Immigration minister to meet with N.S. officials over cap on international students - Action News
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Nova ScotiaQ&A

Immigration minister to meet with N.S. officials over cap on international students

Immigration minister Marc Miller spoke to CBC Radio's Information Nova Scotia hostPortia Clark about the reasons for an international student cap and the possible effects it may have in Nova Scotia.

Maritimes universities 'were on an untenable trajectory, ' says Marc Miller

Profile headshot of Immigration Minister Marc Miller, with person standing in the background who is blurred by a shallow depth of field.
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller speaks to the media during a federal cabinet retreat in Montreal in January. (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press)

Federal Immigration Minister Marc Miller recently announced a two-year cap on how many international students will be granted study permits to come to Canada.

The change is being introduced to address the affordable housing crisis, but it's also an effort to crack downonprivate colleges that mislead international students about their chances of staying in Canada once they finish their diploma.

Miller spoke to CBC Radio's Information Morning Nova ScotiahostPortia Clark about the reasons for the change and the possible effects it may have on international students and institutions in the province.

Their conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

Immigration Minister Marc Miller speaks with Portia Clark about the two-year study permit cap on international students his government has just imposed.

What is your sense of the extent to which international students are contributing to the housing crisis?

You probably read a number of economists saying that the number of people here on a temporary basis, including a large swath of international students that hasspiked rapidly in a couple of years, have created an impact on the cost of shelter, which includes rentals and home ownership.

The international student increase has occurred notably in British Columbia andin Ontario but recently in ... P.E.I., Nova Scotia and New Brunswick which were on an untenable trajectory as well.

We were looking at a spike offrom one millioninternational students on three-year permits for the last three years to 1.4 million next yearwhich, if that continues, could present some real challenges in housing and perhaps even folks that would be claiming asylum at the end.

What's your understanding of where provinces and territories are right now in deciding how they're going to distribute this among the various institutions?

I think privately there has been some hesitation as to how to do this. This is something that is disruptive to a system that was out of control.

Provinces will have to move quite quickly to make sure that, you know, they look at the institutions under their control and regulate them accordingly.

And the best way to regulate them is to look at them and say, well, are you an institutionthat is deserving of getting these students from abroad or do you have to get your funding elsewhere or perhapsshut down?

There have been public reports across the country on some institutions that really haven't been doing their jobs and creating a proper student experience, that's proper education, proper housing, proper health services, including mental health.

That's something thatreally needs to be done. They have a very short period of time to get themselves in order or shut down some institutions that really shouldn't exist in this country.

When you say quite quickly and they need to do this in quick order, does that mean by the next school year in the fall?

This is not something that's going to be fixed overnight. It'll probably take a couple years to really bring the system back to what it was intended to be in the first place.

This is the first step. I don't exclude further measures, but it was the first important step to really bringing in something that was creating an ecosystem that had people chasing short-term gain without looking at what the long-term pain was.

What have you heardfromuniversities that rely heavily on international students?For example,Cape Breton Universityreported about 77 per centof the studentsthere come from overseas.

There is a recognition among those institutions that have been behaving well that this was a long time coming.

There are others that are hiding and there are others that are finding a lot of excuses to find all sorts of evils inwhat I announced.

The reality is that the Government of Canada did have to act and those institutions that need to get their ships in order need to look elsewhere than the exploitation and perhaps even abuseof an international visa program that was never intended to fill their coffers on the backs of international students at the proportions that they are doing.

International students are not to blame for this, and some of them are being scapegoated as a result of this, and that's not fair for them.

Will you be watching how each province, in our case Nova Scotia, brings this in?

I am meeting mycolleagues in Nova Scotia in the next week or solooking for some positive discussions.

I wouldn't say Nova Scotia was an outlierin terms of the volume, but it certainly was on a trajectory that wasputting it very close to Ontario if it continued in the next few years.

So there will be some adjustments that need to be made.

We haven't really finalized the numbers of the reductions yet. That's a discussion that will be concluded within the next few days.

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With files from Information Morning Nova Scotia