Windsor Star

No Frenchlang­uage university in the cards for Ontario

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Ontario will not reverse the cancellati­on of a proposed French-language university despite a federal commitment to extend funding for a team working on the project, the provincial government said Monday. Merrilee Fullerton, the minister of training, colleges and universiti­es, said the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government was not in a financial position to support the Universite de l’Ontario francais project.

“As a result, the Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universiti­es will not provide further funding to support the developmen­t of the new university while the initiative is on pause,” she said, adding that the working group could access private and public funding from other entities. Fullerton’s comments came after Federal Minister of Tourism, Official Languages and La Francophon­ie Melanie Joly informed the Ontario government that Ottawa had provided $1.9 million in funding to a team developing the school called the Francophon­e Knowledge and Innovation Hub. The provincial funding for the hub and its staff was to expire Jan. 15. “This project is greatly supported by the community, and enjoys support across the country,” Joly said in a letter Sunday to Ontario’s Francophon­e Affairs Minister Caroline Mulroney. “I am concerned about the impact of this decision on the vitality of the Franco- Ontarian community.”

Plans for the school were announced by Ontario’s previous Liberal government in 2017, but the Tories scrapped the project in November. It would have been the first French-only university in the province, which is home to 600,000 francophon­es, and it was set to be located in southweste­rn Ontario.

The move sparked outrage and protests among Franco-Ontarians and prompted Progressiv­e Conservati­ve legislator Amanda Simard to leave the party caucus and sit as an independen­t. Normand Labrie, interim president the Universite de l’Ontario francais, said the federal money will give the hub a year to secure additional funding to continue developmen­t of the school. “We’re very relieved because otherwise we would have had to let the staff go,” he said. “It would have been a loss to stop the activity at this point and it would have been hard to start all over again.” Joly said the federal government’s Action Plan for Official Languages 2018-2023 could provide funding for the French-language university, but that would be conditiona­l upon the province applying for it and committing to at least 50 per cent of the total costs.

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