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29 October 2014
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07.01.04


EAST MIDLANDS TV


Inside Out - students for neighbours


Inside Out, Monday 12 January 2003, 大象传媒 ONE (East Midlands), 7.30-8.00pm


This week Inside Out exposes the misery some people have suffered because their communities have been taken over by students.


In some streets the majority of houses have been snapped up by landlords and converted into student bed-sits.


Those living in the remaining privately owned houses have found themselves surrounded by noise and disruption.


Inside Out goes onto the streets of Loughborough and Lincoln to capture the behaviour of students.


It's behaviour that hasn't changed over the years and is usually alcohol fuelled in many cases, as youngsters away from home discover their freedom for the first time.


But it's this behaviour that has driven local people away from their homes.


Loughborough has had a University since 1966 but its growth in recent years has caused a massive shortage of places to rent for students.


Back then, there were fewer than 2,000 students. Now there are more than 14,000, all looking for somewhere to live.


Rosie Peddle lives near Loughborough's Ashby Road where students stagger home at night.


She's witnessed the campus spread into the town over the years.


She can understand their boisterous behaviour but has to put up regularly with what she calls "vomit and tin can football".


Rosie says: "The only way forward is to have a residents group to fight to get the students within the campus."


But this is a bit late for Angela Jarram. For 65 years she lived on the same street but felt she had to move out when the students moved in.


Angela says: "I always imagined I'd only leave the street in a box. But I felt forced out and no-one was listening to me."


The university is sympathetic and is doing more to regulate student behaviour.


It also has plans for more places for students to live on campus.


As a town, Loughborough's economy benefits greatly from having the university.


The same can be said for Lincoln; but it's a new university and has only been up and running since the Nineties.


It was built for and opened with a huge number of students who had to live in the city.


Landlords bought up property nearby and what happened in Loughborough is being repeated here.


Trudy Farrelly, who lives in the Victorian terraces close to the city centre, says: "They've turned part of the city into a makeshift campus and we're the ones having to suffer the consequences."


For more about Inside Out visit .


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