Sunday, June 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

British Columbia Ditches Tuition Fees For Former Kids In Care Aged 19 To 26

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2017 03:10 PM
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Premier John Horgan says British Columbia has waived tuition at all 25 of its post-secondary institutions for former youth in care to give them a chance to succeed.
     
    He told an audience of students and alumni at Vancouver Island University in Nanaimo that the government as parent of foster kids has a responsibility to ensure they are helped on their path to education and a better future.
     
    Youth who were in care for at least two years and who are between 19 and 26 are eligible for the program.
     
    Horgan says more support will be announced for young people who were in care in a financial update to the provincial budget on Sept. 11.
     
    George Davison, president of the Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of BC, supported the provincial government's approach.
     
    He says with provincewide support, youth who were in care will be able to find new opportunities to improve their futures, adding that 80 per cent of future jobs in the province will require some kind of post-secondary training.
     
    "The provincial government has streamlined what, until today, was a patchwork of different programs and initiatives that provided varying degrees of tuition support to former youth-in-care, and it has replaced that with a system that is straightforward: tuition-free post-secondary education," he said in a statement on Friday.
     
    Previously, youth who had been in care had to find their own funding support.
     
    In the 2015-16 school year, the federation says about 150 former youth-in-care enrolled in tuition-waiver programs at the 12 post-secondary institutions that offered some form of help.
     
    A fourth-year child and youth care student at Vancouver Island University told the audience that many people in that situation are marginalized and expectations for them are low.
     
    Eligible students who have already paid tuition for September enrolment will get their fees refunded.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart
    Police say a man and woman have died in what appears to be a targeted shooting in Langley, B.C. About 12 hours earlier, a man was shot to death in an attack in Abbotsford that police also described as targeted

    Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder
    Surrey: On August 29, 2017 at 8:45 p.m. the Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a shooting in the 6300 block of 166 Street. 

    IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards
    VANCOUVER — School districts in British Columbia are scrambling to hire thousands of teachers ahead of the new school year to satisfy a court decision that reinstates standards on class size.

    B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail
    TORONTO — A Toronto neurosurgeon charged with first-degree murder in the death of his wife has been denied bail.

    Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium
    VANCOUVER — Scotiabank's $800-million deal for the naming rights to the Air Canada Centre, home of the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs, is the latest move by a corporation to corner the sponsorship market of the country's national pastime.

    Naming Rights For Arenas Is The Norm: Why ScotiaBank Bet $800m On NHL Stadium

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding
     Math test scores among public elementary school students in Ontario have not improved — in some cases they have decreased slightly — despite a $60-million "renewed math strategy" the government had hoped would help solve the problem.

    Math Scores Flat And Falling Among Ontario Elementary Students Despite Funding