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Universities keep quiet as students protest Ontario funding cuts

While students protest hit on affordability, colleges shrug and grow foreign enrolment

Published on
January 25, 2019
Last updated
January 29, 2019
ontario-protest
Source: Getty

Students in Canada鈥檚 largest province have聽protested against聽a聽move聽by the Ontario government that both hikes costs for students and lowers revenues for their universities 鈥 but institutions themselves appear to be quietly accepting it.

The divergence in responses聽appears to be聽tied in large part to the fact that the universities and their leaders sit far better positioned than the students to cope, given Canada鈥檚 foreign recruitment boom.

鈥淢ost of [Ontario鈥檚 universities] will be able to make up much of that with increased international student enrolment,鈥 said Alex Usher, a Toronto-based higher education consultant. 鈥淎nd that is the way most of them are going to deal with it.鈥

Students, on the other hand, have taken to the streets after Doug Ford, Ontario鈥檚 premier, announced that while tuition fees for domestic students would be reduced by 10 per cent, government aid for those students would be cut even deeper.

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The pain will be felt most by聽Ontario鈥檚 lowest-income students, as the Ford administration policy includes ending free tuition. In total, the aid cuts value C$600 million (拢344 million), while universities will not be reimbursed for the C$440 million reduction in fee revenue.

Both the aid cuts and the change in fee structures were points of protest at several demonstrations across Ontario. Many participants accused the Ford administration of聽failing聽to understand the seriousness of the financial challenges that they face.

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Some聽said聽that a change to exempt students from paying fees that were聽established聽through student referendums and which go towards support activities would hit scholarship and employment programmes, on-campus food banks, and academic appeals services.

But Ontario鈥檚 universities minister, Merrilee Fullerton,聽聽CBC Radio that the Ford administration wanted to give students more choice over fees that may have been decided before they arrived on campus.

Dr Fullerton said that the administration cut the student aid programme to make it more sustainable.聽Free聽tuition, in particular, was being distributed without any corresponding requirement for academic success, she said.

Leaders of Ontario鈥檚 top universities declined to comment on the matter. Spokesmen for two of them said that it was too early for their institutions to assess the full effects of the cuts in their tuition income.

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Their silence, said Mr Usher, the president of Higher Education Strategy Associates, largely reflected the fact that, for the most part, 鈥渢he institutions got off lightly and it鈥檚 the students who got hit harder鈥.

The universities, he said, recognised that the Ford administration was elected last year with a promise to balance the provincial budget and to make every department absorb its share.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 pretty much what鈥檚 happened here,鈥 Mr Usher said. 鈥淣obody likes a cut, but 3-4 per cent, from where they are, is not exactly the end of the world.鈥

And to the degree that colleges might want to protest somewhat on behalf of their students, Mr Usher said, they are muted by their recognition of Mr Ford鈥檚 reputation for being politically聽vindictive.

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鈥淭hey鈥檙e quiet because they鈥檝e got to live with this government for four years,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd they don't want to get into a fight with him early on.鈥

Mr Ford has already attracted controversy since his election last June by demanding that universities implement and comply with a campus free speech policy that meets a minimum government standard.

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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