Quebec student group rejects tuition hike offer
CLASSE votes against Charest proposal to spread out tuition increases
CBC News
Posted: Apr 29, 2012 11:41 AM ET
Last Updated: Apr 29, 2012 5:22 PM ET
Student union leader Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois has taken on the Liberal government for announcing tuition fee hikes.
(Canadian Press)
Need to Know
- Planned tuition increase: $325/year for 5 years, total: $1625
- Proposed tuition increase $254/year for 7 years, total: $1778
Related
Related Stories
Quebec's most militant student group CLASSE has voted to reject the Liberal government's tuition increase proposal.
CLASSE delegates voted against the proposal at a weekend meeting in Quebec City, and announced the results on Twitter.
"The offer doesn't really respond to our demands," said CLASSE spokeswoman Jeanne Reynolds, speaking after the delegate meeting.
"The tuition hike is still there. We are questioning the legitimacy of the increase, and there hasn't been any compromise on that."
Premier Jean Charest offered Friday to spread planned tuition hikes over seven years instead of five and increase the province's bursary program.
The new proposal means that, instead of annual increases of $325 for five years, tuition would rise by $254 for seven straight years, indexed to inflation.
Student groups immediately rejected the Friday offer, but later said they would review the proposal with their members.
Jeanne Reynolds, CLASSE. (CBC)But leaders with Quebec's college and university students associations (FECQ and FEUQ) said Saturday they doubt their members will accept the offer.
FEUQ and FECQ said they could make a counter offer to the government, and that they are open to possible mediation.
FECQ spokesman Léo Bureau-Blouin said the groups made initial contact with Louise Otis, a mediator and former Quebec Court of Appeals judge.
But CLASSE, the largest and most powerful student group, isn't interested in mediation at this point because "it won't change anything," said spokeswoman Joanne Reynolds.
She said students have already proposed concrete solutions to offset tuition costs, such as reinstating capital gains taxes.
On Sunday the Quebec Liberal Party announced it was relocating its annual convention from Montreal to Victoriaville because of student protests. The party was supposed to meet May 4 - 6 at the Centre Mont-Royal in Montreal, near Charest's offices.
Boycott evolves into larger student unrest
Students have held nightly protests in a bid to pressure the Liberal government to cancel tuition increases.
The Montreal protests have drawn tens of thousands of people for mostly peaceful gatherings, marked by occasional violent clashes with police.
In recent protests, a small group of vandals smashed windows and threw projectiles at authorities.
Police have used pepper spray, chemical irritants and tear gas to disperse the crowds, sparking accusations of excessive use of force.
Another tuition protest is planned in Montreal Sunday night.
About a third of Quebec students are still avoiding their classes, but most have chosen to return to school during the dispute.
Europe, U.S. media report on Quebec tuition conflict
The province-wide class boycott, now in its eleventh week, has transformed into a movement of broader student unrest that has drawn international attention.
In the last week, Quebec's student protests have received coverage in France, through Agence France-Presse, TV5, and a front-page photo in Le Monde.
They also appeared in Australia, New Zealand, on Al Jazeera, and on U.S. news outlets, including CNN.
A New York Times blog suggested tuition fees and student debt could become a key theme in President Barack Obama's bid for re-election as the president tries to energize young voters.
The "French-Canadian students" were cited as an example in the tuition debate, as part of an international outcry against the high price of education.
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- Oklahoma tornado recovery work begins after deadly storm
- Rescue teams searched through the night looking for survivors after a deadly tornado that flattened homes and two schools in an Oklahoma City suburb, and officials have now reduced the death toll from 51 to 24. WATCH LIVE: U.S. President Obama is scheduled to speak at 10 a.m. ET about the massive tornado.
more »
- Gary Carter honoured with Montreal street name
- The memory of baseball hero Gary Carter will be commemorated by the City of Montreal today with the renaming of a street in Villeray. more »
- Thousands push for rejection of Bill 14
- A petition against the controversial language bill will be presented before Quebec's national assembly today. more »
- Quebec's Eugenie Bouchard advances at French Open tuneup
- Quebec teenager Eugenie Bouchard advanced to the second round of the Strasbourg International on Tuesday with a two-set win over Spain's Silvia Soler-Espinosa. more »
- Montreal politicians debate city council size — again
- A proposal put forward by Coalition Avenir Québec leader François Legault to reduce the number of city councillors as a way of dealing with municipal corruption is being met with caution. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Oklahoma tornado recovery work begins after deadly storm
- Rescue teams searched through the night looking for survivors after a deadly tornado that flattened homes and two schools in an Oklahoma City suburb, and officials have now reduced the death toll from 51 to 24. WATCH LIVE: U.S. President Obama is scheduled to speak at 10 a.m. ET about the massive tornado.
more »
- Harper 'upset' by conduct in Senate expense scandal
- Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave a televised address to his Conservative caucus this morning to comment on the Senate expenses controversy that prompted the weekend resignation of his chief of staff, Nigel Wright. more »
- Horwath will support Ontario Liberal budget
- Ontario voters may get some indication today from NDP Leader Andrea Horwath on whether the province is headed for a spring election. more »
- Keith Boag: Have you heard about the murderous abortion doctor?
- The gruesome trial and murder conviction of Philadelphia abortion provider Dr. Kermit Gosnell is unlikely to change American abortion law, Keith Boag writes. But it has U.S. journalists questioning their priorities and how they cover such a sensitive issue. more »
- Fearful Oklahoma families search for children
- The parents and guardians stood in the muddy grass outside a suburban Oklahoma City church, listening intently as someone with a bullhorn called out the names of children who were being dropped off — survivors of Monday's deadly tornado. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- Quebecer dead in Mexico after scuba diving incident
- 4-year-old girl attacked by dog in l'Assomption
- Woman arrested in LaSalle stabbing
- New fake-RCMP computer scam fools Canadians
- Mohawk Girls series tells stories of once 'voiceless' women
- Luka Magnotta trial date set for fall 2014
- Fire destroys historic church in Eastern Townships
- Apartment fire kills 1 in Rivière-des-Prairies
- Construction hotspots to avoid on May long weekend
