that the Government was unable to deliver on its target of building 1,000 homes by 1 July 2019.
Following a cabinet reshuffle in late June 2019, the Housing and Urban Development ministry was split into two separate portfolios. Megan Woods became Minister of Housing while Twyford was demoted to Minister of Urban Development. This new division of labour came in response to the failure of the Labour-led coalition government's flagship KiwiBuild scheme. Kris Faafoi was appointed as Associate Minister of Housing with responsibility for urban housing while Nanaia Mahuta was appointed Associate Minister of Housing with responsibility for Māori housing.

Functions

The Ministry of Housing and Urban Development is responsible for advising and delivering the Government's housing and urban development programme. Key priorities include addressing homelessness, increasing public and private housing supply, promoting healthier and warmer homes, making housing more affordable to rent and to buy, and supporting quality urban development and thriving communities.
HUD consolidates a range of housing policy, funding, and regulatory functions from the following government departments:
and public housing policy.
The HUD is in charge of the Government's KiwiBuild scheme project. It also works closely with MBIE, MSD, the Treasury, Te Puni Kōkiri, Housing New Zealand, and Corrections New Zealand.

Leadership and structure

HUD comes under the oversight of Housing Minister Megan Woods, Minister of Urban Development Phil Twyford, Associate Minister of Housing Kris Faafoi, and Associate Minister of Housing Nanaia Mahuta. The HUD's leadership team consists of Chief Executive Andrew Crisp, DCE Policy Jo Hughes, DCE Public Housing Supply Scott Gallacher, Head of People and Culture Catherine Taylor, Chief Financial Office Jo Hogg, Head of the Office of Chief Executive Brad Ward, and DCE Strategy Development Nick Maling.
The HUD is also assisted by a Ministerial Advisory Group that serves an advisory role. As of 2019, the Advisory Group consists of: