A victory of the Yes campaignJoe Robinson

Results for the Disabled Students’ Officer referendum show it has been a success for the Yes campaign, with 4315 for and 336 against.

The referendum, to add a full-time Disabled Students’ Officer to Cambridge University Students’ Union (CUSU) saw a 92.22 per cent vote for the Yes option, with 4679 votes cast.

The vote results have now been confirmed by CUSU, and it is understood that this has been the highest turnout for a CUSU-led referendum in the past six years.

In a statement, Jemma Stewart, CUSU Co-ordinator and Returning Officer for the referendum, said: "CUSU Elections Committee would like to take this opportunity to thank all those students who voted in what is now the highest voter turnout in a CUSU referendum in over 6 years. We would like to commend all those who campaigned for either side in the referendum – the high turnout is in no small part down to the excellent campaigning techniques and dedication of those involved.

"We will now be handing over the constitutional implementation to the Union Development Team – composed of Priscilla Mensah, CUSU President, Cornelius Roemer and Umang Khandelwal – who will liaise with the CUSU Trustee Board and the University's Council Committee for the Supervision of Students' Unions".

The referendum ran from Wednesday 27th January until 9am this morning. It required a quoracy of 10 per cent voting “Yes” in order to pass, which required 2,191 students from the total 21,915 eligible registered voters.

It proposed adding the role of Disabled Students’ Officer (DSO) to the six current sabbatical officer roles: President, Education, Welfare, Women’s, Coordinator and Access.

The first DSO will be elected by “all those ordinary members who self-define as disabled”. This would operate in a manner similar to the election for Women’s Officer, the electorate for which consists of self-defining women.

The DSO will operate as head of the autonomous CUSU Disabled Students' Campaign. They will work full-time and be paid £20,000 a year, the same salary as other elected CUSU officers.

The referendum question was phrased “Do you accept the proposed constitutional changes, which would add a Disabled Students’ Sabbatical Officer to the CUSU Full-Time Elected Officer Team?”, with “Yes” and “No” as the responses. It was run under tight rules for campaigning and social media. This included a blanket ban on any posts which advocated either voting option from public social media groups, including JCR and MCR pages.

The official Yes guidance offered by CUSU Elections Committee said that the creation of a full-time DSO would be a “positive step for greater equality and liberation” within the university. They said that a student elected into this role could “feed into general discussions on whole-team Sabbatical Officer campaigns with both personal and representative experience much more easily”.

It was also suggested that the creation of the new role will “set a precedent for other Students' Unions” around the UK, as full-time officers for disabled students are currently a rarity.

Reacting to the outcome of the referendum, a spokesperson for the Yes campaign said: "This is a huge victory. We hope that we can build on this support and mobilise more students to get involved with the Disabled Students’ Campaign, and we will continue working relentlessly to make Cambridge a less disabling place. [...] We want to thank every single student who took the time to vote and engage with the campaign."

Concerns were raised about the over the value for money that a full-time Disabled Students’ Officer would offer. The CUSU guidance for the No campaign stated that an “additional full-time officer would increase the demands on staff support, which may consequently result in a need for more roles within the support staff team”, and stated that this could have its own “financial implications”.

Options proposed by CUSU to fund the newly created post include “ceasing existing activities” and “looking to raise additional income”. CUSU is currently in the early stages of pursuing a general re-negotiation of its funding model – seeking to gain money directly from colleges rather than from JCRs and MCRs. This new approach has received mixed responses.

The vote was triggered by a petition held by the Disabled Students’ Campaign at the end of last term, which gained the 350 signatures required to trigger a referendum.

Issues pertaining to disabled students currently fall under the remit of Welfare and Rights Officer, Poppy Ellis-Logan, who is tasked with “identifying areas of concern regarding the rights of minority or marginalised groups within the student body”.

According the university’s Equality & Diversity Information Report for 2014-15, “numbers of students who have diagnosed a disability continue to rise”. 8.1 per cent (968) of undergraduates and 5.9 per cent of (497) graduates disclosed a disability in 2014-15.