Politics

Ford not willing to raise post-secondary tuition in Ontario despite schools reporting financial struggles

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday he does not want to raise tuition for post-secondary students, despite colleges and universities struggling financially and a panel that recommended otherwise.

Ford’s government cut tuition by 10 per cent in 2019 for Canadian students and froze it.

A government-commissioned blue-ribbon panel recommended the province unfreeze tuition, raise student aid and increase operating grants to the schools.

“I just don’t believe this is the time to go into these students’ pockets, especially the ones that are really struggling, and ask for a tuition increase,” Ford said at a news conference about combating car theft.

The province has not said how it will respond to the panel’s report other than saying it would work with the schools to find efficiencies, something Ford reiterated.

“We’re going to work with our colleges and universities to support them any way we can and drive efficiencies throughout the system,” he said.

“You know, there’s some classes out there, believe it or not, that have six or seven students. That’s unacceptable.”

The tuition cut and freeze on domestic students combined with low provincial funding forced many schools to look for different revenue streams. Colleges in particular vastly increased their reliance on international students, who were not subject to the tuition freeze, as a way to increase revenue.

WATCH | Province implements new changes following federal cap:

Ontario’s response to the federal government’s international study permit cap

Ontario is imposing a moratorium on new public-private college partnerships, among other changes the province says will improve “the integrity of Ontario’s post-secondary education.” It comes on the heels of a recent federal government decision to cap the number of international student permits it issues over the next two years in a bid to address the housing crisis.

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But the federal government recently introduced a cap on international students’ study permits that will see Ontario’s allotment of new visas cut in half.

The move was done, in part, to deal with “bad actors” in private colleges that made false promises of citizenship after graduation and some institutions that are allegedly diploma mills.

There has also been a recent surge in international students, which the federal government said has increased demand for housing, of which there is very little supply, especially in Ontario.

There is work to do on post-secondary institutions in Ontario, said Marc Miller, minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship. He said the federal government will work with the province to “clean it up because it is a mess.

“This is an opportunity to do things the right way and make post-secondary education a thing that is a quality proposition and not a quantity one, which is what it is today,” Miller said at an unrelated news conference Wednesday.

“There [are] clearly some institutions that shouldn’t exist. We’ll see if they get shut down,” he added when asked if the Ford government is capable of tackling this problem.

The province recently said post-secondary institutions must guarantee housing for international students, but has not explained how that will work.

Colleges Ontario, which represents the province’s 24 publicly funded colleges, said the new cap is already creating havoc as they have year-round intake of students.

Both Colleges Ontario and the Council of Ontario Universities have asked the federal government to cancel or delay implementing the international student visa cap.

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Both have also called on the province to immediately implement the recommendations from the blue-ribbon panel.

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