by Grandpa on Tue Nov 14, 2006 3:02 am
A possible scenario?
Yeah, well, back to the topic in hand: If we think that the council should be able to issue HMO's at their discretion we are going to find ourselves (i.e. students, or anyone renting a house for more than one person to live in, and thus the university by extension) in a bit of a muddle.
Imagine the scenario if, for example, on a rolling basis, the council decides to not re-issue HMOs to many landlords: Less housing = less students within the town. On a side note, this is not an unimaginable situation, given the history of the HMO debate in St Andrews (the town, the union, etc.).
Granted there would be available housing in nearby villages/towns/cities but I would imagine that the majority of students would expect to be able to live in the place they study at. Surely this is not the case for everyone (I know students who live outside St Andrews), but it is only reasonable to assume that there would be some sort of accommodation available in St Andrews. I know an argument along the lines of 'what god given right does a student have to demand accommodation?' But, again, surely it is only reasonable to expect to find housing in the place one wishes to, or indeed, is studing at.
However, consider this: Contrary to popular belief, not all of us either have financial support from parents/other means. I know mature students whose parents are loaded, yes, but they don't support them - but that's simply an example for you. Furthermore, many students will be from poorer backgrounds - and I know that some of you will simply look down on poorer people as lesser beings, but at the end of the day the system is there to benefit itself, not to benefit the more affluent among us. What I mean is that if we want society to benefit as much as it can from the brainiest of us all, it necessarily must be accessible to us all.
Further to this, if there are less and less people able to come to St Andrews due to HMO policies which could be viewed in discriminatory terms, then either the council has a Human Rights issue on its hands (imaginable, but unlikely), or the University and town will suffer in the long term. Let me qualify that. I have already said that it is not unreasonable to expect that you can live in the place you study. If however you find you cannot, then your student loan/money from elsewhere is probably going to be spent on accommodation and living/studying costs elsewhere, like Glenrothes, for example (an arbitrary choice of alternative place of abode). Glenrothes, then, as a community of businesses, services and people will benefit and St Andrews will begin to feel the negative economic effects of this. An example: Rentable houses will remain empty, as no one would be able to afford to rent a house simply for him/herself, landlords of these houses will try, eventually, to sell but the amount s/he will be able to get will be far less than what was paid for it. Why so? Because with less demand for housing in general due to less student demand, as shown, but also due less demand for family homes as the negative economic effects escalate due to a lesser number of students bringing a lower demand for a lesser amount of goods and services resulting in a lesser amount of money flowing through and in St Andrews. So landlords will sell houses, but will not receive what it was previously worth or maybe even what was paid for it, or they will hang on to them in the hope that the council will reverse its decision on HMOs. However, given the history of the HMO debate within St Andrews (as I previously said), this is unlikely.
The anticipated HMO related policy of the council will harm not only students, but people who have come here to work and are in shared houses. Maybe the council thinks that this is all good, because in a situation like the one I describe just above there is less need for such housing for such people, but the effects will be felt much more immediately by those who have moved here to work - as immediately as students will feel such effects.
Lastly, the University will feel these effects too. With less places for St Andreans (that's people who'd live here anyway, and students) to live negative press of this sort is undoubtedly going to spread. With less students able to live in and around St Andrews, the University will find itself in receipt of less students. With less students coming here, the number of 'top grade' students will fall and the University's academic reputation will also suffer.[s] Can the university afford to downsize? What of its resources in terms of buildings and (academic and other) equipment of differing natures? Will these too also be made effectively redundant from a lack of student use???[/s]
I think the proposed ammendments to the HMO bill/law are inappropriate for places of comparable size to St Andrews as it will have, I think, massive negative knock on effects both for the livlihoods and wellbeing of the people and businesses of this town as well as students and the university itself.
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We are gentlemen that neither in our hearts nor outward eyes envy the great nor shall the low despise.
We are gentlemen that neither in our hearts nor outward eyes envy the great nor shall the low despise.