All I hear is excuses. Universities are very profitable and are run like corporations now. They need to house their students adequately instead of pushing the burden to the city, or they should lose their tax exempt status. Its really that simple
There's a lot of irony here.
For starters, do you read the news? Universities around the country are faced with making cuts or closing completely in light of the COVID-19 pandemic... not exactly the predicament corporations are facing per trends on Wall Street.
Secondly, leased property residence halls are not tax exempt. So while residence halls like West Village and International Village are tax exempt, leased residence halls like East Village and Lightview are not. Lightview Residence Hall--American Campus Communities' 825-bed residence hall on university-owned land--pays $1.1M+ in property taxes: you can look at the
Tax Assessors' Website if you don't believe me. East Village pays $865k. Copied screenshot below for Lightview's FY 2021 tax assessment. A $1,158,658 tax bill translates to a cost of $1,404 per bed. Assume 25 of those 825 beds go to RA's (i.e. no payment), that becomes $1,448 tax rate per bed for FY 2021.
Why does this matter, and what does this have to do with 840 Columbus Avenue? American Campus Communities is the proponent for both developments; the financing structure will be probably be similar for 840 as it was for Lightview; and it's a certainty that the 840 Columbus residence hall will be taxed the same way the Assessor's Office estimated taxes for Lightview. The taxes in this case are passed along to the resident (i.e. students) to pay. It's another factor that contributes to cost, and it only goes away if the university assumes ownership and all liability of AAC's development. It's not an excuse for why on-campus housing is expensive, and it's not independently a justification... it's a fact and, therefore, a contributing factor to consider. If universities and academia become become taxed with no exemption, the expense
will be passed along to students; the expense
will impact the quality/caliber of higher education the institutions can afford if fewer people can afford that cost increase; and students
will face another setback in accessing affordable education. Quality higher education and affordable housing for all are possible, but they are complicated issues to accomplish with many variables to consider.
Not excuses.