The Announcement: Canadore College Launches Comprehensive Organizational Review
Canadore College, a prominent public college in North Bay, Ontario, with additional campuses in Parry Sound, recently announced a sweeping organizational review aimed at achieving $20 million in cost savings for the upcoming fiscal year and beyond. This move comes amid mounting financial pressures facing Ontario's postsecondary sector. Led by newly appointed President and CEO Dr. Sandra Efu, who assumed the role on January 27, 2026, the initiative seeks to realign the institution's structure, workforce, and resources to better match current enrollment realities, industry demands, and long-term sustainability goals.
The review was publicly detailed in a press release on March 9, 2026, emphasizing a commitment to student access, success, and stronger industry ties. Despite strong domestic enrollment projections exceeding 3,000 students for Fall 2026, the college must navigate significant revenue shortfalls to protect core academic programs.
Root Causes: The Impact of Federal International Student Policies
The primary driver of Canadore's budget crisis is the sharp decline in international student enrollment, triggered by federal Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) policies. In 2024, caps on study permits led to a 73% drop in permits province-wide, erasing approximately $1.8 billion in sector revenue. For Ontario colleges, international students previously accounted for a substantial portion of budgets, with Canadore's program generating nearly $1 billion in revenue by 2026.
Canadore's business plan for 2025-26 highlights a system-wide international revenue loss of $112 million, with the college's cap set at 1,864 study permits for its North Bay and Parry Sound campuses. Additional changes to the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) program exclude certain arrangements, forcing the wind-down of the Canadore@Stanford partnership by January 2027. These shifts have compounded existing underfunding, where Ontario ranks last in per-student college funding nationally (excluding Quebec).
- Federal study permit caps effective January 2024 and tightened in September 2024.
- Provincial Attestation Letters (PALs) required, limiting allocations to 70,074 for Ontario in 2026—a 42% drop from prior year.
- Loss of high-margin international tuition, previously subsidizing domestic programs.

Provincial Funding Challenges and Recent Developments
Ontario's colleges have endured a tuition freeze since 2019, inflationary pressures, and stagnant per-student grants now comprising less than 30% of revenues at institutions like Canadore. The college's 2025-26 business plan projects a $15.1 million operating deficit (or $11.8 million excluding non-cash items), with revenues down $70.2 million despite expenditure cuts of $63.4 million.
In February 2026, the province announced a $6.4 billion investment over four years, ending the tuition freeze (allowing 2% annual increases) and providing some stability. Dr. Efu welcomed this as a step toward strengthening local economies but noted it falls short of addressing multi-year deficits projected across the sector—up to $1.5 billion by 2027-28. Accumulated deferred maintenance at Canadore alone stands at $24.5 million, with a $1.6 million annual shortfall.
Broader sector woes include program suspensions (Canadore planning 12 in 2026-27, reviewing 19 more) and faculty/staff layoffs totaling 10,000 positions province-wide.
Structure of the Organizational Review: A Phased Approach
The review comprehensively assesses Canadore's organizational structure, workforce complement (faculty, administration, support staff), and resource allocation. Guided by student needs, labor market trends, and Ontario's 2025 Budget priorities, it prioritizes core academics while adapting to change.
Implemented in phases:
- Phase 1: One-time voluntary departure and early retirement incentives to generate immediate savings, reduce headcount, and create operating flexibility.
- Future Phases: Contingent on Phase 1 outcomes, involving further consultations and assessments for additional efficiencies.
This strategy aims to avoid involuntary measures, though workforce reductions are explicitly included to meet the $20 million target, focusing on salary-related costs.
Potential Impacts on Faculty, Staff, and Programs
Voluntary packages target experienced personnel nearing retirement, potentially leading to knowledge loss but also opportunities for fresh talent. However, if savings fall short, deeper cuts loom—mirroring sector trends where colleges like Algonquin and Humber have suspended dozens of programs and offered exit incentives.
For students, core programs in high-demand fields like aviation, health, and trades remain protected, bolstered by strong domestic and Indigenous partnerships (735 Indigenous students targeted). Yet, 35% of programs face scrutiny, risking reduced options in niche areas. Community economic impact is significant: Canadore contributes $459 million annually to the Nipissing-Parry Sound region.
Professionals affected may find opportunities elsewhere; for instance, explore openings at other Ontario institutions via AcademicJobs Canada's listings or faculty positions.
North Bay Nugget CoverageStudent and Enrollment Outlook Amid Uncertainty
Despite challenges, Canadore projects robust Fall 2026 enrollment over 3,000 full-time students, driven by domestic growth and partnerships. Strategic Enrollment Management emphasizes retention and high-demand programs aligned with provincial Strategic Mandate Agreements (SMAs). Students benefit from experiential learning focus, with grads earning higher future incomes—Ontario-wide college education yields $838.8 million in added income and social savings.

Leadership Perspective: Dr. Sandra Efu's Vision
Dr. Efu, with her PMP and Ph.D., brings expertise in strategic renewal. Key quotes underscore resolve: "We are entering a period of renewal... protecting core academic priorities while adapting." She highlights college grads as "boots on the ground" for industries, urging alignment with workforce needs.
Pillars from the business plan—student success, program excellence, community connections, sustainability, innovation—guide adaptations toward carbon neutrality by 2031 and applied research growth.
Broader Ontario College Sector: A Shared Crisis
| College | Actions Taken |
|---|---|
| Algonquin | 30+ program suspensions |
| Humber Polytechnic | Voluntary exit packages |
| Kwantlen (KPU) | 70 faculty layoffs |
| Sask Polytech (comparable) | Job cuts, suspensions |
Ontario colleges face collective surpluses turning to deficits post-caps, with unions reporting widespread layoffs. Federal caps prioritize public institutions but strain budgets reliant on international fees.
Canadore 2025-26 Business Plan (PDF)Solutions and Future Outlook: Diversification and Resilience
Mitigation includes revenue diversification via public-private partnerships, entrepreneurial ventures, and efficiency drives like hiring freezes. Investments in IT, simulation labs, and green initiatives position Canadore for recovery. Long-term, enhanced domestic focus and research could offset losses.
- Diversify beyond international reliance.
- Leverage $6.4B provincial funds effectively.
- Align programs with labor shortages in trades/health.
Career Advice for Higher Education Professionals
For faculty and staff navigating changes, upskilling is key. Consider crafting a strong academic CV or exploring administrative roles. Rate experiences at Rate My Professor to build networks. Amid sector shifts, higher ed jobs in stable programs abound.
In summary, Canadore's proactive review exemplifies adaptation in turbulent times, ensuring continued contributions to Canada's workforce.





