Source: Kaihsu Tai
Members of the universityās collegiate council voted today to approve the reviewās recommendations, which said Europeās largest student union should be wound up and its Bloomsbury headquarters put in the universityās hands.
Instead, it is proposed there will be a refurbished student centre offering the same services, including a swimming pool, fitness centre and bars.
ULUās role in running London-wide sports services would likely be transferred to another body, possibly British Universities and Colleges Sports, while its campaigning function could be run by the National Union of Students.
Paul Webley, director of Soas, University of London, who led the review, said many of ULUās functions were now obsolete because individual colleges now had their own thriving student unions.
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āIt made sense in the 1950s when ULU was created because the largest college only had a few thousand students and most had under 500 students,ā he said.
But several individual institutions now had more students than the entire student population at the University of London back in 1955 ā around 24,000, he said.
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āThis is not about switching money away from students, rather it is addressing the federal structure that duplicates a lot of services already provided by student unions,ā he added.
āWe, at Soas, have made a commitment that all the money that went to ULU will now go straight to our own student union.ā
Professor Webley also drew attention to the fact that fewer than 3,000 of ULUās 120,000 student members voted in the latest university-wide elections.
āThe best turn-out ULU has ever managed was 2 per cent,ā he said, adding that most London student unions saw a turnouts of 15 to 25 per cent at their own ballots.
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The review was commissioned after a letter by five college student union presidents last year that stated they had considered leaving ULU, which receives £800,000 in annual subscriptions from the colleges.
A review of the unionās āservices, processes and governanceā was needed, they added.
Michael Chessum, ULUās president, said reforms were needed, but the review group had been a ācoverā for the university, which wanted to āstealā the Bloomsbury building and turn it into a āprofitable students services centreā, while also sidelining dissenting voices of student union activists.
āAny move to abolish ULUā¦would be totally illegitimate and hugely negative for the students in London,ā he added.
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āIt would set a dangerous precedent for university management to move in with no mandate and shut down democratically-run unions.
āUniversities and colleges need vibrant, democratic organisation and debate as part of their academic culture.ā
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Several leading London political figures, including former mayor Ken Livingston and Hackney North MP Diane Abbott, have also opposed ULUās abolition in a letter to The Guardian published on 3 May.
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