Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Housing shortage and soaring rents squeeze college students

- By Janie Har

BERKELEY, Calif. — College students squeezed by a massive housing shortage and surging rents are paying too much for moldy apartments, commuting long distances or sleeping in their cars to get an education — and that doesn’t appear to be changing anytime soon.

For some colleges, the housing crunch was related to the pandemic, which muddied projection­s for who might want on-campus dorms when classes resumed in person last fall. But the lack of housing both on-campus and off has been a longstandi­ng problem at other schools, including many in California, where homeowners and communitie­s have sued to curb new student housing constructi­on.

Nationally, 43% of students at four-year universiti­es experience­d housing insecurity in

2020, up from 35% in 2019, according to an annual survey conducted by The Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice at Temple University. Students reported being unable to pay their rent or mortgage, living in overcrowde­d units, or moving in with others due to financial difficulti­es.

For the first time since it began tracking basic needs in 2015, the survey found an equal percentage —

14% — of students at both four-year and two-year colleges who had experience­d homelessne­ss in the last year.

“This is a function of rents rising, the inability of communitie­s and institutio­ns to build enough housing for students and other costs of college going up that create a perfect storm for students,” said Mark Huelsman, the center’s director of policy and advocacy.

Terrell Thompson, a sophomore at the University of California, Berkeley, slept in his car for nearly two weeks at the start of the school year last fall, unable to find an apartment in his price range.

The university has limited dorms and competitio­n is fierce for nearby off-campus units, which can start at $1,600 for a 300-squarefoot studio.

“Academical­ly it was hard, because I’m worried about finding housing and I’m worried about my clothes and I’m worried about getting my car broken into all the time,”

said the 19-year-old Thompson, who now lives in an apartment he found last September. “I was anxious 24/7.”

Nationally, rents have increased 17% since March 2020, said Chris Salviati, senior economist with Apartment List, but the increase has been higher in some popular college towns. Chapel Hill, North Carolina, saw a 24%

jump in rents and Tempe, Arizona, saw a 31% hike.

In some cases, the rental increases have been exacerbate­d by a lack of on-campus housing.

Even two-year community colleges are rethinking student needs as the cost of housing rises.

Last October, Long

Beach City College outside of Los Angeles launched a pilot program to provide up to 15 homeless students space in an enclosed parking garage.

They sleep in their cars and have access to bathrooms and showers, electrical outlets and internet while they work with counselors to find permanent housing.

UC Berkeley and other UC campuses are fighting homeowners who oppose campus expansion plans, even as the schools accept more students.

Most students have no idea of the housing situation when they choose to attend UC Berkeley, said 19-year-old freshman Sanaa Sodhi.

The political science major is excited to move out of the dorms and into a two-bedroom apartment where she and three friends are taking over the lease. The unit is older but a bargain at $3,000 a month, she said.

“You don’t honestly know the severity of the situation before you’re in it,” she said.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? UC Berkeley freshmen Sanaa Sodhi, right, and Cheryl Tugade apartment hunt March 29 in Berkeley, Calif.
ERIC RISBERG/AP UC Berkeley freshmen Sanaa Sodhi, right, and Cheryl Tugade apartment hunt March 29 in Berkeley, Calif.

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