
Higher education leaders, premiers push for more federal funding
Canada’s provincial and territorial premiers invited more than 300 stakeholders to a national summit on post-secondary education and skills in Ottawa last month. The summit, called Competing for Tomorrow, was organized by the Council of the Federation of Canada and hosted by Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Quebec Premier Jean Charest.
McGuinty and Charest described the meeting as an opportunity for higher education leaders, including student, college, university, business and labour representatives, to bring their “experience and leadership to the development of a path forward in post-secondary education and training.”
CAUT executive director James Turk said the Ottawa meeting was an important event because it gave participants an opportunity to work together to improve the situation. “The good news is the premiers spoke with one voice about post-secondary education being a top priority for their governments and about the necessity of it being a top priority for the federal government,” Turk said after the meeting.
He said summit participants’ discussion groups brought forward a number of recommendations on developing a pan-Canadian strategy for post-secondary education. The most widely supported was a demand that the federal government introduce a dedicated transfer for post-secondary education and increase the amount of its cash transfer by $4.9 billion.
Most of the Feb. 24 summit meeting was spent in small discussion groups that considered issues of access, financing, research capacity, labour force participation, skills training and the needs of rural and northern areas.
__________________________________
To read the full article that appeared in the CAUT Bulletin March 2006 issue visit www-archive.caut.ca.