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Ontario confirms policy tying university funding to free speech

Universities will have to develop and comply with free speech policy by January

九月 7, 2018
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Source: iStock

Universities in Ontario must establish free speech policies or face funding cuts, the new provincial government has warned.

Delivering on a promise made during its election campaign, the centre-right Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario said that institutions would have until 1 January 2019 to develop, implement and comply with a free speech policy that meets a minimum government standard.

It said that the 中国A片 Quality Council of Ontario would monitor compliance from September 2019, adding that universities that do not comply “may be subject to a reduction in operating grant funding”.

Students whose actions are “contrary to the free speech policy are subject to existing campus student discipline measures”, added the government, which came into power at the end of June.

The ?said that the policy would not only protect free speech, but ensure that hate speech, discrimination and other illegal forms of speech are not allowed on campus.

Some academics had previously claimed that the party’s bid to tie university funding to free speech was likely “just for show”.

Doug Ford, the provincial premier, said that “colleges and universities should be places where students exchange different ideas and opinions in open and respectful debate”.

“Our government made a commitment to the people of Ontario to protect free speech on campuses. Promise made, promise kept,” he added.

ellie.bothwell@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

Good, I have a friend now retired from an Ontario University who noted just how speech codification had prevented him doing his job effectively until he retired aged 50 (not unusual in Canada I gather). For too long Universities have allowed the venomous left to obliterate reasoned discussion and debate with violent protest and 'no-platforming'.
One might conclude college professors in the humanities would be the first to condemn socialism based simply on the terrible consequences of all the many failed attempts to implement it.
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