The Province

Returning UVic students caught in housing crunch

- Richard Watts VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST

Students returning to the University of Victoria are expected to have trouble squeezing into the tight housing market.

University policy guarantees accommodat­ion to all first-year students and keeps 2,200-odd spaces in campus housing to comply. But students returning after their freshman year can only apply and cross their fingers.

“There just isn’t enough to meet the demand for students who want to stay on campus,” said Maxwell Nicholson, community relations director for the UVic Students’ Society. “Once you hit second, third and fourth year, you have to apply and just hope for the best.”

Official figures from UVic for 201516, the most recent available, cite a total student body of 21,593 including 18,147 undergradu­ates. Of the undergradu­ates, 3,757 were firstyear students.

UVic estimates the number of students who come from the Victoria area at about 30 per cent. That means more than 10,000 students could need a place to live next month.

Meanwhile, Victoria is dealing with one of the toughest rental-housing markets in Canada.

According to 2015 figures from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., the vacancy rate for rental apartments was 0.6 per cent, down from 2014, when it stood at 1.5 per cent. The national average was 3.3 per cent.

CMHC listed the total number of rental units in Victoria, including houses, apartments and secondary suites, at 50,836.

Joel Lynn, executive director for student services at UVic, said the university has partnered with places4stu­dents. com to help students find housing.

Otherwise, Lynn said, there’s little the university administra­tion can do.

He said the university administra­tion is in the preliminar­y stages of examining the issue, including the idea of building more on-campus housing.

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