Toronto Star

Province cutting tuition 10 per cent for two years

Unclear how government will make up funding loss

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU ISABEL TEOTONIO EDUCATION REPORTER

The province is set to announce a 10 per cent cut in university and college tuition fees, according to government documents obtained by the Star.

The proposed changes to the Tuition Fee Framework would remain in effect for the next two academic years. In the 2019-20 school year, tuition would drop by 10 per cent from current levels, and would remain frozen for the 2020-21 year.

The changes will “protect students and provide a financiall­y predictabl­e environmen­t” and “keep more money in the pockets of Ontario’s students,” according to documents from the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universiti­es.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government says the move will save college students about $340 a year, and university undergradu­ate students, in arts and science, about $660. Current average tuition for an undergradu­ate program is $8,838 and $10,028 for a graduate program. The change means fees will drop to $7,962 and $9,034, respective­ly.

It is unclear if the government will make up the loss of tuition revenue to colleges and universiti­es, which they rely heavily on for operating funds. Sources have told the Star the tuition cut will amount to a $250-million loss to colleges and universiti­es.

The proposed tuition changes do not apply to internatio­nal students and will not impact students in full-cost recovery programs, such as pricey exec- utive MBAs.

Government sources say that in the coming weeks the province will also make changes to the OSAP student financial aid system, which includes the free tuition program brought in under the previous Liberal government.

Last December, the auditor general warned the free tuition plan would soon cost $2 billion annually, $650 million more annually than the previous grant-and-loan system. The cost of it was supposed to be fully covered by the end of postsecond­ary tax credits.

The auditor also said there was no evidence that the program — it provides grants to qualifying students equal to or greater than tuition — was leading to the goal of more lowincome students attending post-secondary.

The free tuition plan was also cited for allowing one-third of mature students to qualify for grants, without proof they need financial support, including those who live at home with parents earning over $200,000 a year.

However, sources in the postsecond­ary sector noted that free tuition helped 230,000 students, and they are now worried it will be axed altogether and replaced with a loans system.

When it comes to tuition changes, Nour Alideeb, chairperso­n for the Canadian Federation of Students in Ontario, is urging caution.

“There’s always a catch, so let’s wait and see the fine print,” she said on Twitter.

Changing tuition is the second big move Doug Ford’s government has made in the post-secondary file. On Jan. 1, all colleges and universiti­es had to implement free-speech policies.

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