Ontario Premier Doug Ford expressed that he does not want to see international students taking places at Ontario universities, stating that he prioritizes local applicants.
At an event on Wednesday, where the premier re-announced plans for a medical school in the Greater Toronto Area, Ford was asked about difficulties retaining medical graduates in the province.
“That is my number one pet peeve,” Ford replied, suggesting many Ontario students are also struggling to find domestic places and heading abroad to study in countries like the Caribbean, Ireland, and Australia.
Ford said he had been told that roughly 18 per cent of students at Ontario colleges and universities are international students.
“Get rid of the 18 per cent,” Ford said. “I’m not being mean, but I’m taking care of our students, our kids first.”
Colleges and universities have increasingly relied on international students since the Ford government reduced and froze tuition fees in 2019. Leaders in the post-secondary sector have said international students — whose fees are uncapped — are being used to fill funding shortfalls.
The latest provincial budget showed colleges were expected to lose around $3 billion over the next two years, largely due to a decrease in the number of international students allowed under new federal rules.
An independent panel convened by the province recommended a tuition fee increase in Ontario and $2.5 billion in relief funding for colleges and universities. Instead, the government announced $1.3 billion for the sector and maintained the tuition fee freeze.
“I want to support Ontario students and God bless everyone else coming to our country,” Ford said Wednesday.
“Someone from ABC country comes and pays a little more and I understand some of that money pays for the local students. Right now, I ask the minister — and I’ve been on this for a while — what is percentage? And it’s 18 per cent.”
Documents previously obtained by Global News also show the government has long been aware of an overreliance on international students by colleges and universities.
Most recently, in response to a strict federal cap on international students that cut Ontario’s allocation by roughly 50 per cent, the Ford government has limited the number of out-of-country students allowed to attend public colleges.
Every university in the province was allowed to keep its allocation of international students at 2023 rates, apart from Algoma.
“I want 100 per cent Ontario students (to be) going to these universities,” Ford said.
“These kids — and I talk to a lot of the parents — they have to go to Ireland or they go to the Caribbean or they go to Australia or they go down to the United States. And guess what happens? They meet someone and they don’t come back home.”
Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones said an expansion of the number of primary care jobs in the province was part of her strategy to retain Ontario-trained doctors by increasing the number of places they can work.
“It means that wherever a new graduate wants to practise in the province of Ontario, there will be opportunities,” she said.