Queenstown getting a share of $4.5 million for wellbeing post-Covid
Mental wellbeing support is being rolled out to five South Island communities, including Queenstown most affected by the absence of international tourists.
Tourism Minister Stuart Nash is in the resort Thursday to announce details of how tourism operators and communities can access the $4.5 million support.
It is part of the government’s $200 million Tourism Communities: Support, Recovery and Re-set Plan, announced in May.
"Agreements have now been put in place with District Health Boards in the lower South Island to deliver this crucial support to regional communities," Nash said.
"The $4.5 million investment allows DHBs to provide support in, Queenstown Lakes and Fiordland (Southern DHB), KaikÅura (Canterbury DHB), Mackenzie District (South Canterbury DHB), and Westland (West Coast DHB).
"The DHBs will provide a range of mental well-being services and initiatives at a local level. They will work with communities to decide what’s needed and how it’s delivered.
More information is available on the Tourism Recovery section of the MBIE website.
"Businesses, workers and their families in our tourism destinations are facing challenges from border closures designed to keep New Zealand safe.
"The support in the Tourism Communities Plan allows decisions about wellbeing resources and services to be made by those at the heart of the communities themselves."
Southern DHB will receive $3 million of the funding, spread over two years.
SDHB Mental Health Director of Allied Health, Adell Cox, welcomed the funding, which will fast-track some initiatives.
"It has been a very tough 12 months for industries and communities that depend on travellers, and for our international residents who are far from their families and friends and may be witnessing very tragic effects of the pandemic from afar," Cox says.
"In the past year, we’ve worked closely with agencies and affected communities, and have a good sense of what’s needed to help. In particular, we see opportunities to support our business communities, new parents, migrant communities, young people and some of our older population."
Cox is also chair of Te Hau Toka Southern Lakes Wellbeing (formerly known as the Central-Lakes Mental Wellbeing Recovery Group). It will also progress co-design work with affected communities to find the best ways of meeting their needs, and establish a process to evaluate and support further initiatives that may be proposed by the community, she says.
Nash also said work on further business support initiatives in the five communities is progressing, and more information about eligibility criteria is available.
"Each community now has a lead entity to manage the business support services, and recruitment is underway locally to support them. The initiatives include business advisory support, a grant to implement the advice, and a kick-start fund. They are on track to be available from later next month.
"We want access to this support to be easy for businesses to tap into. Businesses will be talking to one person locally about what support is right for them. I encourage businesses in the five communities to check their eligibility criteria on the MBIE website."
More information is available on the Tourism Recovery section of the MBIE website.
The business support initiatives are:
The government is working with four existing regional organisations to act as lead entities to roll out the business support initiatives in the five South Island communities, including Queenstown Lakes District Council and Great South.