McGill calls tuition hike, new French rules ‘targeted attack’ on English universities
MONTREAL — Quebec says it will raise tuition by 30 per cent for out-of-province Canadians and force universities to ensure most of those students are proficient in French when they graduate, a decision the head of McGill University says is “devastating.”
In a letter Thursday to the province’s three English-language universities — Concordia, McGill and Bishop’s — Higher Education Minister Pascale Déry said the government was imposing the new measures so anglophones attending the schools better integrate into Quebec society.
McGill University principal Deep Saini said the government’s decision is a “targeted attack on institutions that have been part of Quebec and have contributed to Quebec for hundreds of years.” The financial impact to McGill is believed to be between $42 million and $94 million a year, he said.
“The measures that the government released today are devastating,” Saini told a news conference. “They are far worse than those announced on Oct. 13 — worse for Quebec, worse for its universities, worse for Quebec businesses that need talent, and worse for McGill.”


