Case Study_Monte Cecilia_FINAL
21 July professional development events
21 July 2-5pm – Community Housing Aotearoa event
Best Practice Guide to Accreditation
This participatory workshop will present the updated Best Practice Standards setting the requirements for accreditation under the Community Housing Accreditation Programme administered by GlobalMark. The standards have been revised to reflect best practice and the regulatory settings in New Zealand aligning with the Community Housing Regulatory Authority (CHRA) registration criteria.
Join us to learn how your organisation can embark on the journey of continuous improvement to earn accreditation. The workshop is designed to assist organisations to identify the policies they need, the processes to implement them and the documents which record their progress toward excellence in community housing provision.
This is a must for all community housing providers looking to be accredited and for assuring continual improvement in housing delivery for those already accredited. The workshop presenters are Chris Glaudel and Marc Slade.
Chris Glaudel
Chris Glaudel is the Deputy Director at Community Housing Aotearoa (CHA). Hailing from the United States, Chris brings over 20 years of experience in community development with core skills in housing finance, development, asset management and policy. He has overseen the development of affordable ownership and rental homes in central California and was responsible for the asset management of properties throughout California. A particular emphasis of his housing work has been supporting housing opportunities for persons experiencing homelessness and/or serious mental illness.
Marc Slade
Marc has 25 years management experience in local and central Government and in the not-for-profit sectors in the UK and New Zealand. He has experience in consultancy, social housing and central government policy. Marc has worked in housing consultancy, tenancy management, homelessness, stock transfer, policy and governance roles. He has also worked with the Community Housing Regulatory Authority in New Zealand and is a certified lead auditor for Global-Mark for the current CHA Community Housing Accreditation Scheme. Marc has a degree in Housing Studies and post graduate Diploma in Management.
Space is limited to 20 participants so please RSVP by Friday 15 July to [email protected]. To be held at: Idea services, Level 1, 3 Margot Street, Newmarket, Auckland, 2-5pm 21 July. Please note there is NO onsite parking available. Please allow time to find street parking or walk from public transport.
21 July 5.30 -7.00- AHI/CHA networking event
Alan Johnson of The Salvation Army will present on ‘Estimating future demand for social housing’
Kindly sponsored by Harrison and Grierson
About Alan Johnson
Alan Johnson has spent almost 30 years working in housing.This work has involved research and analysis, establishing and running non-government housing organisations, protesting about housing issues and actually building houses.He has degrees in planning and economics from Auckland University and worked for over 10 years in Auckland local government in planning and strategy roles. Alan currently works as a social policy analyst for The Salvation Army’s Social Policy & Parliamentary Unit based in South Auckland.
How many state houses do we need in Auckland?
Released documents suggest that Government is planning for around 24,000 to 25,000 state owned housing units across Auckland and that these will be supplemented by perhaps 1000 units provided by third parties such as community housing organisations.These figures are close to what has been provided in Auckland for the past decade or so and take no account of Auckland’s rapidly growing population or its burgeoning shortage of affordable housing.
This presentation will consider the question of how much social housing is needed in Auckland. However, answering such a question is not straight forward. It relies on various assumptions or propositions around what is an appropriate role for Government to play in housing markets, and the best form of housing assistance to offer.
In answering this question this presentation will briefly critique the Government’s ideological stance around housing in Auckland. It will offer a reframing of solutions to the challenge of providing adequate housing for Auckland’s benefit-reliant and working poor householders.
To be held at Harrison and Grierson, level 1 Dilworth House, 71 Great South Rd, Epsom, Auckland
Register here.
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