-

Laurentian University Fiasco Is an Indictment of the Ford Conservatives’ Failed Post-Secondary Education Policies: CUPE

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The bankruptcy of Laurentian University is an indictment of the policy failures of the Ford Conservatives, who are failing in their responsibility to ensure Ontarians have access to high-quality post-secondary education, says the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE).

“The chronic underfunding of post-secondary institutions has led to universities’ relying on revenues from enrolment and the private sector. The pandemic has created the perfect storm as declining enrolment rates combined with the Ford government’s systematic attack on revenue streams has led to this disaster at Laurentian,” said David Simao, chair of CUPE’s OUWCC.

Just before the pandemic, the Ford government cut university budgets by four per cent. In 2019, the Conservatives had also reduced tuition fees by 10 per cent without making up for the shortfall in revenues through additional funding. Universities are also challenged by the Ford government’s new performance-based funding model, which will further erode the quality of higher education.

Smaller universities like Laurentian have been particularly hard-hit during the pandemic as revenues decline due to lower enrolment rates.

“The people of Sudbury deserve to have a world-class university in their community, and the government must step in to ensure Laurentian does not go under. But this is also part of a larger problem, whereby many other universities are also struggling financially,” Simao said.

Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, said that chronic underfunding has harmed the most marginalized communities across Ontario as universities have dramatically increased tuition fees and thereby created barriers to higher education. Ontario currently has the third highest tuition fees for domestic students and the highest tuition fees for international students.

“Post-secondary education has not received adequate support during this massive global pandemic, even though workers, students and administrators have been ringing the alarm bells. Instead the government’s priority has been to support for-profit corporations over our public institutions,” Hahn said.

“This is a wake-up call for the Ford Conservatives. Our post-secondary universities are public institutions and require public solutions premised on the idea of accessible, equitable and quality higher education for Ontarians. We need to have a clear and holistic plan to help our universities overcome the challenges of the current crises, and that plan must acknowledge the policy failures that have brought us to this point.”

lf/cope491

Contacts

Zaid Noorsumar
Communications Representative
CUPE Communications
647-995-9859
znoorsumar@cupe.ca

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Zaid Noorsumar
Communications Representative
CUPE Communications
647-995-9859
znoorsumar@cupe.ca

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

CUPE members at Ontario Health atHome to hold province wide day of action to protest Doug Ford's return to office mandate

ONTARIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Hybrid works. Since before the pandemic, workers at Ontario Health atHome have been working remotely to help deliver the essential home-care services Ontarians need. Now, on the whims of the Ford government, these workers are being forced back into office spaces that are not equipped to handle them all at once. Available office spaces have shrunk since 2019, which has resulted in an uneven application of the return to office mandate in the various regions across the pr...

Inverness Long Term Care Workers Vote to Strike

INVERNESS, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Long term care workers at Inverary Manor, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 1485, voted 100% in favour of a strike mandate last week. “We’ve reached a breaking point,” admitted CUPE 1485 President Ashton Brown, “and that can be seen across the province. Long term care workers are overworked and underpaid and when we ask for help, or for recognition of the vital work we do, the government’s response is to offer us almost nothing at the barga...

My Cape Breton Home Senior Care Workers Vote to Strike

SYDNEY, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Yet another Sydney long term care home, My Cape Breton Home for Seniors, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 5137, voted 98% in favour of a strike mandate last week, citing low wages and recruitment and retention issues. “We took this vote to send a message: we’re ready to fight for what we deserve,” said CUPE 5137 President Bernice Miles. “No one wants to go on strike, we want to keep working and caring for our residents to the best of our abil...
Back to Newsroom