HBCU Students Are Getting Fed Up with Housing Issues. It's Time to Give Them the Truth About Why They Can't Be Fixed

An increasing number of students at historically black colleges and universities nationwide are becoming increasingly frustrated with what they describe as substandard or unsafe campus housing conditions.

Citing ongoing issues with living conditions and executive transparency, the LeMoyne-Owen College Student Government Association has called for the resignation of president Andrea Miller, the second such request in the last two years at the college.

The Memphis Commercial Appeal reports this week on a letter sent to the LOC Board of Trustees last December, calling for Miller’s departure for unresponsiveness to residence hall concerns and alleged cronyism and nepotism in staffing. Alumni of the college joined the students in their appeal for Miller’s removal, and board members could meet soon to address the president’s future.

“The current climate and well-being of the institution is at stake,” the letter read. “In fact, a growing trend of students expressing their desire to no longer attend, transfer, or simply not refer the college to other (prospective) students is occurring.”

LeMoyne-Owen board could soon meet to discuss student calls for president to resign – Memphis Commercial Appeal (Jennifer Pignolet)

A month prior, Tennessee State University Meter Student Newspaper Editor-in-Chief Shayla Simmons publicly called for more attention to be paid to housing issues in an open-letter editorial.

In the months leading up to this semester, several students, myself included, were faced with issues regarding housing and financial aid. Upperclassmen have been housed in freshmen dorms because of unfit conditions in several on-campus apartment units. Those currently housed in apartment units have also reported mold and plumbing issues. I can not speak for students currently housed on-campus, but I must remind readers of the student protest held last year because of the living conditions in the Wilson dormitory.

A plea to President Glover and the administration of TSU – The Meter Newspaper (Shayla Simmons)

Last month, Wilberforce University President Elfred Pinkard published an open letter to the campus community responding to student concerns over living conditions on campus. Two days later, Dr. Pinkard published a list of current renovations and repairs being made to living facilities and infrastructure.

These recent complaints follow last year’s student protests at Howard University, which among the several demands which prompted a takeover of the campus’ administration building included a call for expanded on-campus housing options for undergraduate students.

Students deserve safe housing that inspires learning, good times and fond memories of an institution when they leave as graduates. Most HBCU leaders want nothing more than state-of-the-art facilities to attract more students, but are unwilling to charge current students higher tuition costs to make the upgrades possible in short-term capital planning.

What HBCU students deserve and what HBCU presidents are willing to charge them to build are two very separate things which meet in the middle of public discontent over facilities. The only common ground for both sides of this issue is for the school, somehow, to raise more money or to secure financing through private or federal capital lending programs.

The U.S. Department of Education often require schools to put other campus buildings up as collateral or to secure notes of credit from banks to guarantee that the feds will get their money back from HBCU Capital Finance Loans. This is a proposition that for most private HBCUs, the campuses usually suffering from students publicly railing against poor housing, is difficult to accept.

Amidst all of the complexity of who will pay for more housing and how much it should cost today’s students, other issues are silently killing the struggle, literally, just below the surface. Antiquated heating and cooling systems on campus are being stressed by extreme regional temperatures. Buildings designed with materials and architectural layouts from generations ago are revealing challenges which complicate renovation and expansion and can cause health problems for occupants.

Pipes burst, mold grows, ceiling fixtures collapses, and before you know it, an entire building has to go offline for hazardous conditions; because no one has any clue on how to pay for it when enrollment and tuition revenue are not sure shot numbers from year to year.

The answer, beyond increasing enrollment or Bennett College-level fundraising windfall, is to prioritize infrastructure over student scholarship access, over faculty and staff salaries and benefits, over program development, over athletics, and over everything else which helps to make money for an institution. It is not an easy answer to find and because it isn’t easy to figure out, students are beginning to ask an even tougher question:

Is it really worth staying at an HBCU for all of this nonsense?

3 thoughts on “HBCU Students Are Getting Fed Up with Housing Issues. It's Time to Give Them the Truth About Why They Can't Be Fixed

  1. Who could forget about the recent fiasco that took place at CAU and recently at Morehouse with the hearing problems? They could have gotten sick.For all we know,some of them may have.
    While Im not going to pretend that I know anything about doing housing,I can only imagine being the housing director/ president of the school. Housing is one of those things the staff can never neglect..not even for one minute. They should make sure everything is top notch and that they’re students are well taken care off..even sometimes if they may be in a situation of improvising.
    For the Clark Atlanta administration to cock an attitude ..or in one young students case, leaving her temporarily homeless and keeping her money. Want to turn potential students from your college/ university? Just do that because it’s poor customer service.
    If they knew that they wouldn’t be able to accommodate their students with rooms/ apartments they should have offered some other forms of hospitality whether it’s affordable for them to pay a good hotel room,a rental house ,free housing or discount their tuition or something because it’s wrong and improper. Let’s face it, no school want to be known as a bad school but as long as do things like that,it will.
    I went to a PWI and it’s always isn’t always gold there.They had a similar problem with the students registrations I was beyond disgusted with them 😠. Recently, maybe like a couple of years ago, students also had problems with housing. I feel for those students and parents who have and continue to endure these headaches. I’m also hoping that school administrators will find more feasible solutions to these problems.

  2. My grandson is at Jackson state. At least 4 smoke alarms in rooms, not in the halls, in dorm rooms were going off for several weeks. He put in a work order several times but needless to say nobody came to fix them until I took control. Don’t always blame the students for not taking care of their dorms. they would care more if the schools would take care of issues and repairs.

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