Local Campus Coalition Organizing

UofT Scarborough Coalition Meeting - March 4

UofT Scarborough Coalition Meeting - March 4

  • Date: Monday, March 4
  • Time: 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm (dinner starts at 5:30 pm, meeting starts at 6:10 pm)
  • Location: 1265 Military Trail, Student Centre, TV Lounge

Click here to RSVP

We would like to invite you to attend our planning meeting for the We are the Students campaign. You may have heard that earlier this year the Ford government announced sweeping changes to post-secondary education. Our movement, built by students, workers, and community members are concerned with the changes made to OSAP, funding for post-seconday education, and the attacks on student organizing.

Ryerson University Campus Coalition Meeting: Feb 13

Ryerson University Campus Coalition Meeting: Feb 13

  • Wednesday, February 13
  • 4-6pm
  • Venn (RCC 103).

Contact the coalition at Ryerson at wearethestudentsRU@gmail.com.

Coalition Meeting Invitation

We Are The Students Ryerson would like to invite you and your members to attend our upcoming coalition meeting. We are a group of students and community members that are concerned about the announced changes to OSAP and post-secondary funding as well as how student fees will be collected. We know that these changes will cause uncertain work conditions for staff and faculty, less access to education and lower the value of students’ education.

We Are the Students Ryerson: Statement on Ford's Cuts

We Are the Students Ryerson: Statement on Ford's Cuts

How Ryerson students will be impacted

On January 17th, the provincial government announced sweeping rollbacks to the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP), funding for Ontario colleges and universities and dramatically altering how student fees are administered.

The provincial government has announced a 10 per cent cut to tuition fees for domestic students across all programs, which will adversely affect each institutions’ funding. The government has also rolled back OSAP regulations to their 2016 form, which will result in a reduction in non-repayable grants and an increase in student loans and, therefore, the amount of student debt, while also proposing to remove the 6-month grace period for charging interest on student loans. These changes will make OSAP less accessible to the most marginalized who would be left with unsustainable debt. The announcement of a 10 per cent tuition cut seems like a welcome relief at first, but coupled with the OSAP changes this produces an overall loss for the majority of students. With both of these taken into account, the average student will save around $800 to $900 but lose several thousands more in grants.