Emily Carr students stage walkout to protest tuition increase for international students - Action News
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British Columbia

Emily Carr students stage walkout to protest tuition increase for international students

The Emily Carr University of Art and Design is planning to raise tuition by 30 per cent fornew incoming international students, and 10 per cent for returning international students.

The university plans to raise tuition fees for new international students by 30 per cent

A young woman holds a sign that says tuition fairness for international students.
Students stage a walkout in opposition to the rising costs of international students' tuition at Emily Carr University in Vancouver, British Columbia on Thursday, Dec. 1, 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

StudentsatEmily Carr University of Art and Designin Vancouver, B.C.,walked out of class Thursday in protest against anticipated tuition hikes for international students.

The university is planning to raise tuition by 30 per cent fornew incoming international students and the plan is not sitting well with students who say they are already feeling the financial squeeze of living in an expensive city and paying far more than their domestic peers.

"Treating international students, post-secondary students, as cash cows essentially is not the way," said international studentKashish Hukku Jani, speaking Wednesday onCBC's The Early Edition.

Jani studies communicationdesign and pays about $9,000 per semester a sum she says is already four times higher than domestic students.

Tuition for new international students at the university is expected to go up 30 per cent. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The university is also planning to hike tuition for returning international students by 10 per cent and domestic fees by two per cent.

In a statement, it says the decision is necessary because the school operates underthe province's University Act, and is therefore required to table a balanced budget as part of its responsibility to the government as a public post-secondary institution.

"The tuition increase is required for the university to continue providing a quality education for students today and into the future," readsthe statement.

This is not much solace to Jani, who is from India and is upset that the education she is getting might now be financially out of reach for other Indian students with art school dreams.

"They and their families just cannot afford the tuition hike," she said.

The walkout was originally planned for Wednesday but was derailed for a day due to inclement weather that caused public transit delays and cancellations across the Lower Mainland.

About 100 students had already walked out of their classrooms by 11 a.m., and the event was scheduled to continue until 1 p.m.

A crowd begins to gather outside the university as walk out action beganThursday morning. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

It is not the first action taken this school year, she said, noting there was also a200-student sit-in at a board of governors meetingand a letter-writing campaign directed at local members of the legislative assembly.

The goal, said Jani, is for the school to push back against the province rather than "rely on the backs" of students to stay financially afloat.

"This should be about providing affordable education to your students," she said."The university needs to stand in solidarity for its students and get more funding."

Emily Carr administration was aware of the planned walkout, and the university's statement says it respects the rights of students to voice their concerns by taking action and recognizes the challenges higher tuition payments will create for some but there wereno plans to halt the hike.

With files of The Early Edition