![]() ![]() In a statement about the relocation, the university insists that "there will be no financial impact on any student as a result of any change to their planned accommodation". ![]() GCN has reached out to the university for more information.Īll we do know is that the university is determined to ensure students do not suffer financially from the relocation. The details of the vouchers are, at present, unclear. To cover the 4.2km between the new accommodation and the university, UEA is offering relocated students a free bus pass or a voucher to buy a bicycle. Most of the students affected will remain on campus, but 170 have been placed in private accommodation in the nearby city of Norwich. 750 students have been affected, and in the past few days, the university has scrambled to find new accommodation for each of them. On September 8, just weeks before students at the University of East Anglia (UEA) arrived for the new university year, the university announced that vast swathes of its accommodation would close in line with the new rules on RAAC. In recent weeks, as school holidays came to an end, 147 schools around the country were deemed unsafe due to new Government guidance that declared the material unsafe. Reinforced Autoclave Aerated Concrete (RAAC) has been causing havoc all through the United Kingdom. ![]() Read more: Dangerous e-bikes: Trade-in scheme falls flat in New York In the east of England, a university has offered 170 relocated students free bikes, as some of the university's main accommodation has been closed due to the presence of dangerous concrete. ![]()
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