The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Nowhere to go

UPEISU advocates for city to consider regulation­s to help students

- ERNESTO CARRANZA

Student housing came before Charlottet­own city council as the municipal government grapples with a slim vacancy rate.

University of Prince Edward Island student union vice-president of academic and external Sweta Daboo and president Emma Drake presented their concerns to council earlier this month.

“Short-term rentals do not benefit students,” said Daboo. “If we look at regular assumption­s that students would be attending classes from September to April and take summers off, it makes sense.”

However, Daboo said, many students do not take the summers off and depend on housing 12 months of the year.

Not having somewhere to live in the summer puts students in a “very vulnerable” position.

“The governing principle we are going to be talking about today will be that students require secure, affordable and accessible housing,” said Daboo.

UPEI has around 5,000 students broken down into 30 per cent internatio­nal students, 25 per cent out-of-province students and around 45 per cent in-province students.

Students most affected by housing are internatio­nal and out of province students, said Daboo, who noted 92 countries are represente­d right now at UPEI.

“The concern that we have is that over the past few years the number of students enrolled year-round has increased while the number of housing accommodat­ions have decreased.”

The UPEI student union is recommendi­ng that the city place comprehens­ive regulation­s on short-term-rentals to relieve pressure on the rental market and make housing more accessible for students.

“More students are signing up for online courses than on campus courses, one of the factors of that is that simple, students cannot afford to live in Charlottet­own during the summer due to a lack of accommodat­ion.”

On average, said Drake, an undergradu­ate degree takes about five to six years to finish. She said this is because being students are starting to spread their studies over a longer period of time because they are working more part-time and full-time jobs to keep up with costs of post-secondary education.

Around 61 per cent of students at UPEI are working parttime jobs, while 7.1 per cent of students are working full-time during the fall and winter semesters and on through the summer months.

Around 2,200 students attend UPEI in the summer, with over 90 per cent of students living off-campus.

Drake also pointed to the vacancy rate in Charlottet­own combined the stress of shortterm rentals in the summer months.

“All these factors cause considerab­le stress on the rental markets during the summer months,” she said.

Councillor­s questioned the UPEISU representa­tives on what housing is available to students both on- and off-campus and what factors have contribute­d to housing shortages.

Coun. Greg Rivard said he was sensitive to the complexity of the housing situation.

“It is not a direct correlatio­n. The success of short-term rentals and the low vacancy rate,” said Rivard.

“Let’s be honest, lots of things happened since 2015. Building developmen­t was at an all-time low … there was a big movement to bring people back to the province and a big push on PNP and immigratio­n.”

The result was a massive population growth, said Rivard, with one of the unintended consequenc­es being housing shortages.

“The purpose of this (presentati­on) today is that, with regulation­s being put forward, we hope in March, which can be a short-term solution to a very multi-layered problem, which has short-term and long-term solutions,” said Drake.

“We see this as an opportunit­y to act and support our students in the short-term.”

 ?? ERNESTO CARRANZA/THE GUARDIAN ?? University of Prince Edward Island Student Union president Emma Drake, left, and vice-president of academic and external Sweta Daboo gave a presentati­on to Charlottet­own council last week.
ERNESTO CARRANZA/THE GUARDIAN University of Prince Edward Island Student Union president Emma Drake, left, and vice-president of academic and external Sweta Daboo gave a presentati­on to Charlottet­own council last week.

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