Centennial College Suspends 49 Programs Following 43% Drop in International Student Enrollment

Navigating Program Cuts: Impacts of Canada's Study Permit Caps on Colleges

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  • higher-education-news
  • international-students-canada
  • program-suspensions
  • ontario-colleges

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The Announcement: Centennial College Suspends 49 Programs

Toronto's Centennial College, one of Ontario's largest community colleges, made headlines in January 2025 when it announced the suspension of 49 full-time programs for the 2025-26 academic year.10 This decision affected nearly 28 percent of its offerings, primarily those heavily reliant on international student enrollment. The college projected a staggering 43 percent decline in new international students, translating to a loss of approximately 5,000 learners and significant revenue shortfalls.

President Ann Marie Vaughan emphasized that these measures were necessary to ensure financial sustainability amid unprecedented external pressures. 'We are deeply committed to delivering high-quality education, but we must adapt to the new reality,' she stated in the official release. Existing students in suspended programs will complete their studies without interruption, but no new intakes will occur, signaling a strategic pivot toward core strengths.

Unpacking the Enrollment Cliff

International students have long been a cornerstone of Canadian colleges like Centennial, often comprising 50 percent or more of total enrollment. At Centennial, they generated vital tuition revenue that subsidized lower domestic fees mandated by provincial funding models. However, federal policies introduced in 2024 drastically altered this dynamic.

The 43 percent drop at Centennial mirrors national trends, with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) data showing study permit approvals plummeting 97 percent in November 2025 compared to the prior year.11 This 'enrollment cliff' stems from caps limiting new study permits to 437,000 for 2025-26, further reduced to 408,000 for 2026, with only 180,000 allocated to new applicants requiring Provincial Attestation Letters (PALs).85

Affected Programs: From Animation to Hospitality

The suspended programs span diverse fields, highlighting the breadth of impact:

  • Business School: 16 programs, including fashion business management and international business.
  • Community and Protective Services: 11 offerings like child and youth care and justice studies.
  • Engineering Technology and Applied Science: 9 programs, such as electronics engineering technician.
  • School of Hospitality, Sports and Culinary Arts: Key areas like tourism management and food and beverage operations.
  • Creative and Media Arts: Including 3D animation and advanced television scripting.80
These programs, often short diplomas or certificates popular with international career-switchers, now face indefinite pauses. A later clarification revealed 54 total suspensions by mid-2025, with some like cannabis production resuming limited intake by 2026.6

List of suspended programs at Centennial College due to international enrollment drop

The Catalyst: Federal Study Permit Caps Explained

Canada's government, responding to a housing crisis exacerbated by rapid temporary resident growth, imposed study permit caps in January 2024. Initially a 35 percent reduction, subsequent budgets under Prime Minister Mark Carney slashed new permits by 49 percent for 2026, targeting 155,000 fresh arrivals.9 Provinces receive PAL allocations, with Ontario—home to 55 colleges—bearing the brunt as colleges compete with universities.

The process works as follows: Institutions request PALs from provinces, which IRCC honors up to caps. Master's and doctoral exemptions help universities, but undergraduate-heavy colleges suffer. By late 2025, Ontario colleges reported 90,000 fewer permits issued year-over-year.74

Learn more about IRCC study permit guidelines

Sector-Wide Shockwaves: Beyond Centennial

Centennial is not alone. Across Ontario and Canada:

  • Algonquin College: Suspending 30 programs, including journalism and paralegal studies.57
  • Cambrian College: Additional six suspensions like fitness promotion and business analytics.
  • Holland College (PEI): Eight programs cut, with international enrollment dropping 83 percent.
  • St. Lawrence College: 40 percent of programs paused.
  • Province-wide: 600 programs suspended, per Colleges Ontario.60
This cascades to universities too, though less severely due to graduate exemptions.

Financial Fallout and Layoffs

International tuition, often triple domestic rates, propped up operating budgets amid stagnant provincial grants—Ontario funds colleges at 55 percent below 1990s levels adjusted for inflation. Centennial's revenue hit threatens deficits, prompting campus consolidations like closing the Story Arts Centre by 2026.

Colleges Ontario reports $1.8 billion in cuts, 8,000 job losses province-wide. 'These are not just numbers; they are livelihoods and educational pathways,' warns CEO Carlene Donnan. X (formerly Twitter) buzz highlights fears of a 'higher ed recession,' with posts decrying underfunding.47

Voices from the Ground: Students, Staff, and Experts

Prospective international students express heartbreak: 'It breaks all hope for my Canadian dream,' one applicant told CTV.42 Domestic students face larger classes or program mergers. Faculty unions like OPSEU rally against austerity.

Experts like Higher Education Strategy Associates' Alex Usher note colleges' over-reliance on internationals masked chronic underfunding. Balanced views acknowledge caps' housing relief but urge sustainable funding.

Craft a strong CV amid sector shifts

Government Stance and Pushback

IRCC defends caps as essential for sustainable growth, projecting temp resident drop from 6.5 percent to 5 percent of population by 2026. Provinces plead for relief; Ontario seeks billions in budget asks.

Industry lobbies for domestic grant hikes to 70 percent of costs. X trends amplify calls for reform, blending frustration with policy nuance.

Adaptation and Innovation Ahead

Colleges pivot: Centennial eyes 2026-27 restorations selectively, boosts online/hybrid options, and targets mature domestic learners. Diversifying to emerging markets like Latin America and domestic upskilling programs.

Steps for institutions:

  • Enhance domestic marketing via higher ed career platforms.
  • Invest in micro-credentials for flexibility.
  • Lobby for equitable allocations.
Colleges adapting to international student caps with new strategies

2026 Outlook and Long-Term Implications

With 2026 allocations at 309,670 applications (180,000 permits), Ontario colleges brace for continued strain.85 Positive signs: stabilized housing, potential policy tweaks post-election. Yet, without funding reform, more consolidations loom.

For higher ed, this underscores diversification needs, blending global appeal with local priorities.

Career Opportunities in a Transforming Sector

Amid challenges, resilient roles emerge in administration, online education, and career services. Explore faculty positions, admin jobs, or university opportunities at AcademicJobs.com. Upskill via career advice.

Moving Forward: Building a Sustainable Future

Centennial's suspensions spotlight Canada's higher ed crossroads. Balanced reform—bolstering grants, smart caps, innovation—can preserve access. Students, check Rate My Professor for alternatives; professionals, post resumes at higher-ed-jobs. Engage via comments below.

Colleges Ontario insights
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Frequently Asked Questions

📉Why did Centennial College suspend 49 programs?

The suspensions stem from a 43% drop in new international enrollments, losing ~5,000 students due to federal study permit caps. This hit revenue hard for intl-heavy programs.

📚What programs were affected at Centennial?

Key areas: business (16), community services (11), engineering tech (9), hospitality/tourism, 3D animation. Existing students complete studies; no new starts for 2025-26.

📜How do Canada's study permit caps work?

IRCC caps new permits: 408k total for 2026, 180k needing PALs. Provinces allocate; colleges vie with unis, exacerbating short-term pain.IRCC details

🗺️Are other Canadian colleges facing cuts?

Yes: Algonquin (30), Cambrian (6+), Holland (8), St. Lawrence (40%). Ontario: 600 suspensions, 8k jobs lost per Colleges Ontario.

💰What are the financial impacts?

Intl fees subsidized domestic; now $1.8B Ontario cuts. Campuses close (e.g., Centennial Story Arts), layoffs surge.

🏠Government reasons for caps?

Housing crisis from temp residents (6.5% pop). Aims for sustainability; critics say ignores underfunding.

🔄Can suspended programs reopen?

Possibly; Centennial eyes select 2026-27 revivals. Depends on enrollment recovery, funding.

🎓Advice for prospective students?

Verify PALs, explore alternatives. Use Rate My Professor for insights.

💼Job impacts in higher ed?

Layoffs in admin/teaching; opportunities in online ed. Check higher-ed-jobs.

🔮2026 outlook for intl students?

Tighter caps persist, but exemptions grow. Focus on quality recruits; domestic push rises.

🛠️How to adapt as faculty/staff?

Upskill via career advice; diversify roles. Resilience key.