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Ontario expected to announce post-secondary funding increase

Ontario’s colleges and universities minister is expected to announce funding today for post-secondary institutions to respond to their precarious finances.

A government-commissioned report released in November said that low levels of provincial funding to colleges and universities combined with a tuition cut and freeze in 2019 are posing a “significant threat” to the financial sustainability of the sector.

The report said that funding for publicly assisted colleges for full-time domestic students is at a lower level than every other province, while the Council of Ontario Universities has said at least 10 universities are facing operating deficits.

The expert panel recommended a one-time, 10 per cent increase in per-student funding to colleges and universities followed by inflationary increases in subsequent years, as well as a five per cent increase in tuition along with an “equally generous” increase to student aid.

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Premier Doug Ford has already ruled out any tuition fee increases, but Colleges and Universities Minister Jill Dunlop is set to make an announcement today.

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Dunlop’s announcement is set to come as post-secondary institutions have recently been saying their situation has grown even more dire following a federal announcement earlier this year that the number of visas for international undergraduate students will be slashed, with Ontario seeing its allotment cut in half.

A report last year by Higher Education Strategy Associates said Ontario’s post-secondary funding is “abysmal” and raising spending to the average of the other nine provinces would require $7.1 billion per year in additional funding — much higher than the current level of operating funding at around $5 billion.

“No province has underfunded post-secondary education more, and no province’s institutions have found so many ways to raise money from private sources,” the strategy firm wrote.

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“On a per-student basis, the province funds universities at 57 per cent of the average of the other nine provinces; on the college side it is a mere 44 per cent. It is tenth out of ten in every interprovincial comparison of financing.”

The low levels of government funding have caused post-secondary institutions to increasingly turn to international student tuition fees, which are much higher than the rates for Canadian students.

Average university fees in 2020-21 were $7,938 for domestic undergraduate students and $40,525 for international undergraduate students, the auditor general said in a 2022 report.

The Smart Prosperity Institute, a University of Ottawa-based think tank, reported last year that Ontario universities nearly doubled international student enrolment between 2014 and 2015, and 2021 and 2022, and colleges more than tripled international enrolment.

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Ontario’s government-commissioned report on post-secondary finances said international student revenue is now fundamental to the sector’s viability, greatly raising institutions’ risk exposure.

&© 2024 The Canadian Press

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