The Hamilton Spectator

Foreign students won’t be penalized

Study permits will be extended: Ottawa

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

Tens of thousands of internatio­nal students affected by a faculty strike at Ontario colleges are being reassured by immigratio­n officials that they won’t be penalized for a delay that is beyond their control.

But some internatio­nal students say the work stoppage, which began last Monday, has them worrying about finances as well as their education and immigratio­n status.

“It is very stressful,” said Noble Thomas, 24, a human resources management student at Confederat­ion College in Thunder Bay.

Thomas, who came to Canada two years ago from India, said each week on strike represents a loss of roughly $800 in tuition fees, not to mention the additional money spent on rent if the semester is prolonged once faculty return to work.

Though he has a job at the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, Thomas said internatio­nal students are limited to 20 hours of work per week. What’s more, he said, uncertaint­y over the length of the strike prevents students from scheduling additional shifts.

Schools should be giving refunds for the time lost, he said — a sentiment expressed by domestic and internatio­nal students alike in a petition that had garnered nearly 100,000 signatures by Sunday morning.

Several colleges in the province said they recognized the concerns raised by the strike and hoped it would end before the more than 40,000 internatio­nal students enrolled in Ontario colleges felt financial — or other — difficulti­es.

Officials at Humber, George Brown and Confederat­ion colleges also stressed other services remain available during the strike, including support for foreign students concerned about their visas or study permits.

“We haven’t started down the path of refunds yet,” said Kim Smith, associate director of internatio­nal admissions and student services at Humber College, where some 5,000 internatio­nal students are enrolled.

“In the past, this has always been decided by the province and not by an individual college, so at this time we’re kind of waiting to see what comes out of that,” she said.

A spokespers­on for the Ontario ministry of advanced education and skills developmen­t would not say whether the province was considerin­g refunds.

“We are optimistic that the two parties will return to the table to work to reach a successful, negotiated settlement that is in the best interests of all parties, with a focus on students and their learning,” Tanya Blazina said in an email.

She added: “I want them to know that previous college strikes have not led to students losing their semester. ”Meanwhile, Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada is seeking to relieve internatio­nal students’ fears about the fate of their visas and permits.

“Study permits include the condition that the student must make continual progress toward the completion of their program,” said Beatrice Fenelon, a spokespers­on for the department.

“However, internatio­nal students whose studies have been affected by the labour dispute at some designated learning institutio­ns in Ontario will not face enforcemen­t action for being unable to fulfil that condition, as it is a circumstan­ce beyond their control.”

Internatio­nal students who need to apply for extensions should include with their applicatio­n a letter from their school’s registrar confirming the impact of the strike, she said.

And while students are required to have studied continuous­ly in order to qualify for a post-graduation work permit, the interrupti­on caused by the strike won’t affect their eligibilit­y, she said.

John Porter, director of internatio­nal admissions and student services at Toronto’s George Brown College, said most students have study permits that span the duration of their program, plus a 90-day grace period afterwards so they can apply for a post-graduation work permit.

Permit extensions are “fairly common” even in a normal school year, said Porter, himself a regulated internatio­nal student immigratio­n adviser.

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