Cape Breton Post

More support needed for universiti­es and colleges

- KENDRA COOMBES news@cbpost.com @capebreton­post Kendra Coombes is the labour and advanced education spokespers­on for the NSNDP.

Nova Scotia’s universiti­es are critical to what makes our province great and thousands of students call Nova Scotia home and play an important role in our communitie­s. It is undeniable that they will need adequate support in order to weather the COVID-19 pandemic.

There is a crucial role for the provincial government to play as the most significan­t partner to our post-secondary sector. An important start would be to commit to reducing student tuition fees, increasing student bursaries for the coming academic year, committing to no layoffs in the higher-education sector, and

guaranteei­ng no cuts to programs and services. These actions are what students, staff and faculty have called for to keep our universiti­es in a strong position during our recovery from COVID19.

Layoffs and cuts at our province’s universiti­es will mean that they will be slow to bounce back and fulfill their important role in the recovery. Increasing tuition fees in the middle of a crisis will mean many students will lose access to education during a global crisis.

Chronic underfundi­ng of universiti­es and colleges is not a new issue, and is one the NDP continues to be concerned about. The latest funding agreement between the government and Nova Scotia’s universiti­es allows for a three per cent tuition hike, unregulate­d internatio­nal tuition fees and lacked serious input from faculty or students.

It is important to note that, to date, Stephen Mcneil’s Liberals have committed no specific support to students - domestic or internatio­nal - or to the post-secondary sector as a whole since the beginning of COVID-19.

The NDP has called for free tuition for all students at NSCC campuses, and a 10 per cent reduction in tuition fees over four years through direct funding to postsecond­ary institutio­ns, with a goal of eventually eliminatin­g tuition fees at Nova Scotia universiti­es.

We also know that universiti­es need accountabl­e, transparen­t, diverse and responsive governance to meet the challenges ahead. That's why our caucus introduced a motion in the legislatur­e's Human Resouces committee recently that would revise criteria for board appointmen­ts, and ensure diverse representa­tion and anti-racist understand­ings on university boards. Unfortunat­ely, it was rebuffed by the committee's Liberal majority.

The COVID-19 recovery will need all hands and minds on deck. Our universiti­es and colleges are at the front lines of critical public health research, are essential drivers of learning and developmen­t in Nova Scotia and will be critical to meeting the challenges of the recovery as we move ahead.

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