Households (students and families)
- Provinces would have to ensure “reasonable access” for academically capable applicants, regardless of ability to pay (s. 10(a)). How “reasonable” is defined is not set in the bill.
- Tuition must follow a provincially authorized schedule (s. 10(b)). The bill does not set tuition levels.
- Federal annual reports would publish average tuition and student debt by province, plus access indicators (s. 19(d)(iv), (vi)).
Workers (faculty and academic staff)
- Institutions must limit use of short-term contracts, casual labour, and contracting out in hiring faculty to meet the “quality” criterion (s. 9(a)).
- Institutions must report faculty-to-student ratios, administrator-to-student ratios, use of contract faculty, and course loads to the provincial minister (s. 9(b)).
Donors and affiliated organizations
- Institutions must prevent outside entities, including donors, from exercising undue influence over research, curricula, and employment decisions (s. 8(b)). Gift agreements may need review to comply.
Post-secondary institutions
- Must be non-profit, be accountable to the provincial government, and be subject to provincial audits (s. 7).
- Must protect academic and intellectual autonomy of staff and students (s. 8(a)).
- Must meet the quality and accessibility criteria noted above (ss. 9–10).
- Failure to satisfy criteria could trigger provincial risk of reduced federal transfers after a federal-provincial discussion process (ss. 12–13).
Provinces and territories
- To qualify for federal cash contributions, provinces must ensure their funded institutions meet the four criteria and must provide prescribed information to the federal Minister when required (s. 5; s. 11).
- If the federal government finds non-compliance and discussions do not resolve it, it may reduce or withhold the province’s transfer; reductions can continue while the default persists (ss. 12–15).
- Quebec may opt out of the criteria yet still receive the transfer; Quebec must still provide required information (s. 6; s. 11).
- Provinces will see the CST split into a post-secondary education component and a social services/child care component under a framework created within 6 months of Royal Assent, with implementation starting within 60 days after (s. 20).