Green PartyTuesday 14 December 2010, 9:56AM
Media release from the Green Party
On the sixth day of Christmas, the Green Party today showed how
targeted policies can improve child health and wellbeing, in
response to the release of the Children's Social Health Monitor
report.
"Every child deserves to grow up healthy and safe. This requires a
secure home, good food, access to essentials like footwear and
raincoats, and a safe environment to live and play in," Green Party
Co-leader Metiria Turei said.
"If we can guarantee these things, we can ensure that every child
gets the best possible start in life.
"The Children's Social Health Monitor report shows that even before
the current economic crisis, many of our Maori and Pacific kids,
and kids from deprived areas, had very different childhoods than
kids from wealthier families. This hurts their health during
childhood, and their chances for life.
"The report warns that in the current economic climate, families
will be forced to take further steps - like fitting more people
under one roof, and cutting down on heating - that have severe
health consequences for our kids," Mrs Turei said.
Mrs Turei said that having this information provided the
opportunity to make targeted interventions to improve child health
and wellbeing.
"The Green Party has targeted solutions to change this picture,
such as building new state houses, investing in job creation, and
focussing the welfare system on child wellbeing.
"We know that inadequate and overcrowded housing contributes to the
appallingly high rate of rheumatic fever for New Zealand kids.
Building new state houses will put more kids in healthy
houses.
"Building 6,000 new state houses in the next three years will also
create around 28,000 desperately-needed new jobs, which could help
thousands of families out of poverty.
"The other side of the equation is to ensure that kids whose
parents rely on a benefit also get the best start in life.
"We can do that by extending Working for Families support to those
kids, re-instating a training allowance to help their parents to
upskill, and focusing welfare changes on the goal of child
wellbeing.
"These solutions are part of our Christmas wishlist that would
guarantee the essentials for our kids, narrow the gap between the
haves and the have-nots, and help to build a strong community
that's better for everyone," Mrs Turei said.
Each working day between now and Christmas, the Green Party is
highlighting a key issue related to inequality, and presenting
Green solutions to those issues.
Reference:
Children's Social Health
Monitor