Colleges feuded over admissions snafu
Toronto Star|February 28, 2024
Emails reveal tensions over move to revoke offers for 500 foreign students
NICHOLAS KEUNG
Colleges feuded over admissions snafu

Former Northern College president and CEO Audrey Penner, who retired in December, assured the Ontario Ministry of Colleges and Universities the mass admission revocation would not turn into a public relations nightmare.

A high-profile snafu last summer in which 500 international students’ admissions were revoked saw a public college in northern Ontario and its private partner in Toronto turning against one another, documents reveal.

Emails obtained under a freedom of information request have pulled back the curtain on internal communications as Northern College in Timmins rescinded admission offers to hundreds of international students who had been headed to the school’s private partner, Pures College of Technology.

The incident added to scrutiny of Canada’s international student program and the partnerships between public colleges and private institution partners, which have been targeted by Immigration Minister Marc Miller in his recent reforms to rein in the country’s international student intake.

But the flurry of emails suggest that Northern initially considered taking even more drastic action that would have affected nearly three times as many potential students, and that this wasn’t the first time such a measure had been taken. 

The correspondence shows the partner schools threatening each other with legal action for breaching obligations under their public college–private partnership agreement. They also discuss public perceptions of the matter.

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