NUS Scotland President Ellie Gomersall says Scottish Government must ‘take its head out of the sand’ and bring rents down
As CHI Scotland (Chartered Institute of Housing) declares today that Scotland has moved past a housing crisis and is in the midst of a housing emergency, NUS Scotland reiterated its call for the Scottish Government to act urgently to support student renters.
While industry bodies like CHI Scotland and three local authorities (Argyll and Bute, Edinburgh, and Glasgow) have recognised Scotland is in a housing emergency, the Scottish Government seems to be ignoring the problem.
It is not a problem that students have been able to ignore. An NUS study found that a horrifying 12% of students in Scotland have experienced homelessness during their studies, which far exceeds the rate in the general population. Further to that, student rents on average increased at three times the rate of student support between 2021 and 2023.
NUS Scotland has reiterated its asks for the Scottish Government to extend emergency protections for renters beyond the March 31 cliff-edge, for its upcoming Housing Bill to include rent controls that bring rents down to affordable levels, and to apply equally to purpose-built student accommodation as well as the private rented sector.
Commenting, NUS Scotland President Ellie Gomersall said:
“The housing emergency has been plain to see for students for years, but as three councils last year declared housing emergencies and the industry increasingly sees the scale of the problem, it’s essential that the Scottish Government takes its head out of the sand, declares a national housing emergency, and delivers urgent and radical action through the Housing Bill.
Renters are experiencing the sharp end of this crisis, especially student renters, and they must be the government’s first concern. As the emergency rent cap and eviction ban comes to an end, the Scottish Government must act quickly to extend real renter protections beyond March until they can introduce their Housing Bill.
To meet the scale of the challenge, the Housing Bill must not simply slow rent rises but bring rates down to an affordable level - and it must be free from loopholes which disadvantage students, and apply equally to purpose-built student accommodation."