Nova Scotia signs memorandum of understanding with 10 universities - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia signs memorandum of understanding with 10 universities

The province's Department of Labour and Advanced Education said the memorandum pledges better support for students around sexual violence prevention and disability services.

Agreement to improve support to students when it comes to sexual violence prevention, disability services

The MOU is retroactive to April 1, 2015, and runs until March 31, 2019. (Robert Short/CBC)

Nova Scotia's Department of Labour and Advanced Education signed a four-year memorandum of understanding with the province's 10universities Wednesday pledgingto improvethings like sexual violence prevention and disability services.

Thememorandum also containsguidelines around executive compensation, and says universities commit to outlininga process to reviewfees and other costs faced by students for things such as accommodation and meal plans.

The agreement is retroactive to April 1, 2015, and will run until March 31, 2019.

Memorandumcriticized

The Canadian Federation of Students in Nova Scotia released a statement criticizing the memorandum.

The federation saidthe memorandumcaps provincial funding increases to one per cent a year until 2019, putting the cost of post-secondary education onto students.

It said the tuition policy laid out in the memorandum reaffirms the ability of universitiesto make a one-time increase in tuition fees above the three per cent cap through "market adjustments"and removes the cap for out-of-province, graduate and professional students.

'Surprising and disappointing'

"It is surprising and disappointing to see the government is not listening to students' voices on this issue," said CharlotteKiddell, chair of the federation in Nova Scotia.

The federation said it is "encouraging" to see the province agrees that more needs to be done to combat sexualized violence, butthe memorandum doesn't go far enough.

It leaves it to individual universities to come up with plans toimprove sexual violence prevention and disability services. The federationsaid students have no recourse if their school doesn't get around to making such policies.

Kiddell said sexual violence needs to be addressed in binding legislation.

CBC News contacted the Department of Labour and Advanced Education and iswaiting for a response.

With files from Moira Donovan