Howard University housing crisis

Joe Money

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Rats, mold, roaches: Howard students stage sit-in over housing conditions



Mold. Rats. Cockroaches. Mushrooms growing under the sink. For undergraduate students attending Howard University, a historically Black college in Washington, these and other conditions have prompted students to protest, staging a sit-in and sleeping at the university’s main student center for the past two weeks.

Organizing on social media apps like Instagram and TikTok under the #Blackburntakeover, as many as 150 students have been staging a sit-in at Howard’s Blackburn University Center, described as the “social hub of the university” by Howard.
Since 12 October they have protested what they describe as deplorable housing conditions, including mold on expired air filters, rat and cockroach infestations, and mushrooms blooming on dorm room ceilings and under sinks, despite on-campus housing costing upwards of $12,000 a year.

Students, chronicling the sit-in with the Instagram account “The Live Movement”, are also sleeping at the center in protest and say they will not leave until their demands are met.

“[Sleeping] outside and in the Blackburn center has been nicer than a lot of our dorms,” said Nikkya, 18, and freshman at Howard University and sit-in participant.

Student organizers have been using the student center to launch mutual aid efforts, feeding Howard University students for free, providing free hair cuts and hosting yoga sessions.

The group’s demands center on concrete plans from the university to address housing woes and solutions to issues around transparency. They want an in-person town hall with Howard’s president Wayne A I Frederick, a permanent reinstatement of all affiliate positions on Howard’s board of trustees, a meeting with student leadership to outline plans addressing housing-related issues, as well as immunity – legal, disciplinary, and academic – for protesting students as participants have received threats of expulsion and other punishment for their participation.

Despite a recent wave of funding to the university, including a $40m donation from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott, and a multimillion dollar yearly endowment – $647m as reported in 2017, Howard has publicly struggled with housing for its DC-located students, particularly after an enrollment surge this year.

In addition to blighted on-campus housing, sit-in participants say that upperclassmen– third and fourth year students – struggle to find off campus housing in the DC area, where the average rent for a studio apartment is $1,843, a nearly 7% increase from last year.

“It’s incredible that with the amount of money Howard University receives each year, whether it be from the government, tuition, fees, or donations, we still have buildings that haven’t been up to date in years,” said Eja, 18, a freshman at Howard and protest participant.

Students dealing with unhealthy housing conditions say their complaints have been met with what they have called the “Howard run-in”, a chronic bureaucracy problem that students say make it difficult to access campus resources for everything from housing to financial aid to appointments at Howard’s health center.

Even when fixes have been made, students allege that solutions have been incomplete. According to Jasmine, 19, many students have had health consequences because of issues like mold in the dorms. Jasmine and Eja, who has asthma, both say they have been sick for most of the first semester, unsure what the issue is, before discovering mold and liquid leaking through their ceiling as the likely source of their illnesses.

“I’ve been sick for like a month and a half due to my air filter not being properly cleaned to the point where we thought it could’ve been Covid,” said Jasmine.

The protests have received widespread support from a number of influential allies such as president and CEO of the NAACP Derrick Johnson, Bernice King, and Gucci Mane, who pulled out of performing at Howard’s homecoming in solidarity with protesters.

But they have been met with hostility from university officials. Emails from Howard University officials such as Howard vice-president of student affairs Cynthia Evers have also threatened to punish students who participate in the sit-in, including with expulsion.

Progress stalled further when students, attempting to host a town hall with university officials on Tuesday night, were met with police who were dispatched to remove protestors from the center. While no students have been arrested, Nikkya noted that some police have been aggressive, with mostly male officers walking through sleeping spaces with mostly women protesters, even though there are other hallways they could use.

Howard University officials could not be reached for comment. Corvias Property Management, who Howard University is currently in partnership with for housing, defended its record.

“A recent inspection discovered mold in less than a tenth of 1% of rooms – 34 out of 3,300. We encourage students to report service needs as soon as possible by contacting the front desk attendant, by phone or online,” a spokesperson said.

But protesting students are unlikely to be satisfied with that response.

“We hope no other future Howard class has to protest and sit in like we have,” said Jasmine, noting Howard’s long history of student protest regarding issues on campus.

 
kenan-thompson-what.gif
 
Word is, they took in too much money too fast, and there's no one in place with the experience to deal with it. They were discussing this on the Karen Hunter a couple of weeks ago.
 
Unpopular opinion but college’s asinine tuition prices are bullshit, if parents would stop forcing their kids to sit in classes they don’t want to be in, maybe they’ll lower the price. Until then colleges don’t have to do shit because every year a new crop will show up to be harvested
 
The Cosby's would of loved to allow some students stay at their modest brownstone but......
 
Howard University students reach deal to end month-long protest over housing, other issues
Demonstrators began occupying the campus student center Oct. 12

By Lauren Lumpkin

Today at 9:16 a.m. EST|Updated today at 10:41 a.m. EST

After a month-long protest waged against Howard University administrators over housing issues, transparency and representation, students and officials have reached a resolution, demonstrators announced Monday morning.

Students have “substantially accomplished their objectives,” Donald Temple, the students’ attorney, told The Washington Post, marking the end of one of the longest student-led protests in the school’s history. The terms outlined in the agreement are confidential, he added.
“The students courageously journeyed on a path towards greater university accountability and transparency and public safety,” Temple said during a news conference Monday, broadcast on the daily news show Roland Martin Unfiltered.

“The university’s pleased to come to an agreement with the students,” said Frank Tramble, a Howard spokesman. The university’s president, Wayne A.I. Frederick, plans to share a longer message with the community, Tramble said.

Howard protests over mold and mice put campus housing contract under scrutiny

The announcement is the result of weeks of negotiations between students and Howard administrators. Since launching their protest Oct. 12, students have rallied around four core demands: an in-person town hall with Frederick and other officials; the permanent reinstatement of student, alumni and faculty affiliate positions that are being removed from the school’s board of trustees; a meeting with university leaders about housing; and legal, disciplinary and academic immunity for protesters.

“We came, we saw, we declared and we won,” Channing Hill, a student organizer, said on the broadcast. “Today is a new day for Bison everywhere.”

According to demonstrators, more than 100 students have been living in the Blackburn University Center, a student hub on campus and home to its largest dining hall. Dozens more, including a small group of faculty and alumni, have pitched tents outside, vowing to remain until the demands were met.

Issues surrounding housing conditions also came to the forefront, with students sharing stories of mold infestations, leaky pipes and rodents. The concerns have heightened scrutiny on Howard’s relationship with Corvias, the private development company that manages 60 percent of on-campus housing.

Since students launched their protest last month, they have gained high-profile attention and support from civil rights activists, politicians and alumni. The Rev. Jesse Jackson visited the campus in early November to coach students and university leaders toward a solution.

 
Damn WTF I lived at Jones Hall at Southern and there wasn't roaches and rats in the place and Southern doesn't have the prestige of Howard University. Before I lived in the DMV I visited Howard U's library and was disappointed. I was like damn this is supposed to be the most prestigious black university in the country and this is what there facilities look like.
 
Damn WTF I lived at Jones Hall at Southern and there wasn't roaches and rats in the place and Southern doesn't have the prestige of Howard University. Before I lived in the DMV I visited Howard U's library and was disappointed. I was like damn this is supposed to be the most prestigious black university in the country and this is what there facilities look like.

Howard’s endowment is only $700 million. The “Black Harvard” is a ruse. It really doesn’t have enough money.
 
Unpopular opinion but college’s asinine tuition prices are bullshit, if parents would stop forcing their kids to sit in classes they don’t want to be in, maybe they’ll lower the price. Until then colleges don’t have to do shit because every year a new crop will show up to be harvested


I remember enrolling a couple of times for my program at some smaller schools’ campuses. Each time they were postponed / delayed. Tuition was too high. Once they finally lowered the numbers, they got 5 times the applicants to meet program numbers. Really frustrating. The last delay they notified people 3 days before it was supposed to start. As if they didn’t know it would not be taking place as scheduled.
 
Damn WTF I lived at Jones Hall at Southern and there wasn't roaches and rats in the place and Southern doesn't have the prestige of Howard University. Before I lived in the DMV I visited Howard U's library and was disappointed. I was like damn this is supposed to be the most prestigious black university in the country and this is what there facilities look like.
Mannn I had flashbacks reading that first sentence... I stayed on the 6th floor in Jones then upperclassmen I went to Carroll... I did think our dorms weren't shit until I visited other campuses... The dorms back there now look really nice...
 
Unfortunately, this is one of those things at HBCUs that we don't like to talk about.

I remember being a freshman at [well let's just say my HBCU], and sitting in the dean of students office, there was a girl crying about the conditions of her room. The dean was like, 'Where is your school spirit? Why don't you go out and get a can of paint, have a paint party and repaint the walls?"

Kids today aint going to stand for it.
 
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