Daily Express

Scandal of students forced to pay up for digs they cannot use

- By Steph Spyro

ANGRY university students have threatened to hold back thousands of pounds in rent for accommodat­ion they cannot use because of the pandemic.

Youngsters across the country have lodged disputes with their halls of residence or private accommodat­ion companies and are calling for refunds.

Thousands of students signed contracts for their digs believing lessons would take place on campus – but then moved home when teaching shifted online.

Many students in university-run halls have been offered refunds and discounts. But some in private rented houses have been threatened with legal action if they fail to pay.

The Daily Express is backing the pleas of desperate students asking to be better treated through the pandemic with our Fair Deal For Students crusade.

Several students from Northumbri­a University, in Newcastle, have lodged complaints with Abodus Student Living.

They claim the company has bombarded them with calls, emails and letters demanding payment.

They were reportedly told they could cancel the one-year contract under very strict conditions.

But lockdown and the cancellati­on of in-person teaching was not being treated as exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, it was said. One student, who did not want to be named, said he moved into the Portland Green halls last year and stayed for 14 days before in-person teaching was halted and he moved home. He said he was withholdin­g more than £2,000 from a private accommodat­ion firm, who have reportedly threatened to call his guarantor if he does not pay up.

The student, in his 20s, said: “I’m more than happy to pay for when I was there, which I have, but I cannot justify paying over £2,000 for somewhere I haven’t clicked a light switch on.

“I get we’ve signed a contract for that place until June but we weren’t to know this [online learning] was going to happen. It’s been quite stressful as well knowing that they’re going to try and threaten legal action.” Swansea University students are threatenin­g to withhold more than £120,000 in rent for rooms they have been unable to use.

The university has pledged a reduction between January 4 and February 15 for those living in four halls of residences, but some felt this did not go far enough. Students are looking to hold a rent strike and are calling for a mass refund. A spokeswoma­n for the university said: “We are working through the implicatio­ns of the stay at home advice, which came from the Government after some students had returned.”

Meanwhile, some accommodat­ion offered to students during the pandemic has generated dozens of formal complaints about damp, dirt, smells, noise and vermin, a Freedom of Informatio­n request has revealed.

One gripe at the University of Greenwich highlighte­d the plight of a student who was self-isolating. Her room was said to be in “a terrible condition” with a broken bed.

The person logging the complaint said: “She is mentally and psychologi­cally exhausted.

“She is not sleeping at all, crying all day long and does not have any support whatsoever, rather the opposite.”

The complainan­t criticised the university for “the total lack of any support and empathy” shown, and added: “She was treated like some under-human.”

Christophe­r McGovern, chairman of the Campaign for Real Education, said: “Too many universiti­es are enticing young people on to second rate courses, fleecing them with exorbitant course fees and then dumping them in third-rate accommodat­ion. This is disgracefu­l.

“At a time of a pandemicin­duced mental health crisis, students deserve better than being treated as scum of the earth cash cows while university bosses swan around on bloated salaries and expense accounts.”

The 61 complaints, which were all logged from students from the start of the academic year in September, uncovered details about how the standard of accommodat­ion was affecting their mental health and learning.

The National Union of Students said: “It is unacceptab­le that students are being charged extortiona­te rents for substandar­d accommodat­ion.”

Abodus, which houses 1,500 students in Newcastle alone, declined to comment when the Daily Express contacted them for a response.

A University of Greenwich spokeswoma­n said: “We’re providing hall fee refunds to students who can’t access their accommodat­ion, giving £1,000 to those struggling in private rentals and offering extensive wellbeing support.”

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 ??  ?? Rent rows...the Portland Green Student Village, in Newcastle, and campus buildings at Swansea University
Rent rows...the Portland Green Student Village, in Newcastle, and campus buildings at Swansea University

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