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安省院校因惊人入学人数下降 大规模裁员

(2025-09-05 04:39:18) 下一个

安大略学院因“惊人”入学人数下降面临大规模裁员

https://globalnews.ca/news/11281454/ontario-college-layoffs-arbitration-decision/

作者:Isaac Callan 和 Colin D'Mello 环球新闻 2025年7月9日

安大略学院高管薪酬上涨,裁员和校园关闭接踵而至

随着国际学生入学人数骤降、课程削减和大规模裁员,一个大型工会再次向安大略公立学院发出警告。

周三,安大略公共服务雇员工会 (Ontario Public Service Employees Union) 发布的信息显示,该行业面临近10,000个工作岗位流失,约600个课程将被取消或暂停。

工会与大学雇主委员会 (College Employer Council) 之间最近就一个问题达成的仲裁裁决,揭示了自2024年初联邦政府对国际学生人数设定上限以来,该行业所面临的困境。

仲裁员在裁决中写道,安大略省24所公立学院中有23所报告称,2023年9月至次年期间,国际学生入学人数下降了48%。

因此,到2025年春季,这些学院将有超过600个项目被取消或暂停。此外,还有四所院校已经关闭或宣布将关闭校园。

仲裁员称这种情况“令人担忧”,并指出安大略省24所学院中有19所裁员人数超过8000人。安大略省公共服务工会(OPSEU)估计,如果算上尚未提交信息的学院的裁员人数,裁员人数将接近10000人。

“我们正在经历安大略省历史上最大规模的裁员之一,”安大略省公共服务工会主席JP·霍尼克(JP Hornick)周三表示。“这比哈德逊湾公司(Hudson's Bay)的破产清算还要严重,那次破产在加拿大各地裁员8000人。”

安大略省高校目前的困境可以追溯到去年联邦政府出台的国际学生人数上限。

当时,渥太华限制了各省获得学习许可的学生人数。福特政府保持了大学入学人数稳定,并减少了高校的招生人数。

这对该行业的收入造成了沉重打击,因为多年来,该行业一直依赖国际学生提供资金。政府文件估计,在设定上限之前,大约32%的高校收入来自海外学生。

安大略省公共服务工会 (OPSEU) 认为,对国际学生的依赖使得省政府得以逃避其资金责任。

该工会在一份声明中表示:“我们的社区正在为省级资金不足造成的危机付出代价——工人们已准备好建立省级协调一致的反击机制,以实现更完善的高校体系。”

虽然校园经费正在削减,但年度薪酬披露数据显示,安大略省高校高层领导的薪酬有所增长。安大略省薪酬最高的学院院长在2024年的收入超过60万加元,而第二高的学院院长的收入接近50万加元。

福特政府的批评者认为,政府必须为公立学院提供更多资金,以避免进一步削减预算,这可能会摧毁一些较小社区的就业机会。

在国际学生人数上限出台后,该省公布了略高于10亿美元的拨款,低于该省专家小组建议的数额。

今年春季,省政府又为该领域提供了7.5亿美元的资金,用于STEM项目。

学院、大学、研究卓越和安全部发言人表示,政府故意减少高等教育资金以制造危机的说法“毫无根据,完全是错误的”,并指出了最近的投资。

他们指出,国际学生人数上限来自联邦政府,而削减幅度则由各个院校自行决定。

这位发言人表示:“与项目规划、校园关闭、人力资源、运营和预算相关的决定完全由各院校自行决定。”

“一如既往,我们的政府将继续对我们的公共资助体系进行必要的投资,以确保我们的学生能够进入能够开启成功职业生涯并为我们的经济做出积极贡献的项目。”

工会称,安大略省各学院裁员导致近万人失业

https://www.ctvnews.ca/toronto/local/article/cuts-at-ontario-colleges-leading-to-nearly-10000-job-losses-union-says/

加拿大新闻社 2025年7月10日

安大略省公共服务雇员工会主席JP Hornick谈到了各省各学院的裁员,这些裁员已导致近万人失业。
安大略省公共服务雇员工会周三表示,自去年以来,数百个项目被取消或暂停,近1万名学院教职员工已被解雇或预计将失业,并警告该行业将面临严重问题。

代表约5.5万名大学教职员工和支持人员的工会表示,此次裁员相当于“安大略省历史上最大规模的裁员之一”,因为各大学正努力应对资金危机。

安大略省公共服务工会主席JP·霍尼克在多伦多百年理工学院Story艺术中心校区外举行的新闻发布会上表示:“此次裁员规模超过了哈德逊湾公司破产清算,后者在加拿大各地裁员8000人。”该校区预计将于2026年夏季关闭。

霍尼克说:“(约)150万安大略省居民,即近十分之一,经历过所在社区的校园关闭。”

上周公布的一份由工会与大学雇主委员会(College Employer Council)达成的仲裁教师合同称,联邦政府对国际学生的限制导致入学人数和学费收入急剧下降,超过600个大学项目被取消或暂停。

该文件显示,安大略省24所学院中有23所报告,从2023年9月到2024年9月,第一学期国际学生入学人数下降了48%。

报告称,截至6月,19所学院已报告当前和计划中的裁员人数,总计超过8000人。该工会指出,由于一些学院尚未报告裁员情况,因此数据并不完整。

工会表示,裁员和课程暂停将对几代人产生影响,学院员工已准备好反击裁员。

“我们今天需要实力雄厚的学院,提供他们提供的便捷、低门槛的职业培训,尤其是在贸易战正在削弱和重组我们经济的情况下,”霍尼克说。

“但相反,我们正在流失工作岗位。”

霍尼克表示,暂停和取消的课程不仅仅是那些主要面向国际学生的课程。

“这些项目也是我们国内需要的,比如护理、儿童和青少年护理、环境技术以及其他地方没有的专业艺术培训,”霍尼克说。

其中包括桑德贝的烹饪管理学院项目,霍尼克表示,该项目是方圆1000公里内唯一一个支持北部地区粮食安全的同类项目。

工会表示,安大略省政府和各学院“从未打算”向公众全面通报裁员和项目削减的情况,工会员工“竭尽全力”争取这些信息。霍尼克还表示,安大略省长期以来一直对高等教育资金不足。

高等院校部长诺兰·奎因的发言人表示,安大略省公共服务工会对政府的指控“毫无根据,且完全是错误的”。

“仅在过去的14个月里,我们就为公立高等教育部门提供了前所未有的新增资金,除了每年向该部门投入的50亿美元外,我们还向学院和大学提供了超过20亿美元的新增资金,”比安卡·贾科博尼在一份电子邮件声明中表示。

“由于联邦政府单方面修改了国际学生体系,全国各地的高等教育部门都在做出艰难的决定,”贾科博尼说道,并补充说,一项大学资助模式的审查将于今年夏天开始。

作为安省公立学院的谈判代理人,大学雇主委员会(College Employer Council)也对工会的部分说法提出了异议。

“自2024年1月29日起,CEC就一直在向安大略省公共服务工会(OPSEU)通报这一情况即将出现的严重性。声称这些信息被隐瞒显然是错误的,”首席执行官格雷厄姆·劳埃德在一份电子邮件声明中表示。

“所有学院都设有专门的工会委员会,负责就所有裁员、停职和工会员工自愿退休方案征求意见……任何声称工会不知道裁员规模的说法都是不准确的。”

劳埃德表示,报告的1万人裁员意味着该学院6万多名员工中约有17%被裁员。

“这当然令人遗憾,但与45%的学生入学率下降不成比例,”他说。

虽然安大略省公共服务工会(OPSEU)表示,仅百年理工学院就暂停了100多个项目,但该校对这一数字提出异议,称其在2025年暂停了54个项目。

“由于外部因素,包括联邦政府关于国际学生的政策变化,百年理工学院正面临巨大的财务压力,

“招生人数减少,资金模式也出现问题,”该学院表示。

“鉴于这些挑战是全行业的,我们正在与行业合作伙伴合作,以整体方式应对这些不利因素,以便我们能够继续满足安大略省的经济需求。”

Ontario colleges face massive layoffs after 'alarming' enrolment decline

https://globalnews.ca/news/11281454/ontario-college-layoffs-arbitration-decision/?

By Isaac Callan & Colin D'Mello  Global News July 9, 2025

Ontario college executive pay increases as layoffs and campus closures hit
 

A major union is again sounding the alarm for Ontario’s public colleges as international student enrolment drops to a trickle, programs are cut and major layoffs take place.

On Wednesday, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union released information that suggests the sector faces close to 10,000 job losses and the cancellation or suspension of some 600 programs.

A recent arbitration decision on an issue between the union and the College Employer Council shed some light on the extent of difficulty the sector was going through after an early 2024 federal cap on international students.

The arbitrator wrote in his decision that 23 of Ontario’s 24 public sector colleges reported a 48 per cent decline in enrolment of international students between September 2023 and the following year.

As a result, by the spring of 2025, more than 600 programs were cancelled or suspended at those colleges. Four institutions have also closed campuses or announced they will close them.

The arbitrator called the situation “alarming,” pointing to layoffs numbering more than 8,000 people across 19 of Ontario’s 24 colleges. OPSEU calculates that the number is almost 10,000 if you include layoffs at the colleges that have not yet submitted their information.

“We’re seeing one of the largest mass layoffs in Ontario’s history,” OPSEU president JP Hornick said Wednesday. “This is bigger than the Hudson’s Bay liquidation, which laid off 8,000 employees across Canada.”

The current pain at Ontario’s colleges can be traced back to the introduction of the federal cap on international students last year.

In that case, Ottawa limited the number of students who could get study permits in each province. The Ford government kept university enrolment steady and reduced the numbers at colleges.

It was a hammer blow to the sector’s revenue, which had for years relied on international students for funding. Government documents estimate that, before the cap, roughly 32 per cent of college revenue came from those joining from abroad.

OPSEU argues that a reliance on international students allowed the provincial government to shirk its funding responsibilities.

“Our communities are paying the cost of a crisis manufactured by provincial underfunding — and workers are prepared to build the provincial, coordinated fightback we need to realize a better college system,” the union said in a statement.

While cuts are being made on campuses, annual salary disclosure data shows pay for leadership at the top of Ontario’s colleges has grown. The best-paid college president in Ontario earned more than $600,000 in 2024, while the second-highest pay was almost $500,000.

Critics of the Ford government have argued it must offer better funding to public colleges to avoid further cuts, which could destroy jobs in some smaller communities.

After the international student cap came in, the province unveiled just over $1 billion in funding for the sector. That was less than the number recommended by the province’s own expert panel.

In the spring, it offered another $750 million for the sector, tied to STEM programs.

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Colleges, Universities, Research Excellence and Security said the claim that the government had deliberately underfunded post-secondary education to create a crisis was “baseless and categorically false,” pointing to recent investments.

They pointed out that the cap on international students came from the federal government and said cuts were decided by individual institutions.

“Decisions related to programming, campus closures, human resources, operational and budgeting decisions lie solely with each institution,” the spokesperson said.

“As we always have, our government will continue making the necessary investments into our publicly-assisted system to ensure our students get into programs that launch successful careers and positively contribute to our economy.”

Cuts at Ontario colleges leading to nearly 10,000 job losses, union says

https://www.ctvnews.ca/toronto/local/article/cuts-at-ontario-colleges-leading-to-nearly-10000-job-losses-union-says/

By The Canadian Press   

 
Ontario Public Service Employees Union President JP Hornick speaks about the cuts at colleges across the provinces, which have led to nearly 10,000 job losses.

Close to 10,000 college faculty and staff have either been let go or are projected to lose their jobs amid hundreds of program cancellations and suspensions since last year, the Ontario Public Service Employees Union said Wednesday as it warned of serious trouble in the sector.

The union representing some 55,000 college faculty and support staff said the cuts amounts to “one of the largest mass layoffs in Ontario’s history” as colleges grapple with a funding crisis.

“This is bigger than the Hudson’s Bay liquidation, which laid off 8,000 employees across Canada,” OPSEU president JP Hornick said at a press conference outside Centennial College’s Story Arts Centre campus in Toronto, which is expected to close in the summer of 2026.

“(About)1.5 million Ontarians, nearly 1 in 10, have seen a campus closure in their community,” Hornick said.

An arbitrated faculty contract between the union and the College Employer Council released last week said the federal government’s cap on international students led to a dramatic decline in enrolment and tuition revenue, and the cancellation or suspension of more than 600 college programs.

The document showed 23 of 24 colleges in Ontario have reported a 48 per cent decrease in first-semester enrolment of international students from September 2023 to September 2024.

It said 19 colleges have reported current and planned staff reductions totalling more than 8,000 employees as of June, noting the data was incomplete as some colleges hadn’t reported their layoffs.

The union said the layoffs and program suspensions will have generational impacts and college workers are prepared to fight back against the cuts.

“We need strong colleges today for the accessible, low-barrier job training that they offer, especially in the face of trade wars that are undercutting and restructuring our economy,” Hornick said.

“But instead we are bleeding jobs.”

Hornick said the suspended and cancelled programs are not only those primarily attended by international students.

“It’s also programs we domestically need, programs like nursing, child and youth care, environmental technologies, specialized art training that is not offered anywhere else,” Hornick said.

Among them is the culinary management college program in Thunder Bay, which Hornick said is the only one of its kind within 1,000 kilometres that has supported food security in the north.

The union said the Ontario government and the colleges “never intended” to tell the public about the full scope of job and program cuts and that its workers fought “tooth and nail to get this information.” Hornick also said the province has been chronically underfunding post-secondary education.

A spokesperson for Colleges and Universities Minister Nolan Quinn said OPSEU’s claims against the government are “baseless and categorically false.”

“In the last 14 months alone, we have provided unprecedented amounts of new funding to our publicly-assisted postsecondary sector, with over $2 billion in new funding into our colleges and universities, on top of the $5 billion we put into the sector every year,” Bianca Giacoboni said in an emailed statement.

“Due to the federal government’s unilateral changes to the international student system, difficult decisions are being made across the country in the post-secondary sector,” Giacoboni said, adding that a college funding model review is set to begin this summer.

The College Employer Council, the bargaining agent for the province’s publicly funded colleges, also disputed some of the union’s claims.

“CEC has been informing OPSEU about the pending severity of this situation since Jan. 29, 2024. To suggest this information has been hidden from anyone is obviously wrong,” CEO Graham Lloyd said in an emailed statement.

“All colleges have specially designated union committees that are consulted about all layoffs, suspensions and voluntary retirement packages for union employees...Any suggestion that the union has not been aware of the extent of the layoffs is simply inaccurate.”

Lloyd said the 10,000 reported layoffs represent a staff reduction of about 17 per cent in a workforce of more than 60,000.

“This is certainly unfortunate but is not proportional to the 45 per cent reduction in student enrolment,” he said.

While OPSEU said that Centennial College alone had suspended more than 100 programs, the school disputed that number, saying it suspended 54 programs in 2025.

“Centennial is facing significant financial pressures due to external factors, including the federal policy shifts related to international students, which has reduced enrolment numbers, alongside a broken funding model,” the college said.

“Given that these challenges are sector-wide, we are working with sector partners to address these headwinds in a holistic way so that we can continue to serve the economic needs of Ontario.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 9, 2025.

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