
Quebec court overturns out-of-province tuition hike at English universities
MONTREAL — A Quebec Superior Court judge has overturned a university tuition hike for out-of-province students that the government introduced to reduce the number of English-speaking students in the province.
The decision, released Thursday, is a partial victory for Montreal’s two English-language universities, McGill and Concordia, which have said the Quebec government’s recent changes caused a drop in enrolment.
Justice Éric Dufour found the government’s 2023 decision to increase out-of-province tuition by $3,000 — 33 per cent — was unreasonable and “not justified by existing and convincing data.”
The government had argued the fee increase was necessary to protect the French language in Quebec. Higher Education Minister Pascale Déry had also said the hike was justified because most out-of-province students leave Quebec.