VACANCIES

Work with us

If you're driven to create change and uplift whānau, your journey could start with us.

At Te Whare, we walk alongside whānau, helping them heal and restore oranga.
Our mahi is woven through the values of Te Hāhi Mihingare (the Māori Anglican Church) and kaupapa Māori, guiding everything we do:

Auaha - Nurturing creativity and innovation
Te Ao Māori - Honouring the past, present and future of the Māori world
Pono - Acting with integrity
Tika - Doing what is right and just
Aroha -  Giving unconditional and compassionate service
Tū Tangata - Pursuit for excellence
Tumanako - Releasing the aspirations

Accredited Living Wage Employer

If these values resonate with you, check out the job opportunities below

Current vacancies

Kairuruku | Social Worker

We currently have two full-time Kairuruku (Social Worker) positions available within our Sexual Harm Services team based in Kaitaia.

In these roles you'll provide vital support to tamariki, rangatahi, or adults, assisting whānau facing various challenges. Your responsibilities will include intervention, advocacy, safety planning, assessment, and therapeutic support.
For more information and to apply visit the link below

Kia Ora Ake Cultural Liaison Māori 

Kia Ora Ake is the locally co-designed tamariki hinengaro wellbeing approach for Counties Manukau and forms part of the national Mana Ake programme. We support primary and intermediate-aged tamariki, their whānau, kura and schools through early intervention, group-based programmes, whānau engagement and coordinated pathways.

We're searching for someone to fill the Kia Ora Ake Cultural Liaison Māori, key to helping identify barriers that impact access and participation for tamariki Māori, whānau Māori and other priority communities, and contribute to practical solutions that improve the service experience.

The is a cross-rohe role working alongside Kia Ora Ake providers, Kaiārahi, Kaimanaaki, kura, schools, whānau and community partners. You'll support whakawhanaungatanga across the service network, strengthen trust and help kaimahi and providers hold culturally grounded practice in day-to-day delivery also supporting providers to engage well with kura and whānau, particularly where local context, tikanga, whakapapa, whenua connections, trust-building or cultural clarity are important.