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Rent Caps and Cash Help - what students want from government

The country’s main student body is calling on the government to implement a cap on student rents.

The National Union of Students says it’s a central part of an overall package “to support students with the cost of living.”

Warning that students have been left behind by existing support, NUS has published a new report off the back of research claiming to show that a third of UK students have £50 or less to live on per month after paying rent and bills.  

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The report was prepared in collaboration with the Higher Education Policy Institute and draws on recent research carried out by NUS, Save the Student! and other bodies. 

The NUS says that despite inflation reaching double digits, the value of maintenance loans for students in England has only increased by just over tow per cent in the past year. The group also claims that students have been “forgotten” in existing cost of living support schemes, and face a postcode lottery accessing council tax rebates, while full-time students completely frozen out of Universal Credit. 

The report makes the following recommendations to the government:

- Cap student rent “to prevent a student homelessness crisis”;  

- Tie student maintenance support with inflation;  

- Stress test all cost of living support schemes to ensure they work for students;  

- Reform Universal Credit to include fair access for students;  

- Provide funding to education providers to deliver improved hardship funds;  

- Adjust maintenance loan thresholds to reflect changes to family income.  

 

Recommendations are also directed at education institutions, including:

 

  • Cap rents, increase the number of affordable rooms, and “support students unable to secure a place in halls”;  
  • Ensure hardship funds are as simple to access as possible;  
  • Make food on campus as cheap as possible and provide food vouchers;  
  • Increase the pay of apprentices they hire in line with the living wage;  
  • Provide travel subsidies;  
  • Tailor support from careers services to help students who want or need to work.  

 

Recommendations are also directed at education institutions, including:

- Cap rents, increase the number of affordable rooms, and “support students unable to secure a place in halls”;  

- Ensure hardship funds are as simple to access as possible;  

- Make food on campus as cheap as possible and provide food vouchers;  

- Increase the pay of apprentices they hire in line with the living wage;  

- Provide travel subsidies;  

- Tailor support from careers services to help students who want or need to work.  

An NUS vice president, Chloe Field, says: “We urgently need the government to inflation-proof student loans and maintenance loans, bring in legislation to control student rent to avoid a homelessness crisis, and provide additional funding to education providers to bolster hardship funds. 

“In addition to specific support, the government must ensure that students are no longer excluded from general interventions intended to alleviate the cost-of-living crisis such as energy grants and one-off payments to households.” 

And Nick Hillman, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI), adds:  “The evidence is overwhelming that the most urgent and pressing issue for students in 2022 is not fees, it is day-to-day living costs. Sadly, to date the government at Westminster has largely ignored students when it comes to tackling the cost-of-living crisis, with – for example – English maintenance loans going up by just over two per cent while inflation surges past 10 per cent.” 

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    As I was growing up in the 60s I was always told '' I want doesn't get'', don't you just love these self important entitled students, one of the reasons that I won't rent to them

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    How about if we ask for stuff nicely?
    I would very much appreciate, if it isn't too much trouble:
    Section 24 to be scrapped
    CGT indexation or taper relief to be restored and Section 8 to be made fit for purpose.

    Pretty please, with cherries and sprinkles on.

    I somehow don't imagine that would work any better than the student demands, although of course it may actually enable us to partially accommodate some of the rental aspects of their their wishlist. Section 24 is a complete disservice to every type of tenant and it's this form of government racketeering that has been one of the main reasons for rental inflation.

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    Thing is Jo one day all of this will be offered to LL's as if its a unique idea from some MP. But by then it will be too late LL's will have sold and will be sailing off into the sunset

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    Massive contradictory statements! In essence want prices to go down and wages up! Must have had a good education, ahem !

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    I was short of money when I was a student, so I worked weekends and holidays to earn extra money.

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    That was the norm in my day too, although I have to say some of my current set of students are working as well They do seem to more self sufficient than many previous groups, bought up to not expect everything giving to them !

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    Well we have Rent Caps already every rule and regulation is a Rent cap in the form of Rent hit. Just doing my Accounts and can see straight away £3’500. to Council for re-licensing and that’s just money for them, I have to do all the Compliance work at my cost as well or my Application wouldn’t be successful, not withstanding they have all been licensed before so 2, 3 & 4 times (one was 2006, 2011, 2016 & 2021.) now rotating so some cropping up in every year’s Accounts. So they mean they want me to absorb from my very reasonable below market Rents.

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    Most degrees are worthless and suckng young people into a debt trap. Who then become cannon fodder for the Marxists (communists) !

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    Totally agree Edwin, but the so called intelligent young people and their parents are too thick to see this, what ever happened to good old common sense in this mad world today

     
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    Nang nag don’t forget to give Shelter 4%, give us a break do you write kiddies stories.
    The SPELL has been well and truly cast on Private Landlords alright but it wasn’t Lord
    Bubuza, it was the Conservative Party in all their guises regardless of how many times they change the Prime Minister.

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