McGill shelves $50M French program after Quebec out-of-province tuition hike - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:17 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

McGill shelves $50M French program after Quebec out-of-province tuition hike

The prestigious Montreal university was set to invest $50 million on a program to teach students, faculty and staff French to "integrate more fully into Quebec society," but says it is pausing the program.

The Montreal English-language university was creating a program to teach students, faculty and staff French

Photo of McGill campus and people walking
Thousands of out-of-province students who attend institutions like McGill University have an 'anglicizing effect' on the Montreal area, according to the province's minister of the French language, Jean-Franois Roberge. (Daniel Slim/Getty Images)

McGill Universitywas set to invest $50 million to teach students, faculty and staff French to "integrate more fully into Quebec society," but says it is pausing the program's announcement, after the provincial governmentsaid it would double tuition for out-of-province students.

Late last week,Quebec's minister of higher education, Pascale Dry, said new, out-of-provinceCanadian students will see tuition fees doublenext year for most,that would mean their tuition would rise from about $9,000 to more than $17,000.

International student tuition will also rise to a minimum of $20,000 per year. Dry framed the increase, the proceeds of which will go into government coffers, as a way to balance the funding of English and French universities in the province.

But Quebec's three English universities, McGill, Bishop's and Concordiahave said the plan would have devastating financial consequences for them.

WATCH| With higher tuition,here's how Quebec stacks up against other provinces:

Quebec's tuition hikes broken down

11 months ago
Duration 3:15
How the province's undergraduate tuition changes stack up against other provinces, what they mean and what's behind them.

Nearly a third of the students who attend Bishop's are from outside the province, the university's principal and vice-chancellor, Sbastien Lebel-Grenier, said earlier this week.

"Most of them will be priced out [by the new tuition fees]. It's going to have a direct impact on our capacity to enroll those students," he said. "That's really significant and that's really what our identity is about."

In an email response to CBC News Wednesday, McGill's media relations office confirmed it had postponed announcing a $50 million investment over five years "to enable more people from its community to learn or improve their French."

The university was alerted a few days ahead ofDry's tuition hike announcement that changes were coming that could affect the school's financial situation but was not informed what those changes would be, according to the email, which was unsigned.

"Finding the initial funding for McGill's investment in the promotion of the French language was extremely difficult," it wrote. "The larger goal of the program was to help students, faculty and staff integrate more fully into Quebec society, broadening the already extensive impact of our talent and expertise across Quebec."

Wednesday, Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante joined the chorus of voices criticizing Quebec's decision, saying it will dissuade students from coming to Montreal, hurt the city's economy and push them instead towarduniversities in Toronto.

"We need talent, we need workers, we need students because we want our economy to grow," Plante said.

"I want them [the Quebec government] to maybe have a bigger reflection and not to limit it to a fight between francophone against non-francophone. I think we're missing the point here and it's hitting hard and strong the representation of the city of Montreal as the metropolis of Quebec."