Oscar Godinez-Avila heads into his room to grab some library books before class. He has some Pok茅mon study music playing in the background, a big Colorado flag hanging on the wall, and a lot of clothes piling up in his laundry basket.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a bit of a disaster,鈥 the 25-year-old student at Colorado State University said. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying my best to get rid of things to keep it more open.鈥
He鈥檚 a fifth-year senior studying interdisciplinary liberal arts and history. He lives in a tiny, older apartment building in Fort Collins, two blocks west of the university鈥檚 stadium. His bedroom has all of the college essentials, but one thing is missing 鈥 a bed.
鈥淚 use a rollout mat,鈥 he said as he took out his sheets and pillows and put them on the floor. 鈥淎fter moving so much, so often, I learned it's just impractical to have a big bed鈥y friends are usually flabbergasted when they come and see I don't have a bed.鈥
Godinez-Avila has struggled to find housing ever since he couldn鈥檛 afford the dorms during his first year of college. For the last couple years, he鈥檇 go around asking friends if they had a place he could sleep.

"They were kind enough to let me be on their couch while I figured out something more permanent,鈥 he said. 鈥淯nfortunately, that usually just meant I needed to find another couch to move on, and not be too much of a burden to them."
This is the sleeping situation Godinez-Avila has always known. He grew up in Fort Morgan, on the eastern plains, but moved around northern Colorado for most of his life since his dad worked a variety of jobs. His parents couldn鈥檛 afford a place with more than one bedroom, so he would sleep with his three sisters on the living room floor.
Godinez-Avila said the longest he ever stayed in one place was one and a half years.
Despite growing up in poverty, Godinez-Avila loved to learn. After reading articles about anthropology and philosophy after high school, he decided he wanted to go to college. He even got a small scholarship to attend CSU.
But his college experience was quite different from that of many other CSU students he knew. He would spend mornings using his friends鈥 bathrooms or the sinks on campus to clean up. He would skip breakfast, because he had no place to store his food. He was always working or doing homework.
Godinez-Avila felt isolated, like he was the only one that didn't have money to make ends meet. He dropped out for a year before deciding to come back.
鈥淚t felt like everybody here had money, everybody here had a heritage and a legacy to build off of, and I was just left really confused and judged and exploited,鈥 he said.
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"Home" is a car or couch
Nearly half of college students who responded to the Hope Center鈥檚 2020 said they struggle with paying utilities or rent. Most of those respondents come from community colleges. Many are also managing medical, grocery and transportation bills as well. Thousands of college students succumb to these challenges every semester.
糖心vlog传媒 News talked to other college students for this project, all with their own stories to tell. One student had slept in a CVS bathroom once before class. Another got by working over 20 hours at Panda Express on top of completing classwork. A group of three students crammed into a studio apartment to be able to afford rent. One student lived out of his car.
鈥淭here is a substantial number of students affected, it's not negligible,鈥 said Sara Goldrick-Rab, the former director of Temple University鈥檚 Hope Center, which administers the RealCollege Survey. 鈥淔ood insecurity, housing insecurity, and homelessness are all issues that are persistent and not going away.鈥

Additionally, 1 in 7 students who responded to the RealCollege Survey said they were homeless at some point during the year. More than a third said they lacked the food they needed. These problems only get worse at two-year colleges, as well as for those who identify as part of the BIPOC or LGBTQIA+ communities.
Goldrick-Rab believes these numbers fail to represent the full scale of student homelessness.
鈥淭hose (who took the survey) are the survivors, so to speak. Those are the ones who were able to have enough financial strength to stay in college, despite the fact that everything was pushing them out,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e couldn't get to the former students. We couldn't get to the dropouts.鈥
Universities in Colorado do not have much data on these students, showing an incomplete picture of housing insecurity among students. A recent CSU survey had a very low response rate. The University of Northern Colorado only has numbers in the teens. The University of Colorado Boulder doesn鈥檛 count students at all.
Speed bumps slow down education
Statistics can tell us how many active college students face housing challenges. But the numbers don鈥檛 account for the young people who want to pursue degrees but get delayed鈥攐r never make it鈥攄ue to mental health issues or medical conditions. Some do not even have access to internet or a car to get to school.
鈥淚t's a great reward to see these students come through and totally, like, crush it in the college world because they were given some resources,鈥 said PJ Travin, the assistant director of the Gateway to College program at Front Range Community College. 鈥淏ut (some people are) not realizing how those little speed bumps can completely derail a student's education as well.鈥
Gateway to College helps underserved youth who are at risk of dropping out of high school get their diplomas and earn college credits. Two-thirds of the Gateway to College students move on to a two- or four-year college. But other students feel a college education is not for them. Some choose to pursue a job right after high school because the ability to earn an income seems more appealing than taking out a large college loan.
鈥淚 can sit in my seat and be like, 鈥榃ell, student loans aren't terrible because it can help you get degrees, and that it can help you earn money.鈥 And I can discuss that path,鈥 Travin said. 鈥淏ut the reality is, if you don't complete鈥攁nd if you don't have the other supports in place to complete鈥攖hose degrees, then that financial piece is an extremely scary, real factor.鈥
Aspen Crowe can relate to this. Crowe uses they/them pronouns. The 20-year-old has always wanted to go to college. But Crowe was born with several medical issues, and like many other young adults, has struggled with depression and suicidal thoughts. Of the money they do have, they use it to pay their medical fees and rent in Boulder.

Most of Crowe鈥檚 days are spent waking up early and heading to the bus stop to get to appointments with specialists in Aurora and Lone Tree. Last month, a friend gave them a ride to a medical appointment in Windsor.
鈥淭he bus here would have taken three hours. It would have been a trip down to Denver, taking the 'north,' which is a Bustang鈥攕o I can鈥檛 even afford it鈥攁nd then taking another bus, and then a 15 minute walk. That wasn鈥檛 feasible,鈥 they said.
Travin said the reality for many of these prospective students is that there鈥檚 just too much to balance between making ends meet and completing assignments.
鈥(They say) 鈥極kay, I have 20 hours of class a week, I need to work 45 hours a week to support myself and others, and school costs this much.鈥 Even if they get scholarships鈥he math just doesn鈥檛 work on those things,鈥 he said.
Crowe moved to Denver from South Dakota when they were 18, after Crowe's parents said they would no longer pay Crowe's medical bills or accept their identity as a nonbinary individual. Crowe then hopped between shelters until they found TGTHR, , in Boulder.
With stable housing at TGTHR鈥 where they've been for a year and a half鈥擟rowe could focus on other aspects of their life and health.
鈥淚 got all my mental health and my medical stuff under control,鈥 they said. 鈥淎fter that, I felt confident and comfortable that I will do good in school.鈥
Crowe starts classes at Front Range Community College on Feb. 20. They want to get their medical assistant certificate 鈥 something they鈥檝e dreamed of since they were young 鈥 and work at the local children鈥檚 hospital.
鈥淚 know that I can be an inspiration to other people, especially kids,鈥 Crowe said. 鈥(I want) to show them that even though life may not be OK right now, eventually, you'll get to a spot where it will be OK.鈥
Thriving, not just surviving
Oscar Godinez-Avila, the student from CSU, agreed that housing makes all the difference. LuMin is an organization next to CSU that provides to students who did not inherit generational wealth. Godinez-Avila has been living in one of the units since last spring.
鈥淚t was an insane weight lifted off my shoulders,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel like (last semester was) the first semester I really started to thrive, because for once that obstacle wasn't present鈥 didn't have the anxiety of feeling like nothing I was doing was ever good enough.鈥

The LuMin housing initiative is one of the first supports like it in the state. CSU, CU Boulder and the University of Northern Colorado all offer forms of emergency financial aid and food pantries for students who need help. But most colleges still do not have good housing resources for students in need. CSU refers students to external housing organizations. CU Boulder and UNC offer temporary emergency housing to students, but only if they get evicted from their current residence.
But even these resources may not make their way to the students who most need them. The RealCollege Survey found half of students surveyed who struggle to meet their basic needs don鈥檛 apply for these housing resources because they do not know they exist.
Godinez-Avila said he would probably be living in his car if he did not hear about LuMin's housing options.
After securing his housing, though, Godinez-Avila was able to start connecting with mentors for the first time. Instead of working a minimum wage job, he got an internship at a local museum since he could now afford his rent.
Through that internship, he fell in love with local history and has since applied to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in history at CSU. He dreams of one day getting a doctoral degree.
But more than professional growth or a newfound availability for extracurriculars, Godinez-Avila enjoys having a space of his own for once. He can finally focus on his homework and getting a good night鈥檚 sleep without people barging in. He鈥檚 decorated, too, putting up art of historical monuments around Colorado, like the Mesa Verde cliff dwellings, and nurturing a few house plants.
鈥淛ust being able to decorate this is so motivating, it makes me feel a lot more dignified,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t makes me feel like I can love the world on another level and love myself on a level that I think I've been deprived of for a lot of my life.鈥
Life still isn鈥檛 easy for Godinez-Avila, though. He continues to rely on the campus food pantry, and he鈥檚 unsure what his scholarship funding will look like next year. But he hopes others can find the support they need to make a degree more possible, just like he has.
鈥淗ousing insecurity and food insecurity should not in any way shape or form, be any sort of norm for any college student,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t's insane to be trying to navigate modern life without these resources.鈥