No room in the dorm? California students get creative with housing.

Le’Ana Jackson, a senior at the University of California, Riverside, is ambivalent about campus housing.

In her freshman year, the school didn’t tell her until a month before classes started that she and her roommate could share a $1,750-a-month one-bedroom apartment. They couldn’t sign their lease until the second week of October, so she had to pay to stay in a hotel.

Why we wrote this

Rising rents and crowded dorms are making housing a priority on many American campuses. How does a state try to ease the burden and make students feel more at home?

“My parents were angry. They said, ‘Just change schools.’ Come home to Sacramento State.” But I waited two weeks,” Ms. Jackson said.

Students in one of California’s three higher education systems face a range of situations. Some people have lived in vehicles or traveled long distances from home. Schools have increased dormitory capacity. Housing costs and rental prices have skyrocketed after the pandemic.

California is a snapshot of how this issue has played out for students across the United States. Frustration with campuses across the state is common as we enter a new school year.

“We need to be able to continue to expand our housing,” said Gerry Bomotti, vice chancellor at UC Riverside, “but at the same time we need to be aware of (a wide variety of) cost options and offer them to people … so they can afford to come here to come and get an education.”

Le’Ana Jackson makes no secret of her ambivalence toward the University of California, Riverside, campus housing office. Questionable experiences during her sophomore and junior years forced her to be more proactive as a senior.

She applied for on-campus housing last March — and never heard back from the school. So she and two friends split a six-bedroom house near campus with three other female students they don’t know.

“UCR has a reputation for awarding more housing to students than it can accommodate,” said Ms. Jackson, a political science major.

Why we wrote this

Rising rents and crowded dorms are making housing a priority on many American campuses. How does a state try to ease the burden and make students feel more at home?

Although that school is the center of Mrs. Jackson’s misery, a report found that there were as many as 417,000 California students who lacked stable housing in the state’s three higher education systems: the University of California, California State University and California Community Colleges. Some students have lived in vehicles or traveled long distances from home – a few by plane. Schools have pushed dormitory capacity to the limit, where units that once housed two students now house three students. The problem is two-sided: the lack of inventory for students to rent and affordability. Housing costs and rents have skyrocketed here after the pandemic, as they have elsewhere in the United States.

California is a snapshot of how this issue has played out for students across the country. According to a report released in 2021 by The Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice, 43% of college students and 52% of community college students in fall 2020 reported experiencing housing insecurity. Students also reported higher rates of anxiety and depression, lower GPAs, and poorer health.

In California, the reality of near-homelessness can be bleak, and frustration on campuses across the state is common as you enter another school year.