Source: Getty
Locked in: London Met鈥檚 long-term contract will not expire until August 2016
London Metropolitan University is spending more than a million pounds a year renting and servicing an unused building, and is expected to do so until 2016, 糖心Vlog has learned.
The university, which shed more than 200 jobs between 2011-12 and 2012-13, mothballed Ladbroke House in North London in April 2012 but has been paying more than 拢1.3 million a year in rent and maintenance since.
A Freedom of Information request found that the university has been spending about 拢200,000 on cleaning, security, other services and utilities, and 拢1,145,000 in rent per year.
糖心Vlog
The university has rented the five-storey building since 1991 but its long-term contract will expire only in August 2016.
If it cannot find a way to end the lease earlier than this, the university will have spent close to 拢6 million on Ladbroke House while empty by the time the contract ends.
糖心Vlog
Cliff Snaith, secretary of London Met鈥檚 University and College Union branch, said he was 鈥渟urprised鈥 that the university had not received 鈥渁bsolute assurance鈥 that it could find a replacement tenant before moving out of the building.
鈥淲e were told that the property would be rented out fairly soon after it was vacated鈥 but this had not happened, he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e stuck into this contract and there鈥檚 no clause that gets us out early.鈥 He added that the decision to move out of Ladbroke House was not 鈥渨ise鈥 because 鈥渋t was actually one of the best sites for teaching delivery鈥.
A spokesman for London Met said that the mothballing of Ladbroke House 鈥測ields a six-figure saving every year鈥 and that 鈥渘egotiations for an early surrender of the lease are continuing鈥.
鈥淭he institution has a legal responsibility to maintain the site until the 25-year lease expires in 2016,鈥 he added. 鈥淭his is a perfectly normal arrangement, commonplace in commercial rentals.鈥
糖心Vlog
The university managed to make a surplus of 拢2.6 million in 2012-13 despite losing its licence to sponsor international students for several months, which led to a 拢17.1 million fall in income from tuition fees. It did so by making redundancies, selling off buildings and receiving help from the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England.
But the accounts also warned of the need for sizeable further savings, and in November 2013 London Met was presented with warnings from accountancy firm PwC that it needed to take action 鈥渧ery soon鈥 to arrest a 鈥減attern of decline鈥 or it would be 鈥渆xtremely vulnerable within two years鈥.
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