Unprecedented Enrollment Decline Triggers Financial Crisis
St. Clair College, a prominent public college in Windsor, Ontario, is grappling with a severe financial crunch as its board recently approved the 2026-27 business plan and budget projecting a $5.5 million operating deficit. This marks a significant improvement from an earlier mid-year projection of over $12 million last year, but the pressure remains intense. The primary culprit is a staggering 93 percent drop in international student enrollment since 2023, a direct fallout from federal government policies aimed at curbing study permit issuances to address housing shortages and immigration pressures.
International students, who once formed a substantial revenue pillar through higher tuition fees—often three to five times domestic rates—have plummeted. In fall 2024, they numbered around 4,641 across campuses, but by fall 2025, this fell to 1,732 at the Windsor campus alone, contributing to a total enrollment decline of 23 percent from 12,235 to 9,383 students. The college now boasts an 82 percent domestic to 18 percent international student ratio, reversing pre-cap trends where internationals sometimes outnumbered domestics.
Decoding the 2026-27 Budget Breakdown
The approved budget reflects revenues down approximately 15 percent overall, with the international segment bearing the brunt. Cumulative revenue losses from the enrollment plunge are estimated at $153.7 million by fall 2026, underscoring the scale of dependency that had developed. Domestic enrollment has held relatively steady, providing a buffer, but it cannot offset the void left by high-fee paying internationals.
College President Michael Silvaggi highlighted the sector-wide challenges: "The 2026–27 budget was developed against the backdrop of extraordinary and unprecedented pressures across the college sector." Expenditures have been slashed by $11.5 million—or 12 percent—in salaries and benefits alone. A robust $73 million sustainability fund offers short-term relief, earmarked strictly for stabilizing operations, but long-term viability hinges on broader reforms.
Strategic Cost-Containment Measures in Action
To navigate the deficit, St. Clair has implemented over 122 cost-saving initiatives totaling $24.8 million in prior years, with continued focus for 2026-27. Key actions include:
- Voluntary faculty incentive packages accepted by nearly 70 full-time faculty—over 20 percent of the total—yielding more than $7 million in savings, avoiding outright layoffs.
- Across-the-board reductions in part-time staffing aligned with lower enrollment.
- Termination of partnerships with private colleges in Toronto, ending fall 2025.
- Organizational restructuring and operational efficiencies.
These steps have halved the projected shortfall, demonstrating prudent fiscal management amid uncertainty.
Program Suspensions Reshape Academic Offerings
Eighteen programs were suspended last year, with three more paused for fall 2026, primarily affecting the Zekelman Schools of Business and Information Technology, School of Engineering, and former School of Media, Art & Design. The downtown Windsor MediaPlex building will stand unused for 2026-27, with classes potentially relocating to the main south Windsor campus or the St. Clair College Centre for the Arts. This consolidation from leased spaces like One Riverside Dr. W. aims to cut overhead while maintaining program delivery where viable.
While specific program lists aren't fully public, impacts span journalism, fashion, paramedics, and hospitality—fields heavily reliant on international interest. Domestic students face fewer choices but stable core offerings.St. Clair's corporate documents detail these shifts.
Photo by Marquise Kamanke on Unsplash
Faculty Union Voices Concerns and Cautious Optimism
OPSEU Local 138, representing about 1,000 faculty across Windsor and Chatham-Kent campuses, views retirements and buyouts as temporary offsets. President Mark Colangelo expressed hope: "I’m hopeful that we won’t see layoffs in the future." He criticizes chronic underfunding, noting Ontario's operating grants lag $7,700 per student below the national average, compounded by tuition freezes and a 2019 10 percent cut, making domestic fees $1,100 lower.
"There was a windfall that covered the structural funding deficit... since the federal government has made the move away from international students, the provincial government has not stepped up," Colangelo added. Strong management-union relations foster collaborative adjustments.
A Sector-Wide Crisis in Ontario Colleges
St. Clair's plight mirrors a province-wide reckoning. Ontario colleges report a 38 percent drop in first-year international enrollments for fall 2026, with St. Clair facing a 77 percent cut in allocated spots (down to 2,417). Peers like Fanshawe College project deficits escalating to $54.1 million by 2027-28, suspending programs amid 8,000+ job losses sector-wide. Conestoga, despite leading allocations, and Seneca (shuttering Markham campus) exemplify the chaos from federal caps limiting permits to 408,000 nationally in 2026—down from prior booms.
Nationally, new international arrivals fell 61 percent in 2025, decimating revenues that subsidized domestic education.
Provincial Funding as a Potential Lifeline
Ontario's 2026 budget reaffirms a $6.4 billion infusion over four years for post-secondary education, projected to create 70,000 jobs. This includes ending tuition freezes with 2 percent annual increases for domestics and 3 percent for internationals starting fall 2026. Colleges Ontario hailed it as a "game changer," though distribution and timelines remain key.Ontario government announcement
- Increased operating grants to address per-student shortfalls.
- Tuition flexibility to boost revenues gradually.
- Infrastructure support for enrollment stabilization.
Impacts on Students and the Local Economy
Current students encounter reduced program options and potential class consolidations, though core health sciences and trades persist. Prospective internationals face heightened competition for limited Provincial Attestation Letter (PAL)-backed spots—Ontario's mechanism for federal caps. Domestics benefit from focused resources but risk diminished diversity and campus vibrancy.
Windsor's economy, buoyed by student spending, feels the pinch; local housing and services adjust to lower demand. Yet, President Silvaggi eyes opportunities: "Opportunities that we have to be ready to submit proposals for that could be beneficial to St. Clair College."
Photo by Mariia Yesionova on Unsplash
Outlook: Diversification and Resilience Strategies
Recovery roadmaps emphasize domestic growth, online/hybrid expansions, industry partnerships, and non-tuition revenues like apprenticeships. St. Clair's $73 million reserve buys time for federal-provincial alignment on sustainable models. Lessons from peers: pivot to high-demand fields like skilled trades amid Canada's labor shortages.
Experts urge balanced immigration reforms preserving education's role. As Silvaggi notes, it's "not always going to be about cost cutting." With collaborative stakeholder efforts, St. Clair positions for rebound.
For deeper insights, review the official 2026-27 Business Plan & Budget.
Key Takeaways for Higher Education Stakeholders
- Federal caps exposed over-reliance on internationals; diversification is imperative.
- Voluntary measures preserve morale better than layoffs.
- Provincial funding signals commitment, but equitable per-student allocation needed.
- Students: Monitor program status; explore alternatives like Windsor higher ed jobs and programs.
This crisis catalyzes innovation, ensuring Canadian colleges like St. Clair emerge stronger, serving communities long-term.
