Laundry should decrease by about 40-50%,
Yes, laundry and dishes decreased in my house when she was away at school. The hall bathroom stayed cleaner too. My oldest isn't neat, but my youngest is.
I'm sure the insurance companies already know this but when colleges say students "aren't permitted" to have cars, all that really means is that they can't get campus parking permits. They're welcome to have cars. They just have to park them on the street.
My college's policy was no cars for freshman but I still had a car and I parked it right outside my dorm every day and close to campus when I drove it to class. I just couldn't get a window sticker to park on campus in a lot.
My daughter's school has plenty of parking for freshmen -- two miles down the road. Just hop on the campus bus and take a ride to the parking lot. Of course, if you stay on the bus only a few minutes longer, you will arrive at your destination and be able to skip the car altogether. The reality at my daughter's school is, For a freshman, a car is only useful for going home on Friday. Or pay $1000 for one of the few private adjacent to campus spots (only a dozen or so exist, so that's how they can command that price). Upperclassmen can purchase good parking spots in a deck, but freshmen are definitely discouraged from having cars. My daughter said it wasn't really a big deal not having a car on campus -- not as a freshman, while all her classes and plenty of social life are within easy walking distance.
Check with your insurance Pjila,
I have allstate and they won't let you drop a young adult that resides in your house. I beg, pleaded, threatened and cajoled. their reasoning is that even though you say she may "hate" driving there is a chance she will drive.
The only way I could remove my two sons was they would have to get their own policies, which of course is cost prohibitive. kinda of burns me because as I said my youngest is 16 hours away and definitely will not have a car.
Yep, ditto for us. To remove her from our insurance, she would've had to turn in her license to the state . . . and that would cause problems in the future. Regaining a license after a period of non-licensure is expensive because the only people who do it are those who've lost their license for DUI (or similar). Testing again would be nothing, but the fees are significant. Likewise, it's difficult and expensive to get insurance after a break in service. AND she wouldn't be able to drive when she comes home, which would be a problem for summer jobs. PLUS she's only going to be car-less her freshman and sophomore years. When she's a junior and begins nursing clinicals, a car will be required. So IF we went to great lengths to get her off our insurance for four 14-week semesters, we would pay much more in the long run
and inconvenience ourselves in the process.
I don't know that other states are the same, but I investigated this option thoroughly, and -- for us -- the system wins.
I don't expect that she will come home except for holiday weekends.
During the school year we saw our daughter about once a month, which pleased us and her. It was "just right".
As for making college "home", my daughter hasn't. She LOVES her school. Right now, while she's home for the summer, she occasionally mentions, "I miss so-and-so or such-and-such about school." I believe her entire wardrobe is school colors now. She fit in well, she had tons of friends and has kept in touch with them over the summer, she's said to me 100 times, "I'm so glad I chose my school", and she's excited to return in only a few weeks . . .
but home remained home for her. She looked forward to trips home, and she was very ready for a break from school and from dorm life by the time May arrived (she was burned out after exams). Home is the ties she has with us, and I'm not a bit sorry for that!