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Leaflets are flying, phone lines buzzing, and social medial is sizzling with excitement over the giant rally planned for Monday, September 26th, at Toronto City Hall. Groups are organizing in neighbourhoods across the city, union members are mobilizing, tenants, daycare parents, library users, TTC riders and students are all expected to turn out in great numbers.
It kicks off at 5:30 pm, down on the Queen Street end of Nathan Phillips Square. But if you can get down before then, why not visit the Council chambers and bear witness to the debate between the Ford team and those Councillors who are listening to their residents about cuts to services and good jobs. If you want flyers in Spanish, Tamil, Chinese or English, they are all available at www.labourcouncil.ca |
RALLY EXCITEMENT BUILDING
September 26, 2011Liberal Platform Factsheet
September 20, 2011On September 5, the Ontario Liberals released their election platform. Central to their promises was the announcement of a $430 million investment into grants for most (but not all) college and undergraduate university students. What does this announcement mean? Here is an explanation to use when speaking to media who may contact you, to train your volunteers and to share with your members. Keep in mind that the Liberal Party seems to want to fight this election out on education and if we work hard enough we can probably pressure them to improve their promises.
THE FACTS:
- A grant worth $1,600 for undergraduate and $730 for college students will be given to eligible students whose parents make less than $160,000 per year. This should make new grants available to more than 300,000 students.
- Students who attend an institution that charges more than the average tuition fees will still receive $1,600. If a student attends an institution that charges less than the average, they will receive $1,600.
- Students who do not take a 100 per cent course load but who are still considered full-time as defined by the government should still receive $1,600.
- The grant will not be renewed for students who drop from clear standing (presumably as defined by each institution) or who move from full-time to part-time status.
- Grant eligibility should be automatic; students don’t have to apply for the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP) to receive it. It’s unclear as to how the government would determine students’ family income, though, in absence of an OSAP form.
- Nothing about the Liberal announcement will affect OSAP eligibility or administration. Debt can still rise to $29,200 per student and Ontario Student Opportunity Grants will still be distributed.
- The Liberals say that there will not be any changes announced during the campaign to reform or improve OSAP.
- There will be no announcement made to improve graduate student education, research or funding. There was no money promised for research at all.
- There was no announcement about hiring more faculty or reducing class sizes.
- Satellite campuses were promised in Barrie (Laurentian), Milton (Laurier) and Brampton (a York, U of T, Ryerson supercampus). These campuses will offer undergraduate teaching only.
IS THE PROMISED GRANT A TUITION FEE REDUCTION?
No. The Liberals have promised an up-front grant to students which will amount to $1,600 for undergraduate students and $730 for college students. This grant will not stop tuition fees from rising and the Liberals have said they will not announce their plan for tuition fees until after they’re elected.
IS EVERYONE ELIGIBLE FOR THE GRANT?
No. The following is a list of students who will not be eligible for the grant:
- Students in professional programs, who pay the highest fees, are not eligible for the program. In fact, their fee increases will be subsidizing the grants in part. Because the highest cost programs won’t be included, the least accessible fields of education will remain further out of reach for low- and middle-income students.
- Students who fall from clear standing will lose the grant.
- International students are not eligible for the grant.
- Part-time students are ineligible for the grant and students who move from full-time to part-time status will lose the grant.
- Students whose parents make over $160,000 annually will also be ineligible, even if their parents do not subsidize their education.
Graduate students are ineligible for the grant, even though they have less access to provincial student financial assistance and pay higher fees.
I HEARD THE GRANT IS WORTH 30 PER CENT OF THE COST OF TUITION FEES. IS THIS TRUE?
No. The Liberals have excluded tuition fees from professional programs in their average calculation, which are higher than other programs. The average undergraduate tuition fee is $6,300, according to Statistics Canada, but the Liberal Party says it is $5,400. This is problematic because professional programs have the highest tuition fees, and excluding them from the calculation skews the average to be lower, and denies students enrolled in them from needed financial aid. For example, if you were a student in business administration at the University of Toronto, this grant would only comprise 13 per cent of your fees. This grant also does not cover ancillary fees.
DOES THIS GRANT MAKE EDUCATION MORE AFFORDABLE?
The best way to increase the accessibility of college and university is to reduce tuition fees. This grant will help many students afford the high cost of tuition fees, but it may also justify more tuition fee increases, and more student debt. Up-front grants like this are good and students have long been calling for more grants, but real accessibility means reducing and eliminating all financial barriers.
WHAT’S THIS ABOUT SATELLITE CAMPUSES?
Existing satellite campuses in Ontario have been plagued by low educational quality and confusing governance structures where local autonomy is trumped by decision makers in another region of the province. Students have been highly critical of any plans to expand undergraduate education while at the same time not hiring more professors or guaranteeing that all the courses students require to finish their degrees will be available at all campuses. The Liberals are also promising that these campuses will be undergraduate-only; there will be no graduate education or research opportunities. This could mean that students will have lower quality professors, as most professors try to work where they can teach and research together.
IS THIS THE BEST POLICY IN THE ELECTION?
This is going to be a hard promise for the other parties to beat. While it would have been best to target the up-front costs by reducing tuition fees, this is still a significant investment into up-front student grants. Check out the political party report card when it is available and make sure you are communicating updates to your members. Things could change at any time.
THE LAST WORD
The Liberals have indicated that this is supposed to be the final platform policy but, as we have seen time and time again, updates, changes and clarifications are common when an election is underway. This document contains what has been made clear so far, but stay tuned for possible updates and share anything you learn with the Ontario Executive.
(Documentation taken from the Canadian Federation of Students pamphlet )
Posted by jnaughto 
