What if I applied but need to cancel my application?
You can withdraw
from the Allocation Process at any time without a penalty until the application deadline.
After the deadline, there is a penalty of $250 if you are assigned but
do not accept your assignment or if you do not respond by the acceptance/confirmation deadline.
I didn't get assigned but I still need housing.
We will run a second
allocation process to assign any remaining vacancies left over from
the first round. Assignments will be available only to those who did not receive an assignment in the first round. Those who receive first round assignments and do not accept them are not eligible for the second round.
Applications may be adjusted (e.g. to change your preferences) during a one-week period that begins on the date the first round results are announced.
Assignments from the second round will be available two weeks after the first round results are announced and assignees will be given one week to confirm (just like the first round).
If you are still not assigned through the second allocation process,
you can place your name on a waiting list. This list is active through the
summer and we refer to it to assign any remaining vacancies or
cancellations. Around the last friday of June the waiting list will be open to those who did not participate in the first and second rounds of the allocation.
Why is there so little housing for Continuing Single Students?
A few years ago, the process was changed to give priority to New
students so that as many New students as possible would have a year on
campus. We also have one building, the Warehouse, that provides
housing exclusively for New students.
The other buildings have a mix of New and Continuing, usually with a
40-60 ratio. To determine how many spaces go to New, and how many to
Continuing, we look at the number of remaining Continuing students in the
building.
Let's say we have a building with 100 spaces. Each year, 40 New
students must leave when their contract expires, always giving us 40
spaces in this building. Of the 60 Continuing students, however, only
21 graduate and leave. The rest renew for another year.
This means we will be able to assign 40 New spaces, but only 21
Continuing.
We also take gender into account: if 6 of the 21 spots are in female
apartments, then we have only 6 female Continuing spaces, and 15
Continuing male spaces.
Since Single Continuing students are only housed in Tang, Ashdown, Sidney-Pacifc,
Edgerton and Green, the number of spaces will be limited by how many
Continuing Students leave, and what gender the remaining roommates
are.
Why is there even less housing for Continuing Family?
There are only two buildings for Families: Eastgate and
Westgate. Altogether, there are 400 apartments.
Each building has a mix of New and Continuing. However, since New
students can renew for a second year, there are actually three groups
of students: New, Second Year and Continuing. New and Continuing
should always be about equal, with Second Years taking up somewhat
less than a third.
So, in a building of 100 people, there should be 40 New, 40 Continuing
and 20 Second Years.
To determine how many vacancies go to New, and how many to Continuing, we
look at the ratio of remaining Continuing Students in the building.
In our building with 100 spaces, each year 20 Second Year students
must leave when their contract expires, always giving us 20 spaces in
this building. (20 total vacancies)
Of the 40 Continuing students, however, only 15 graduate and
leave. The rest renew for another year. (35 total vacancies)
Of the 40 New students, however, only 19 graduate and leave. The
remaining 21 renew for their Second Year. (54 total vacancies)
So, we now have 21 Second Years and 25 Continuing. We must now assign
New and Continuing students to the 54 vacancies so that everything is
even again.
If there are 25 Continuing already in the building, there must be at
least 25 New assigned from the total of 54. This leaves us with 29
vacancies to assign. Each side gets 14, and we take a space for a
medical assignment.
So, now we have 21 Second Years, 39 Continuing and 39 New, and 1
medical. The ratio is correct and even.
However to make it even, only 14 Continuing spaces were assigned but
39 New spaces were assigned.
There is another reason that there will always be fewer vacancies for
Continuing. Family housing is divided into many types - so it could be
that out of the 14 vacancies only 2 vacancies will be 2-bedrooms and the rest
could be efficiencies, and one bedrooms.
Between the limited number of vacancies and the limited types of
vacancies, it's not surprising it is so difficult to be assigned to
Family housing.