The Scottish Mail on Sunday

As students struggle to make ends meet, uni chiefs live for free in homes worth £60m

- By Jonathan Petre

‘This level of largesse is an embarrassm­ent’

FAT-CAT university bosses are living in lavish rent-free properties worth an estimated £60 million, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Vice-chancellor­s are already under fire for earning salaries of up to £450,000, but at least a third of higher education bosses are also enjoying multi-million pound grace-and-favour homes.

Our findings come as many universiti­es south of the Border prepare to lumber students with even higher debts by raising tuition fees to £9,250 next month, while staff face being axed because of budget cutbacks.

In April, almost all universiti­es in England won the right to introduce annual increases to tuition fees until 2020-21 – without guaranteei­ng any improvemen­t to teaching.

An analysis of figures by the University and College Union (UCU) provided by 24 universiti­es reveals their grace-and-favour properties are worth at least £28million – an average of £1.2million per residence. Further research shows that at least 49 universiti­es in the UK provide rent-free accommodat­ion to their chiefs – which would bring the total to more than £58.8million if the average market value applies across the board.

The most expensive – the imposing vice-chancellor’s lodge at Cambridge University, which is worth more than £4.5 million – is currently undergoing a refit costing nearly £700,000. The detached property is surrounded by mature trees in a conservati­on area on a private road which ‘retains the character of a country lane’.

Documents seen by The Mail on Sunday show that ‘operationa­l improvemen­ts’ are under way before the arrival of the new vicechance­llor, Professor Stephen Toope, who is expected to be paid in excess of £400,000.

The university said the refit was needed to enhance the lodge as an ‘events venue’.

Other examples of luxury accommodat­ion include a £1.2 million Victorian townhouse in Glasgow, bought by the University of Strathclyd­e and now enjoyed by vicechance­llor Professor Jim McDonald.

During a £339,000 refit of the home in 2014, £4,000 was spent on a wardrobe and £3,400 on sofas.

Leicester University vice-chancellor Professor Paul Boyle’s residence, Knighton Hall, is a 17th Century manor house worth at least £1.2 million. The university has imposed a series of cost-cutting measures in recent years, including a plan to save £2.5million through redundanci­es. A spokesman said the residence was used to host guests and the number of enforced redundanci­es was ‘very small’.

At the University of East Anglia, vice-chancellor Professor David Richardson lives at Wood Hall, a 17th Century farmhouse worth more than £1.7million. The period house is described as ‘a delightful small country house of character and historical patina’. It also emerged last week that more than £100,000 was spent at Oxford University on a makeover of vice-chancellor Louise Richardson’s £2million grace-and-favour home before she moved in last year.

Professor Richardson’s previous position was principal of St Andrews University.

UCU general secretary Sally Hunt said: ‘This is yet another example of leadership largesse which is an embarrassm­ent to the sector. While students rack up enormous debts to pay for university, and academic staff on casual contracts struggle to get mortgages, many vice-chancellor­s enjoy rent-free accommodat­ion at the expense of the university.

‘Universiti­es argue that these properties are also used for formal events, but as tuition fees continue to rise, questions must be asked about whether this level of subsidy for well-paid leaders is really justifiabl­e.’

Earlier this month it was also revealed that Professor John Hughes, vice-chancellor of Bangor University, lives in a country house which his institutio­n bought for him for £475,000 before it embarked on a lavish programme of renovation­s costing £267,000.

Many vice-chancellor­s also have council tax, utility bills, gardening and cleaning costs paid for.

 ??  ?? CAMBRIDGE: £4.5m FIRST-CLASS: The grace-and-favour homes enjoyed by Cambridge vice-chancellor Professor Stephen Toope and Oxford’s Professor Louise Richardson
CAMBRIDGE: £4.5m FIRST-CLASS: The grace-and-favour homes enjoyed by Cambridge vice-chancellor Professor Stephen Toope and Oxford’s Professor Louise Richardson
 ??  ?? GLASGOW £1.2m LAVISH: The elegant residences of Strathclyd­e University chief Professor Jim McDonald and his counterpar­t at Leicester University, Professor Paul Boyle
GLASGOW £1.2m LAVISH: The elegant residences of Strathclyd­e University chief Professor Jim McDonald and his counterpar­t at Leicester University, Professor Paul Boyle
 ??  ?? OXFORD: £2m
OXFORD: £2m
 ??  ?? LEICESTER: £1.2m
LEICESTER: £1.2m

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