PV Ontario Bureau, Jan. 22, 2019

In a calculated and sweeping attack, the Ontario Conservative government has imposed a minimum 4% cut to university and college funding, threatened the very existence of student unions, undermined universality in post-secondary education, jeopardized programs and services essential to students, and opened the door to massive privatization.

To defeat this assault, student and labour organizations will need to unite and build a vibrant, grassroots fightback that includes escalating actions and the concrete demand for free tuition in Ontario.

The government announced on January 17 that it was cutting university and college funding by $400 million. The cut will be in the form of a 10% reduction in tuition fees, which the Tories have stated will not be made up by any other government funding. It is a cynical move, designed to position the government as defenders of “affordable tuition”, but one that is already widely understood to be an attack on post-secondary education (PSE).

The government also announced deep reductions in non-repayable grants to students and an increase in loans, combined with eliminating the 6-month grace period for loan repayment. Furthermore, students’ ancillary fees – used to fund student unions, services for students, and centres for women, Indigenous, racialized, and LGBTQ+ students – will be declared optional so that individual students may select which ones to pay. The government has stated that fees for health and safety initiatives will continue to be mandatory, but the reality is many of these services are provided through student unions, whose capacity to deliver them, and whose very existence, will be immediately threatened through optional funding.

CUPE Ontario President Fred Hahn speaking at a rally against funding cuts. Will the labour movement swing into action?

Ontario has had 16 years of decreased funding to PSE, and the current level is 11% lower than in 2002. Instead of fighting for adequate public funds and defending accessible education, university administrations have embraced tuition increases and deeper corporate penetration at colleges and universities. The net result is that Ontario universities have the lowest per-student funding levels in Canada, while students in the province pay the highest tuition fees in the country. Fees for international students are especially high, reflecting a racist response to the funding crisis.

Against this market-oriented backdrop of high tuition and exorbitant debt, several Ontario colleges and universities are facing enrollment shortages. One university professor told People’s Voice, “All universities are affected by high tuition and underfunding, but the situation is particularly desperate for smaller ones and those in Northern Ontario. These institutions already face declining enrollment, as well as cuts to Indigenous and francophone programs. The Ford cuts profoundly affect accessibility, to the extent that the existence of post-secondary institutions in Northern and hinterland areas is really threatened.”

In response to this, student leaders and organizations are already mobilizing. The Canadian Federation of Students-Ontario was meeting in Toronto as the announcement was made and organized an emergency rally with students and labour allies. Students also organized rallies across the province as well including in London, Windsor and Toronto.

Peter Miller, a student activist at University of Windsor, points to the need for a militant, mass resistance. “There is no doubt that Ford’s government will not respond to reason, nor to simple debates at Queen’s Park. Only a broad united fightback from the streets can force him to abandon this dangerous measure. Our fight should be built with a vision and demand for education to be free, accessible, universal, democratically run, and emancipatory.”

The funding cut will also affect university and college workers, as administrations will undoubtedly propose cuts to jobs, wages, and benefits. Already unions representing faculty, teaching, program and support workers have begun to work with student organizations, to build engaging and united grassroots efforts to oppose the cuts and promote progressive PSE reforms.

One big question, though, is how much support this resistance will get from labour leadership. Ontario Communist leader Dave McKee told People’s Voice, “This announcement is an attack in its own right, but it’s also a trial balloon to see how far this government can go in terms of privatization, attacking democratic right, and undermining universality. It doesn’t take much to see how making student fees optional relates to right-to-work legislation for labour, or that generalized cuts to public programs and institutions greases the rails for massive privatization. Yet, even with this comprehensive right-wing agenda laid increasingly bare before us, there are many labour leaders whose focus is on preparing for the next provincial election three and a half years from now. We simply cannot take a `let’s weather this out’ approach to this government – to do so is a total abnegation of responsibility. These labour leaders must be challenged, and either pushed into fighting or replaced by those who will.”

The Young Communist League of Canada issued a statement on the day of the government announcement, calling “all progressive organizations, including student unions, labour and all kind of on-campus groups to mobilize against this attack aimed at weakening the student fightback and at going one step further in the direction of privatization and commodification of our education.”

Student activist Zidane Mohamed agrees, and insists that such a mobilization must commit to escalating actions. “Everything needs to be on the tactical table, from legal action to occupations of offices to one day strikes and beyond.”

Many argue that this fight cannot be just a protest against the current announcement, in favour of the status quo. As the YCL notes, “This [attack] gives a stronger need to keep up the youth’s fight for a free, democratic, public and emancipatory education. If Ford targets student unions, trying to disorganize the organized student fightback with such zeal, it is because he knows – as the rest of the ruling class knows – that campuses and the student movement have always been a crucible for a new generation of young activists as well as a place to challenge the dominant ideology.”

The seeds of a mass resistance to Ford have begun to sprout. Unity between labour, students, Indigenous people, and other allies of the working class can ensure that it grows.

Rallies

Thursday, January 24

BRANTFORD

Students Against Ford’s Cuts [Facebook]

3PM, Victoria Park [Market St & Darling St]



WINDSOR

Emergency Rally for Affordable & Accessible Education [Facebook]

12PM, University of Windsor [401 Sunset Avenue]



YORK UNIVERSITY

Rally Against Ford Cuts; Banner Making [Facebook]

11AM, York Federation of Students [4700 Keele St]



Friday, January 25

LONDON

Protest Against OSAP Changes [Facebook]

2PM, Victoria Park [580 Clarence St]



SUDBURY

Rally for University/College Students & Workers [Facebook]

12PM, Tom Davies Square [200 Brady St]



TORONTO

March Against OSAP Cuts [Facebook]

2PM, Yonge-Dundas Square



Monday, January 28

OTTAWA

For the Students Rally [Facebook]

3PM, Parliament Hill



Saturday, February 16

TORONTO

Ride the Rocket Rally – Protest the New OSAP [Facebook]

TTC Subway