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Ottawa Sets Standards for Campus Funding

Full Title: An Act relating to cash contributions by Canada and to criteria and conditions in respect of post-secondary education

Summary#

This bill sets national criteria that provinces must meet for their post-secondary institutions to receive federal cash transfers for post-secondary education. It also requires the federal government to split the Canada Social Transfer (CST) into two parts: one for social programs and child care, and one dedicated to post-secondary education (ss. 4–5, 20).

  • Provinces must ensure their institutions meet four criteria: public administration, academic independence, quality, and accessibility (s. 5; ss. 7–10).
  • If a province or its institutions fall short, the federal government can reduce or withhold transfers after a discussion process (ss. 12–15).
  • Quebec may opt out of the criteria and still receive the transfers, but must still provide required information (s. 6; s. 11).
  • The Minister must issue an annual report with data on funding, access, quality, and affordability (s. 19).
  • Within 6 months of Royal Assent, the Minister must create a framework to split the CST; implementation must start within 60 days after that (s. 20).

What it means for you#

  • Households (students and families)

    • Provinces would have to ensure “reasonable access” for academically capable applicants, regardless of ability to pay (s. 10(a)). How “reasonable” is defined is not set in the bill.
    • Tuition must follow a provincially authorized schedule (s. 10(b)). The bill does not set tuition levels.
    • Federal annual reports would publish average tuition and student debt by province, plus access indicators (s. 19(d)(iv), (vi)).
  • Workers (faculty and academic staff)

    • Institutions must limit use of short-term contracts, casual labour, and contracting out in hiring faculty to meet the “quality” criterion (s. 9(a)).
    • Institutions must report faculty-to-student ratios, administrator-to-student ratios, use of contract faculty, and course loads to the provincial minister (s. 9(b)).
  • Donors and affiliated organizations

    • Institutions must prevent outside entities, including donors, from exercising undue influence over research, curricula, and employment decisions (s. 8(b)). Gift agreements may need review to comply.
  • Post-secondary institutions

    • Must be non-profit, be accountable to the provincial government, and be subject to provincial audits (s. 7).
    • Must protect academic and intellectual autonomy of staff and students (s. 8(a)).
    • Must meet the quality and accessibility criteria noted above (ss. 9–10).
    • Failure to satisfy criteria could trigger provincial risk of reduced federal transfers after a federal-provincial discussion process (ss. 12–13).
  • Provinces and territories

    • To qualify for federal cash contributions, provinces must ensure their funded institutions meet the four criteria and must provide prescribed information to the federal Minister when required (s. 5; s. 11).
    • If the federal government finds non-compliance and discussions do not resolve it, it may reduce or withhold the province’s transfer; reductions can continue while the default persists (ss. 12–15).
    • Quebec may opt out of the criteria yet still receive the transfer; Quebec must still provide required information (s. 6; s. 11).
    • Provinces will see the CST split into a post-secondary education component and a social services/child care component under a framework created within 6 months of Royal Assent, with implementation starting within 60 days after (s. 20).
  • General timeline

    • Orders to reduce or withhold funding cannot take effect earlier than 30 days after notice is sent to the province (s. 13(4)).
    • The Minister must table an annual report by December 31 following each fiscal year (s. 19(1)–(2)).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.

  • The bill sets conditions on existing or future federal “cash contributions” authorized under other Acts; it does not set new spending amounts (s. 2 “cash contribution”; s. 4).
  • It requires federal administration (monitoring, reporting) and provincial reporting, but no fiscal note or cost estimate is provided in the bill text. Data unavailable.
  • The CST split requires a framework and implementation steps within set timelines, but the bill does not state any dollar changes to total transfers. Data unavailable.

Proponents' View#

  • Sets clear national standards to protect academic freedom and institutional autonomy by limiting undue donor influence and requiring autonomy protections (s. 8). This aims to safeguard research integrity and curricula.
  • Improves education quality by discouraging heavy reliance on contract faculty and requiring reporting on staffing ratios and course loads (s. 9). Proponents argue this can support smaller classes and stable faculty employment. Assumption: institutions and provinces will adjust staffing to meet the criterion.
  • Enhances accessibility by requiring “reasonable access” regardless of ability to pay and tuition set by a lawful provincial schedule (s. 10). Proponents see this as guarding against financial barriers. Assumption: provinces will use financial aid or tuition policy to demonstrate compliance.
  • Increases transparency and accountability via annual federal reports on spending, access for under-served groups, tuition, student debt, and quality indicators (s. 19).
  • Creates more predictable federal funding for education by splitting the CST and establishing a long-term framework dedicated to post-secondary education (s. 20). Assumption: a separate component will reduce competition with other social spending.

Opponents' View#

  • Risks federal overreach into provincial jurisdiction over education by tying transfers to detailed institutional criteria and enabling reductions or withholdings (s. 5; ss. 12–15).
  • Introduces compliance uncertainty because key terms are undefined or subjective, such as “limit” the use of contract faculty and “reasonable access” (ss. 9–10). This could lead to disputes and inconsistent enforcement.
  • May pressure provincial budgets or institutional operations if transfers are reduced, potentially affecting students and staff; reductions can persist across years until resolved (s. 14). Assumption: provinces rely on these transfers to fund institutions.
  • Could complicate donor relations and philanthropic funding due to strict rules against undue influence over research, curricula, and employment decisions (s. 8(b)).
  • Creates asymmetry by allowing Quebec to opt out of the criteria while still receiving transfers, which could be seen as unequal treatment among provinces (s. 6).
  • Adds administrative burden for provinces and institutions due to new reporting requirements and oversight, without specified federal support for these tasks (s. 9(b); s. 11; s. 19).

Timeline

Mar 24, 2022 • House

First reading

Education
Labor and Employment
Social Welfare