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Canada: Laurentian files for creditor protection as int’l enrolments falter

Canadian public university Laurentian University filed for creditor protection this week – a move that will rock the country’s international education sector for years to come.

The university is "optimistic" it can survive its financial difficulties. Photo: Wikimedia

Laurentian pledged to enrol 1,000 international students by 2024

“A number of developments over the past decade have put an increased strain on the operational financial health of the university,” Robert Hache, president of the institution in Sudbury, Ontario said in a statement.

“If Laurentian had increased its international enrolments at the same rate as other Ontario universities, it would have an extra 277 students”

Contributing factors include “historical recurring deficits, declining demographics in Northern Ontario, the closure of our Barrie campus in 2019 and the domestic tuition reduction and freeze that was implemented in 2019 and most recently various costs and revenue impacts due to the global pandemic”, he said.

Laurentian has long been aware that the number of high school grads in northern Ontario has been shrinking. Last summer, university spokesman Shaun Malley told the Sudbury Star that Northern Ontario was experiencing a decrease in university-aged student population due to changing demographics.

“[This] means smaller graduating classes in our high schools across the region and less students heading to university from our local catchment area,” he said.

With fewer potential domestic students, Laurentian turned to international recruitment, pledging to enrol 1,000 students by 2024. For a school with only 9,000 students, that many international students would have added millions to its coffers.

“If Laurentian had increased its international enrolments at the same rate as other Ontario universities, it would have an extra 277 students, and another $7.8 million in gross revenue in 2018-19, as well as another $20 million or so in the bank from previous years,” Alex Usher of the consulting firm Higher Education Strategy Associates commented.

Post-secondary institutions across the country have been following similar strategies, so competition was intense. Not surprisingly, international students want to go to Canada’s big cities like Vancouver and Toronto rather than a regional town in northern Ontario.

Laurentian lost 117 students during the 2017 Saudi debacle, resulting in a revenue shortfall of $3 million for the institution.

The added impact of the global health pandemic meant that the institution expected to enroll between 500 and 600 international students for its remote learning provision, Malley said last August.

Despite the financial difficulties, Laurentian also continued with campus capital improvements in 2015, when it announced that it was allocating $51 million to refurbish and revitalise buildings across the campus.

In 2020, the school announced a money-saving plan to suspend admissions to 17 programs that only had a total of 49 students.

“It is deeply concerning that Laurentian University has found itself in a situation where such drastic and immediate action is needed to ensure its long-term sustainability,” Ontario’s minister of Colleges and Universities Ross Romano said in a statement on February 1.

“There is no doubt that this situation is unprecedented. The government will be exploring its options, which could include introducing legislation to ensure the province has greater oversight of university finances and to better protect the interest of students and Ontario taxpayers.

“The government wants to ensure this issue does not repeat itself in other institutions in the postsecondary educational sector.”

It may be a cautionary tale for post-secondary institutions across Canada that are reliant on international tuition revenues.

However, other providers like Cape Breton face similar domestic demographic challenges to Laurentian with its international enrolment now accounting for more than half of its total.

In 2019, its manager, Enrolment Services (International) Victor Tomiczek said the institution was “concentrating on scaling the growth appropriately.

International students at Seneca College in Toronto make up around a quarter of the student population but represent 40% of tuition monies because they pay higher fees.

The Canadian government is also looking to attract international students as permanent residents to help with changing demographics in the country.

“We anticipate that the first, and most critical phase of this process will take approximately three months”

Laurentian president Robert Hache says he’s “optimistic” but it may be hard to foresee many domestic or international students choosing to enrol in a school that’s declared bankruptcy.

Ernst & Young will assist the institution as it looks “implement a vision for Laurentian that includes more financially sustainable operations”, he said.

“We anticipate that the first, and most critical phase of this process will take approximately three months, at which time we intend to have a restructured framework for the university which provides a sustainable and clear path forward.”

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6 Responses to Canada: Laurentian files for creditor protection as int’l enrolments falter

  1. we need to think why the public universities and colleges have all funding and facilities but they are still in a huge debt. Some public universities are making by the real estate on a leasing land.

    If all private colleges and high schools can also get this kind of loan from all major banks. It may be an equal competition and our educational quality will be better. Without competition, I believe the public sectors will continue to waste the taxpayer’s money again and again ! such as car insurance, telephone companies, electronic companies and water companies. We real have to watch this case which reflect on public sectors (limited resources; better quality ) vs. public sectors (unlimited resources; poor quality)

  2. this is not the international or local student tuition issues. This is a basic educational revolution after this big industrial revolution. The job demand is required the digital platform skills but all our graduates have less digital skills because the universities are not strength their market skills so this is the end of huge university era. on the other hand, the new baby growing is much slower than before.

  3. A few numbers, we have to keep in mind: the students’ loan numbers vs. enrollment of students are not matched each other. Why the students’ loan is higher but the campuses have no students or less students ?

    Why ? the universities may want to ask ” what is the student looking for !” not the way of feeding them !

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