Conestoga College president John Tibbits defends school's intake of international students - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Conestoga College president John Tibbits defends school's intake of international students

Conestoga College president John Tibbits is pushing back on the ideathe post-secondary institution is a bad actor when it comes to the number ofinternational students it accepts.

Conestoga currentlyhas 30K international students across 8 campuses

A man at a podium.
Conestoga College president John Tibbits says some colleges in Toronto are playing a bigger part in the international student crisis. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

Conestoga College president John Tibbitsis pushing back on the ideathe post-secondary institution is a bad actor when it comes to the number ofinternational students it accepts each year.

He also pointed tosome colleges in Toronto as having larger international student enrollment.

"There are 15 public colleges contracting out their curriculums in Toronto and there's 100,000 students in Toronto. There are no beds and very few services," Tibbitstold CBC Kitchener-Waterloo'sThe Morning EditionThursday.

Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller announced in January the federal government would introduce a two-year cap on the number of international student permits coming to the country.

The government says it will approve approximately 360,000 undergraduate study permits for 2024 a 35 per cent reduction from 2023.

"Now, we're the focus because we're large and we're large because we serve 1.2 million people," Tibbits said.

Conestoga College held an event on Tuesday to highlight the college'seconomical impact in the community. On the issue of international students, the website CambridgeToday reported Tibbits was heard calling the president of Sault College in Sault Ste. Marie a derogatory term.

Tibbitsacknowledged he used the term onThe Morning Edition, but would not talk about it in detail. He said he regrettedusing the term, but doesn't regret criticizingSault College.

LISTEN|Conestoga College presidentJohn Tibbitsdefends school's international student numbers:

Conestoga College has one of the highest numbers of international students in the country. The president of Conestoga tells us what a cap on study permits will mean for his school.

Agrees with international student cap

Conestoga College currentlyhas 30,000 international students across its campuses located in several cities Kitchener, Waterloo, Cambridge, Guelph, Brantford, Milton, StratfordandIngersoll which makes up over half the student population, Tibbits said.

Tibbits said he supports thefederal government's decision to introduce a cap on international students, adding thedecision could have been done sooner and the government could have given colleges more notice.

"I don't disagree, they should have done something. I think it was heavy handed," he said.

Healso pointedto the federal government forletting the number of international students in the country rise, addingthe collegehas tried to reduce letters of admissions by "almost 10,000" over the last three years.

"And yet we got about seven or 8,000 more students than we planned," he said. "We don't decide on the visas, it's the federal government."

Tibbits said the college has already committed to cut the number of international students coming to the college, but would not say by how many other than "it would be substantial."

A man is walking away from Conestoga College campus on January 23, 2024.
Many international students coming to Waterloo region say there is a lack of housing, forcing many of them to share a house with multiple people. (Cameron Mahler/CBC)

Expanding the number of student residences

Tibbits said it has taken the college 20 years to build its self as an international business and is an important economic driver for the region. The college currently employs over 5,500 full-time and part-time employees, according to its website, and delivers careerandskills training to more than 45,000 students.

But many international students say they often live in crowded houses due to a lack of housing locally. They also say rent in the region is expensive.

Regional Coun. Mike Harris said on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, thathe will be witting to Tibbits aboutinternational studentsliving inunsafe housing situations due to lack of housing and residences offered by the college.

"Tonight I spoke with a Conestoga College student who recently arrived from India to study at the college. He was taking a break from carrying a chair from a long distance to a house a few doors down from mine. He told me that's about all he had room for as he lives with 13 others," Harris said in his post on X.

"The only Student Residence in Doon was opened up at least 20 years ago"

Tibbits told CBC News students having a place to live is important and the college has expanded its student residences by seven across the communities it serves.

The college purchased two buildings last fall to expandthe number of spaces for students to live.The new purchases are located at 60 University Avenue East in Waterloo and 22 Frederick Street in Kitchener.

Tibbits also said the college plans to announce additional student housing projects next week.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said John Tibbits was heard calling Sault College a derogatory term, according to CambridgeToday. In fact, the website reported the term was directed at Sault College president David Orazietti.
    Feb 20, 2024 7:55 AM ET