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40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don - Education (3) - Nairaland

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Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by lawani(m):
SmartPolician:
The truth is that university education is not meant for everyone. I have always said this here. One of our problems is jobs for certificate holders have extremely low salaries.

If not, everyone doesn't have to further their education because it's only meant for a select few who can afford it.
Anybody that qualifies should be able to attend university. If they can't then the society is not on the right path. To qualify should be hard but if you qualify you should be able to attend. In our days to have five credits including Maths and English in olevels used to be a herculean task. I don't know about now
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by SkyBizzy(m): 12:06pm On Mar 13
jeff1993:
Are they not paid??

Why are they crying?? Are they the only civil servants working??
Help me ask them, my brother.

As if they are not being paid. Are they the only ones paying for rent in this country?
Even the lowest income earner pay their rents, so I don't understand their complains. Maybe they want to be spoonfed
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Godmind2022(m): 12:09pm On Mar 13
seunmsg:
There is nothing wrong with education. The problem is the funding model for our universities. We have over 140 public universities in Nigeria where students don’t pay tuition fees and you guys expect lecturers to be paid salaries. Just this weekend, a post by a student complaining of N125k fees for school logistics went viral on social media.

We want the best of everything and we don’t want to pay for it. A standard private secondary school in Abuja charges nothing less than N1.5m in a year but somehow, we want to pay N20,000 per year for university education and we don’t want lecturers to sleep in offices. Okay now, make all of us dey play.
Find out about countries that offer their citizens free education and free health services.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Ovieemmanuel: 12:10pm On Mar 13
SmartPolician:
The truth is that university education is not meant for everyone. I have always said this here. One of our problems is jobs for certificate holders have extremely low salaries.

If not, everyone doesn't have to further their education because it's only meant for a select few who can afford it.
problem still remains. Nigeria is a confused country. We need to go back cash crop and exportation . But all our forest are filled blood sucking demons. A serious president would invest heavily on air survellance and strikes with constant mop up opreations . But noooooo you see fools defending this nonsense evil patterns.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by SmartPolician: 12:17pm On Mar 13
lawani:
Anybody that qualifies should be able to attend university. If they can't then the society is not on the right path. To qualify should be hard but if you qualify you should be able to attend. In our days to have five credits including Maths and English in olevels uses to be a herculean task. I don't know about now
Your idea is not feasible. Quality education is not cheap anywhere in the world. In countries where education is subsided like Germany, the government is paying heavily for it from people's taxes.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Manculated: 12:21pm On Mar 13
grin grin grin

Why would they be allowed to sleep in the school offices. That's unacceptable.

What happened to the open places around the school like football fields. This would even give them access to fresh and cool breeze.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Britishpea: 12:28pm On Mar 13
PlasmaTV:
That's sad.
Nobody should say "education is the key to success" o. Politics is obvious the fastest way to unending wealth.
And the politicians are farmers? Or bricklayershuh No wonder u think education isn’t anything because obviously u didn’t have it.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by lawani(m): 12:44pm On Mar 13
SmartPolician:
Your idea is not feasible. Quality education is not cheap anywhere in the world. In countries where education is subsided like Germany, the government is paying heavily for it from people's taxes.
It does not need to be cheap but if you are brilliant but can't attend university because of funds then the society has failed
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by dequir: 12:45pm On Mar 13
BeginsAtHome:
You points would have been valid in a poor country like Rwanda.

Nigeria's wealth if well managed will fund a comfortable lifestyle for everyone.

Before the fall of Ghaddafi in Lybia, their citizens led better lives than most Americans and Europeans.

The truth is, we have the money but it is been frittered away by thieving politicians with the help of civil servants and most western countries.

If government Schools were well funded, no private school will bill you 1.5m per session.

That alone is an indictment of how bad things have become here.

Iré o.
Yet you are ready to pay N15m for a 2 years Master course in the UK.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by professore(m): 12:48pm On Mar 13
grin
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by razzydoo(m): 1:04pm On Mar 13
Well normally your office is more or less your personal property. So no biggie. If better work engross you, you can spend one week inside your office.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by SmartPolician: 1:08pm On Mar 13
lawani:
It does not need to be cheap but if you are brilliant but can't attend university because of funds then the society has failed
If you are truly brilliant and can prove it, there are tens of thousands of scholarships out there available to such people.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by AlphaTaikun: 1:11pm On Mar 13
DiamondsAreFore:
About 40 percent of university lecturers now sleep in their offices due to the country’s worsening housing crisis, Timothy Nubi, professor of estate management and sustainable housing advocate, has said.

Nubi disclosed this on Wednesday at the Film Screening and Conversation on Solidarity and Movement Building to Advocate for Inclusive Housing for the Urban Poor, held at the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

The event was organised by the Heinrich Boll Foundation, in collaboration with the Centre for Housing and Sustainable Development (CHSD), the African Cities Research Consortium (ACRC) and Rethinking Cities.

Speaking during the session, Nubi said the rising cost of accommodation around major urban centres, particularly Lagos, has pushed many academics into desperate living conditions.

“I stand here to tell you today that almost 40 per cent of lecturers in universities sleep in their offices,” he said.

“They sleep in their offices. You see them taking baths around the faculty every morning. That is the state of the country.”

The professor explained that the situation reflects the growing pressure the housing crisis is placing on Nigerians who traditionally belonged to the middle class.

According to him, the cost of renting even modest accommodation around the University of Lagos has risen beyond what many academics can reasonably afford.

Nubi cited a recent case in which a two-bedroom apartment around the Akoka area was rented for N3.5 million per year, noting that such prices are far beyond the reach of many professors.

“No professor will conveniently afford to pay N3.5 million for accommodation. That is about seven months of salary,” he said.

The don added that the challenge is not limited to lecturers but reflects a broader national housing crisis affecting millions of Nigerians.

Nigeria’s housing deficit, he noted, has grown dramatically over the decades. While the shortfall was estimated at about five million housing units years ago, it is now believed to be between 17 million and 22 million units.

“Instead of the problem reducing, the problem keeps increasing,” he said.

He explained that the Centre for Housing and Sustainable Development, was created partly to address this gap by producing empirical research to guide housing policy and build capacity among policymakers.

Beyond Nigeria, Nubi said history shows that societies that fail to address housing inequality risk social instability. He cited the Great Fire of London in the early 17th century, which led to the Poor Relief Act, a system where property owners contributed funds to support housing for low-income residents.

He said the policy later evolved into public housing schemes and mixed-income communities designed to ensure that the poor were not segregated from the rest of society.

“In some countries today, when developers build housing estates, they are required to allocate a percentage of the units for teachers, drivers and other workers who cannot afford market rents,” he said. “That is how mixed communities are built.”

Nubi stressed that inclusive housing policies remain essential for social stability, warning that neglecting the housing needs of low-income residents could have far-reaching consequences.

He called for stronger collaboration among researchers, policymakers and civil society groups to develop practical solutions to Nigeria’s housing crisis.

Civil society organisations and housing rights activists at the event also criticised the forceful evictions and demolition of homes in several Nigerian cities, citing recent incidents in the Makoko and Oworonshoki communities in Lagos State as examples of actions that have worsened housing insecurity for low-income residents.

Buhle Booi, a South African housing activist, highlighted the creative advocacy strategies adopted by the “Reclaim the City” movement in Cape Town. He explained that the campaigns were designed to push for the recovery of public land for the development of affordable housing.

According to Booi, sustainable solutions to housing displacement require legislative backing and strategic engagement with government institutions, rather than reactive measures alone.

He also stressed the importance of transitional housing schemes to reduce the immediate impact of evictions, while underscoring the responsibility of the state to provide alternative accommodation for displaced residents.

Temilade Sesan of the African Cities Research Consortium (ACRC) examined Lagos’ housing challenges within a broader African context.

Sesan compared the Lagos situation with experiences from Cairo in Egypt and Nairobi in Kenya, outlining policies and approaches that have produced varying results.

She noted that Nairobi has made notable progress in recent years, particularly through the enactment of an Affordable Housing Act, which defines housing affordability using the minimum wage of domestic workers as a benchmark.

https://businessday.ng/news/article/40-of-lecturers-now-sleep-in-their-offices-over-housing-crisis-unilag-don/
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Omowale2023(m): 1:38pm On Mar 13
DiamondsAreFore:
https://businessday.ng/news/article/40-of-lecturers-now-sleep-in-their-offices-over-housing-crisis-unilag-don/
Me that am earning over 300k as a marketer, I never clock 40 ooo. Educational career na scam.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Walz001: 2:00pm On Mar 13
When tou have people that are incompetent in power everythings goes the wrong way

So everyone should face their consequence for now till tou arw giving another chance to make it right
The government is not doing well at all
E.g Band A
DiamondsAreFore:
https://businessday.ng/news/article/40-of-lecturers-now-sleep-in-their-offices-over-housing-crisis-unilag-don/
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by razzydoo(m): 2:01pm On Mar 13
Oga stop your myopia. Financial literacy and careers are separate items and mutually exclusive.
Omowale2023:
Me that am earning over 300k as a marketer, I never clock 40 ooo. Educational career na scam.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Bahamas95(m): 2:16pm On Mar 13
Even at gunpoint I will still say this is a big fat lie.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by donborg(m): 2:17pm On Mar 13
DiamondsAreFore:
https://businessday.ng/news/article/40-of-lecturers-now-sleep-in-their-offices-over-housing-crisis-unilag-don/
These same lecturers and professors will be the ones to rig the election for politicians.

What goes around comes around
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by RepoMan007: 2:47pm On Mar 13
SmartPolician:
Your idea is not feasible. Quality education is not cheap anywhere in the world. In countries where education is subsided like Germany, the government is paying heavily for it from people's taxes.
Education has never
been cheap but in a country where the top private schools charge lower than what govt pay as subsidy per student in the top public schools, it is a case of corruption and traditional mismanagement.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by pato405(m): 2:53pm On Mar 13
Damseldammie:
Oh my gosh 🙆‍♀️ Education sector is suffering in 9ja, you can imagine a prof earning 700k/month….
As how nau

Too bad, to the extent they can not afford a standard house rent🤔 then government has to do something about this information.
who dash professors 700k monthly? They're currently on 460k/month. I worked there and left only recently. The new promise of pay rise by FG was supposedly to be implemented since January. However, as we speak now, it's all a mirage - fake promise! If implemented, an associate professor should earn 800k, and a Professor about 900 -950k, but can FG afford to pay this ??
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Gerrard59(m): 3:20pm On Mar 13
yemmit90:
Some Nigerians are just too unapologetic greedy. Since the start of this unfortunate trend, every Landlord in the country want to get rich quick irrespective of the conditions of their houses.

Government at various leves need to invest heavily in real estate through private partnership and give out low cost houses and apartments to the poor masses.
Cement is expensive. Allow the importation of cement so prices fall.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Gerrard59(m): 3:35pm On Mar 13
For a state city like Lagos, building up is literally the major solution it has. Lagos is Nigeria's smallest state with the biggest economy, yet it is also the most poplous. Linking metro lines to Ogun/Oyo is another one.

People can work in Lagos, but they don't have to live in Lagos.

There are countless examples across the world.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by BeginsAtHome(f): 4:23pm On Mar 13
dequir:
Yet you are ready to pay N15m for a 2 years Master course in the UK.
How much is 15m in Naira in the British economy?

Sometimes ehn, I just feel like you guys leave your grey matter somewhere before coming online.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by nairalanda1(m): 4:35pm On Mar 13
RepoMan007:
A certain guy called nairalanda1 will diasgree. He will say foreigners pay more. In Nigeria, govt has cornered natural resources and land for one tribe.
Okay keep telling yourselves sweet tales.

Reality is far better
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by orazx: 4:36pm On Mar 13
seunmsg:
There is nothing wrong with education. The problem is the funding model for our universities. We have over 140 public universities in Nigeria where students don’t pay tuition fees and you guys expect lecturers to be paid salaries. Just this weekend, a post by a student complaining of N125k fees for school logistics went viral on social media.

We want the best of everything and we don’t want to pay for it. A standard private secondary school in Abuja charges nothing less than N1.5m in a year but somehow, we want to pay N20,000 per year for university education and we don’t want lecturers to sleep in
offices. Okay now, make all of us dey play.
APC parrot
How much did you pay when you were in school? Or should I say how much are you paying currently?
If the Government can’t provide cheap education what exactly are they going to give?
No good Road
Security is F9
Power is bad
What gangan?
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by nairalanda1(m): 4:38pm On Mar 13
seunmsg:
There is nothing wrong with education. The problem is the funding model for our universities. We have over 140 public universities in Nigeria where students don’t pay tuition fees and you guys expect lecturers to be paid salaries. Just this weekend, a post by a student complaining of N125k fees for school logistics went viral on social media.

We want the best of everything and we don’t want to pay for it. A standard private secondary school in Abuja charges nothing less than N1.5m in a year but somehow, we want to pay N20,000 per year for university education and we don’t want lecturers to sleep in offices. Okay now, make all of us dey play.
I hate to agree with you since you are defending Tinubu and let's be honest, if Tinubu and apc had done what they should have done in 2015, by now things might have been better

But even then, the era when universities could build housing for their lecturers and staff ended decades before 1999
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by nairalanda1(m): 4:39pm On Mar 13
Gerrard59:
For a state city like Lagos, building up is literally the major solution it has. Lagos is Nigeria's smallest state with the biggest economy, yet it is also the most poplous. Linking metro lines to Ogun/Oyo is another one.

People can work in Lagos, but they don't have to live in Lagos.

There are countless examples across the world.
Eggsactly
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by nairalanda1(m): 4:52pm On Mar 13
Rocktation:
How about we start the explanation with the numerous indirect taxes embedded in Nigerians' everyday transactions. Who is accounting for those?

The frustration that many Nigerians express, as I suspect you already know, is not about paying high taxes, but about trust and accountability. People naturally, must want to know how their monies are functioning.

We see a country with significant oil revenue, large budgets, and numerous public funds, even without the taxes you say we don’t pay, yet our universities are underfunded, hospitals struggle, and infrastructure remains poor.

So are we being punished by the people in authority? Why are they hiding behind the lie that development must come only out of the pockets of citizens?
Nigeria does not have significant oil revenue

Oil revenue in Nigeria without corruption is not up to 100 billion dollars on a good day. Oil prices are in most years low. It is only in crisis like this that we see high oil prices. Ironically thanks to reforms in the oil sector, we may see more oil money

But oil revenue is not significant. We produce about the same amount as Libya , but Libya has 8 million people, we got 230million people. You can say that I am excusing government, which I am not( my beef with government past and present is that we do not focus on using our natural resources to make exportable goods and services, which is the real reason why we are bankrupt and also which is why corruption festers)..but I am here to tell you that even of Peter Obi was in charge and he also had successfully eliminated corruption,the oil money we are earning is not enough for even five states

Our education budget last year was around 7 billion dollars. That's for universities, primary schools, secondary schools ,. polytechnic, mono technical college and colleges of education. States too get their own..when you divide the money it is even a wonder they can pay.salaries talkless of doing it regular. Harvard college spends more than that in a year. Just to give you an idea of how broke we are. And why I am so tired that we keep on voting for people like Tinubu over and over again

People like to abuse me on this site and say I am excusing corruption, when I am pointing out that before we even talk about corruption money no dey. If we want money, long term is Nigeria uses its resources as the basis of an industry based economy, short term taxation for those who are not paying tax in the majority. It's sad, but it is what it is..

God knows that I don't support PDP like repoman007 or apc like many others here. And God knows I hate this reality
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by seunmsg(m): 4:54pm On Mar 13
nairalanda1:
I hate to agree with you since you are defending Tinubu and let's be honest, if Tinubu and apc had done what they should have done in 2015, by now things might have been better

But even then, the era when universities could build housing for their lecturers and staff ended decades before 1999
Buddy, Jonathan lost since 2015, it is time to move on. Stop trying to cut your nose to spite your face. If mistakes were made in 2015 for whatever reason, we don't have to continue like that forever. For me, I will keep advocating for what is best for Nigeria and nothing else irrespective of who is president. If Obi becomes president tomorrow, I will still maintain this same position.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by Walesman2024(m): 5:06pm On Mar 13
Hello Bro,
Who told you students don't pay tuition. Fees? Is tuition different from School Fees?

I just paid N235,000 as school fees for my son in OOU last November with N70,000 Acceptance fee.

What else do you think parents should do? What's the minimum wage my Brother?

Thanks

seunmsg:
There is nothing wrong with education. The problem is the funding model for our universities. We have over 140 public universities in Nigeria where students don’t pay tuition fees and you guys expect lecturers to be paid salaries. Just this weekend, a post by a student complaining of N125k fees for school logistics went viral on social media.

We want the best of everything and we don’t want to pay for it. A standard private secondary school in Abuja charges nothing less than N1.5m in a year but somehow, we want to pay N20,000 per year for university education and we don’t want lecturers to sleep in offices. Okay now, make all of us dey play.
Re: 40% Of Lecturers Now Sleep In Their Offices Over Housing Crisis – UNILAG Don by enemyofprogress: 5:28pm On Mar 13
Easy access to the female students. Does the 40% include female lecturers?
#iamapeepingtom grin
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