Saturday, November 23, 2024

Colleges and universities face job cuts, deficits amid international student cap

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Ontario’s colleges and universities say the federal government’s cap on international students is taking a toll on the higher education sector as some schools face growing deficits, layoffs and, in at least one case, a temporary campus closure.

St. Lawrence College in Kingston, Ont., said it has eliminated 30 administrative and support positions and warned of further job cuts after its foreign student enrolment dropped by 50 per cent.

President and CEO Glenn Vollebregt said the college is participating in a provincewide efficiency review that is expected to conclude early next year and as that unfolds, “SLC cannot guarantee that there will be no further layoffs.”

However, the school will “continue hiring positions of all types” — including a director of Indigenous services — to ensure it can still operate “efficiently,” Vollebregt said in a statement.

Mohawk College in Hamilton has also told its staff that layoffs are on the horizon, while Seneca Polytechnic will temporarily shutter one of its campuses north of Toronto by the end of the fall semester.

“Due to recent decisions by the federal government related to international students, we are expecting enrolment at Markham Campus to decline,” Seneca said in a statement last month, adding that students displaced by the closure will be moved to two other campuses.

Several universities say they’re also staring down cuts amid financial uncertainty.

Groups representing post-secondary institutions say this may just be the tip of the iceberg, as dramatic drops in international student enrolment exacerbate some schools’ existing budget shortfalls.

The federal government has said it will issue approximately 300,000 fewer international student permits over the next three years — a move that especially affects Ontario as it had seen a larger share of growth in foreign students.

Ottawa is also limiting international college students’ work permits after graduation to areas that have labour-market shortages in Canada.

While the full impact of these policy changes on colleges’ programs and staffing levels is yet to be known, early signs are not looking good, said Michael McDonald, director of government relations and policy for Colleges and Institutes Canada.

The organization says international students contributed nearly $31 billion to Canada’s economy and supported more than 360,000 jobs in 2022.

But around 70 per cent of programs colleges currently offer are deemed ineligible for post-graduation work permits, McDonald said. Close to $2 billion in revenue is potentially at risk as international student enrolment declined by 54 per cent across the country, he added.

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