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NZ's oldest school ordered to urgently close hostels due to 'harmful incidents'

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Mon, 3 Nov 2025, 11:05am
Wesley College, in Pukekohe, was established in 1844 and is New Zealand's oldest registered secondary school. Photo / file
Wesley College, in Pukekohe, was established in 1844 and is New Zealand's oldest registered secondary school. Photo / file

NZ's oldest school ordered to urgently close hostels due to 'harmful incidents'

Author
Lane Nichols,
Publish Date
Mon, 3 Nov 2025, 11:05am

The Ministry of Education has ordered the country鈥檚 oldest school to close its hostels at the end of this week after further serious and 鈥渉armful鈥 incidents related to student safety.

Wesley College鈥檚 hostels have been the subject of scrutiny for more than two years after allegations of violence and assaults among boarders at the Paerata school on Auckland鈥檚 southern border.

Wesley鈥檚 trust board itself acknowledged 鈥渙ngoing concerns about student safety and hostel culture鈥 and last month announced it would close its hostels at the end of term 4 on December 10.

The Herald can today reveal that the Ministry of Education has moved to close the hostels early and has suspended Wesley鈥檚 licence to house boarders, effective from this Friday.

The ministry said the Education Review Office (ERO) had recommended the suspension.

Wesley College said today it is seeking urgent legal advice about the suspension.

The Herald understands some parents of Wesley boarders are unaware of the ministry鈥檚 decision that was communicated to the school at the end of last week. The school says it is seeking urgent legal advice on the ministry鈥檚 move.

鈥淭his decision [to close the hostels] follows a pattern of serious and ongoing concerns about the safety and wellbeing of boarders,鈥 the Ministry of Education鈥檚 Sean Teddy said in a statement.

鈥淲hile some improvements have been made since special conditions were imposed on the hostel鈥檚 renewed licence in April 2025, further serious incidents have occurred this year. These incidents have highlighted persistent issues with student safety, staff oversight, and the hostel鈥檚 ability to shift away from longstanding practices that place boarders at risk,鈥 Teddy said.

ERO鈥檚 recommendation to suspend the licence was made in a September report. The office has refused a request from the Herald to proactively release that report.

Teddy said that the ERO鈥檚 recommendation, 鈥渁longside the Ministry鈥檚 own monitoring and the recurrence of harmful incidents, has led to the conclusion that continued operation of the hostel in its current state is not in the best interests of boarders鈥.

Wesley College is on Auckland's southern border. Photo / file

Wesley College is on Auckland's southern border. Photo / file

While international boarders and any students sitting NCEA assessments will be able to stay on to complete the term, all others must leave by this Friday.

鈥淭hese safeguards apply solely to the interim exam period of Term 4, 2025. The hostel remains subject to closure in 2026, as previously announced by the Wesley College Trust Board, and the licence remains suspended as outlined in the official Suspension Notice,鈥 Teddy said.

鈥淭he ministry remains focused on making sure that all boarders are safe and supported and will continue to work closely with the school and families to manage this transition.鈥

Trust board chair Jan Tasker said in a statement to the Herald today: 鈥淲e are meeting with the Ministry and will be in a position to provide comment after that. The board is seeking urgent legal advice in relation to steps taken by the ministry.鈥

鈥楧eep, structural change is required鈥 - school bosses

Wesley College announced last month that the hostels would close at the end of this term 鈥渇or a period sufficient to ensure meaningful and lasting improvements are achieved.鈥

The school said the decision followed 鈥渙ngoing concerns about student safety and hostel culture鈥 and that its trust board accepted 鈥渇urther deep, structural change is required鈥.

鈥淪tudent safety and wellbeing are our highest priority,鈥 Tasker said last month.

鈥淲e acknowledge that our hostel provision has not yet met the consistent standard we expect. Closing the hostels is a decisive step that will allow us to reset the culture, systems, and facilities once and for all.鈥

A history of violence

Wesley College was established in 1844 and describes itself as the country鈥檚 oldest registered school. A special character school, it is tied to the Methodist Church of New Zealand.

The school was placed under statutory management in 2023 after allegations emerged of bullying and violence at the school, including reports of 鈥渃overings鈥, in which students were made to cover their faces before being punched, kicked and slapped by older students.

In April that year, the Herald reported that Oranga Tamariki was working with police to investigate a 鈥渞eport of concern鈥.

At the time, principal Brian Evans said the school鈥檚 trust board welcomed the support 鈥渢o assist us in our progress towards being an exemplary model of change鈥.

In response to 鈥渟ignificant concerns鈥, ERO said it commissioned a special review of the college and its hostel operations.

鈥淭he school board and hostel management of Wesley College have a duty of care to ensure all learners at the school and all boarders in the hostel are physically and emotionally safe.鈥

ERO鈥檚 special review, released in June 2023, recommended that improvements were required in hostel governance and leadership, health and safety, complaints processes and the quality of care for boarders.

Lane Nichols is Auckland desk editor for the New Zealand Herald with more than 20 years鈥 experience in the industry.

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