This website is a testimony to the problems Canadian Student Loan borrowers experienced from approximately 1996 to 2008 and until their loans were paid off.
The privatization of the Student Loans system by the Chretien and Martin Liberal governments broke the system and defaulted thousands of borrowers who were trying to pay their loans. There were even stories of suicide due to the harassment of borrowers.
Read the report that I prepared back in 2007 here. Canada Student Loans-The Need for Change Fortunately the new Conservative government at the time revamped the program and fixed the system for new borrowers, but borrowers under the previous program were left with ruined credit and continued harassment from debt collectors.
I call on the Canadian Government to apologize to the borrowers affected by this fiasco and make amends.
Unfortunately the Liberal government is again clobbering the Education system with their changes to International Student Visas. Yes, there's a problem, but instead of a well thought out plan, they have pulled the emergency brake on the train causing a derailment. This has introduced unprecedented instability for both private and public education institutions who serve both international and local students.
Universities have been forced to cancel programs and layoff hundreds if not thousands of full-time and contract instructors.
Again, the Liberal government has messed up the education environment.
QuoteReplyTopic: Review of Student Loan System Launched?? Posted: 21/March/2007 at 12:58pm
Universities to gain $800 million
Written by Nadya Bell, Canadian University Press
Wednesday, 21 March 2007
OTTAWA (CUP) - Aspire. It may sound like the latest Gucci perfume, but it comes with a $19.7-billion price tag and a boost for universities. The Conservative budget released on March 19, titled Aspire, has $19.7 billion of spending and tax cuts for next year. Universities in particular will benefit from a number of different measures announced in this budget, from more funding through the provinces to extra grants for research councils. The increase in funding for universities is raising the Canada Social Transfer (CST) on a per capita basis. The whole transfer will increase from $8.5 billion to $9.5 billion next year. Linking funding to population means larger provinces, such as Ontario, will get more money for their many universities. The budget also suggests the CST will increase by three per cent every year in the future. Of the CST, 25 per cent of the money given to each province is earmarked for post-secondary education - $2.4 billion in total. A further jump of $800 million in university funding is planned for next year under the CST, following discussions with the provinces on how to make the funding accountable. Since federal funding for universities was rolled into other social spending in 1995, the federal government has been reluctant - or unable - to say how much money it contributes to running universities. But without a binding agreement with the provinces, the federal government says that the money for post-secondary may not actually wind up at universities. The provinces are free to spend the money as they wish. The Council of the Federation - the group of all provincial premiers - has a draft of the Canada Education Act that would establish national standards for education, but the federal government has not adopted it. Signing this act is one way the federal government could ensure universities get the money designated for them. Like the Liberal promise for increased post-secondary education in Paul Martin's fiscal update before his government fell, future spending for universities depends on the government staying in power. Despite the money for universities through provinces, there is very little in the budget for students. The budget offers a $500 tax benefit for Canadians who make between $3,000 and $21,000. Most university students would fit into this category, but the program - like welfare - excludes people who are in school full-time. Following the budget speech, NDP Leader Jack Layton said he could not support a budget that leaves out Canadians who are poor or students. "Despite new funding for post-secondary education, working and middle-class families will pay higher tuition fees and go further into debt for university and training," Layton said outside the House of Commons. The budget also launches a review of the Canada Student Loan program, which could lead to changes in student financing in the future. The Liberal party says undergraduate students are left out of the budget because it only provides funding for graduate scholarships. According to the budget, 1,000 more graduate scholarships will be available through the Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. The government is increasing support for two programs to finance education savings plans: the Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP) and the Canada Education Savings Grant. The amount that people can pay annually into the subsidized savings plans is being increased. The RESP plan is set to receive $15 million in funding next year. Don Drummond, chief economist with the TD Bank Financial Group, says he finds most people who benefit from these plans make over $70,000 a year. "I think it's sort of perverse as a program," Drummond said. "People are not aware of it until they see a tax planner - but at the banks we find only higher-income people can afford (RESPs)." Total tax credits for students in this budget are $1.7 billion, including previously announced programs such as the textbook tax credits. Foreign students recently graduated from Canadian universities will be allowed to apply for citizenship without leaving the country. The budget provides more money to deal with the 25,000 applications expected with this change. A number of research funds and initiatives are having their funding in this budget, tallying up to $9.2 billion total investment in science and technology. The Canada Foundation for Innovation is getting more money, as is Genome Canada and the Network of Centres of Excellence. Jim Flaherty, the federal minister of finance, said in his speech that funding for research would improve Canada's competitiveness. Universities will also see an increase in funding to a program that helps to cover the indirect costs of research, such as laboratory equipment and infrastructure. The budget sets aside an additional $15 million for the program. Students who want summer work may find it easier to get a job next summer, with $5 million announced for student internships in museums. This funding will further reduce the impact of cuts to the Summer Career Placement program last fall. The cuts were reduced from $55 million to $11.6 million a few weeks ago.
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