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Faculty members, students pan Houston government’s university restructuring plans | CBC News

Faculty members and students are concerned changes being proposed by the Houston government could have severe consequences for Nova Scotia’s 10 universities.

Six of the seven people who appeared Tuesday before the Nova Scotia legislature’s new public bills committee worried the changes proposed in Bill 12 would give the province too much control over what universities teach and what research they do.

The proposed law would give the province — a key funding partner — greater control over university governance, the power to force universities deemed to be in financial trouble to come up with a revitalization plan, and the option of withholding funding if it were not happy with those plans.

Peter McInnis, the president of the Canadian Association of University Teachers, which represents 75,000 members across Canada, warned committee members the process could result in fundamental changes.

“Revitalization sounds perhaps innocuous or anodyne,” McInnis said. “Like a trip to a day spa. But in reality, this revitalization could be severe for several reasons, including closing or amalgamating programs or the abrogation of existing collective agreements.”

Woman in burgundy sweatshirt sits at desk
Cathy Conrad is the president Saint Mary’s University Faculty Union. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

McInnis said the Nova Scotia government was granting itself “unique” powers over universities.

“This is a power accorded to no other province and would force universities to restructure according to government directions,” he said. 

Cathy Conrad, president of the Saint Mary’s University Faculty Union, said the proposal was already creating turmoil within her university.

“Just yesterday, I was in a meeting with senior administrators at my university who have put pause on operations that are critical to engaging with equity, diversity and inclusion on our board and on search committees for senior academic members,” Conrad told the committee.

“Because in their opinion, we can’t talk about anything until we see what’s happening with Bill 12, because it’s going to turn us upside down and inside out.”

Darryl Whetter, speaking on behalf of the association of university professors and librarians at Université Sainte Anne, called the bill an attempt “to create Soviet-style political control of research and teaching.”

Student leaders also sounded the alarm, suggesting provisions in the bill giving cabinet greater control over research grants were an attack on academic freedom, a concept Dalhousie University student Maren Mealy called “a cornerstone of higher education.”

woman sits a desk
Maren Mealy is a Dalhousie University student. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

“The bill gives the minister of advanced education the sole power to set provincial research priorities, requiring Research Nova Scotia to align its work with those priorities or risk losing funding,” said Mealy. “This risks stifling academic freedom and devaluing research that doesn’t align with whatever the government decides are its interests.”

Nova Scotia’s auditor general recently issued a report critical of the lack of control over public funding to universities.

A former senior bureaucrat was the lone voice Tuesday in support of the government’s attempt to gain greater control over the money it gives universities.

Former deputy minister Rick Williams told the committee of his frustrations dealing with the universities during his time in the senior government post between 2009 and 2013. 

“One issue that took a lot of my time over the four years was the state of the university system,” said Williams. “As in 2010, we today confront a difficult reality — every one of our universities is too big to fail in its local community.

“I support the government’s intention to improve accountability and exercise more direct influence over decision-making in individual schools.”

But rather than current plans, Williams urged the government to establish a “planning process” similar to the 2014 Ivany commission on revitalizing Nova Scotia’s economy. The aim would be to develop “a shared vision for a financially sustainable higher education system.”

Despite the significant changes being proposed, no university president or anyone representing Nova Scotia’s 10 universities testified before the public bills committee.

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