19th Annual UB Graduate School of Education Graduate Student Research Symposium
Ub student housing
Transcript of Ub student housing
Department of Permit and Inspection
ServicesUniversity Student Housing Initiative
Summary June 8, 2011
For years, the problem of student housing around the University of Buffalo has been recognized as a problem but the various responses were met with poor results.
The actions taken were too broad, poorly timed, and too often in response to student activity that was injurious to the students or negatively impacted the neighborhood such as a keg party, year end move, injury or worse.
The Student Housing Problem
The district inspector would write the property a letter of violation and then take the owner to court if the items were not corrected.
This method was slow, primarily addressed the exterior of the property, and interior orders for inspection were subject to obtaining a court order which is costly and time consuming.
The Former Method
Starting in the Fall of 2010, the Department of Permit and Inspection Services began meeting with Councilmember Bonnie Russell, representatives from the University at Buffalo, community partners, the district court liaison, etc. to come up with a new method that focused the department’s limited resources specifically on the problem and strived to gain entry voluntarily.
The New Method
Increased marketing to students
…led to increase in requests for inspections
•Quick turnaround time by Brian•Letters of Violation issued quickly•Quick response from landlords•8-10 requests this academic year
On three weekends representatives from the University at Buffalo met with inspectors on three separate streets that were identified as having among the highest percentages of student housing in the district.
The City of Buffalo provided the inspectors. The University of Buffalo identified student
housing and sent out notification that City inspectors would be on their street on the respective date and time.
The Roll Out
Housing Blitz
•125 Homes visited over 3 weekends•47 Internal Inspections Completed
Nine inspectors from three separate divisions; multiple dwelling, district, and electrical, met at 9AM to knock on doors.
32 Homes were visited. Two interiors were inspected. Two letters of violation were sent to the
owners of record. This action supplemented the existing 21
letters of violation already active on the street.
Northrup Place- April 9th
Nine inspectors from three separate divisions met at Noon with representatives from the University at Buffalo.
Students were notified prior to the date. 53 home were visited. 20 interior inspections were conducted. 19 letters of violations were issued for
interior items bringing to 41 the total active files on the street.
Englewood- April 23rd
Nine inspectors from three divisions met with representatives from the university at Buffalo at Noon.
Students were notified prior. 42 homes were visited. 21 interior inspections were conducted
resulting in 19 interior letters of violations. In addition 14 exterior violations were issued.
This action resulted in 40 active cases on the street.
Merrimac- April 30th
Good and Bad News
Good•Students were receptive•Other neighbors were pleased/appreciative•Some apartments had updated electrical, a couple had installed security systems•Some apartments were in good shape
Bad
•Absence of necessary working smoke and CO detectors was the norm•Two cases of illegal physical modifications – one egregious•Frequent instances of legal but insufficient electrical service for 2011 tenants
Conducting the inspections in April was highly effective as students were willing to voluntarily provide access.
Prior notification made the process proceed smoothly.
Knocking on doors before noon was highly ineffective.
Having representatives from the University present helped to assuage any fears that the students may have had.
Summary
Many homes were either without or did not have the required number of smoke detectors in the proper locations.
Many homes were missing carbon monoxide detectors.
Many of the homes had updated electrical services. There were still instances of 30 amp fuses being used were 15 amp fuses should have been.
Often times students removed smoke detectors when they activated and did not return them to their proper location.
Summary- cont’d.
Inspectors instructed students in all homes that they entered that in order to have a safe living environment, they need to be conscious of overloading electrical outlets with appliances such as hair dryers, computers, televisions, etc.
Violations not corrected over the summer will be referred to Housing court prior to the start of the next school year.
Summary- cont’d.
Challenges going Forward 2,000 – 3,000 students living from Bailey &
LaSalle to Kenmore & Englewood Exterior inspections aren’t typically enough
for housing court to mandate an internal inspection