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College of New Caledonia's 'We Will Survive' Domestic Drive Tackles International Enrollment Drop

CNC Pivots to Local Youth with 'Create Your Possibilities' Strategy

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The College of New Caledonia (CNC), a key post-secondary institution serving northern British Columbia, has unveiled a bold new approach to student recruitment amid a sharp decline in international enrollments. Dubbed the 'Create Your Possibilities' youth strategy, this initiative carries the rallying cry 'We will survive,' signaling the college's determination to thrive by prioritizing local talent from the region's communities. Launched on April 29, 2026, the strategy marks a pivotal shift for CNC, which has long relied on international students to bolster its programs and finances.

Located primarily in Prince George with campuses across the north, including Quesnel and Vanderhoof, CNC offers over 80 programs in fields like health sciences, trades, business, and university transfer credits. For years, international students made up 40 to 70 percent of its full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment, which hovers around 3,000 students (from a headcount of 5,000 to 6,000). These students not only diversified the campus but also provided crucial tuition revenue—often three times higher than domestic fees—to subsidize high-cost programs like nursing and trades training.

The Perfect Storm: Canada's International Student Caps Hit Home

Canada's federal government introduced caps on international study permits in 2024 to address housing shortages and unsustainable growth, slashing approvals from 650,000 in 2023 to 437,000 in 2025 and maintaining tight limits into 2026. British Columbia followed suit with a provincial cap limiting international students to 30 percent of total enrollment at public post-secondary institutions. Approval rates plummeted to 45 percent in 2024 and further to 31 percent by late 2025, compounded by stricter proof-of-funds requirements (now $20,000) and post-graduation work permit (PGWP) restrictions tying eligibility to fields with labor shortages.

At CNC, these changes triggered an immediate crisis. International tuition revenue dropped by $7.1 million from the previous year, with another $8.7 million shortfall projected for 2026-27. Enrollment fell by about 500 FTE this fall alone. 'This is really strategic for us, for our sustainability,' explained Shelley Carter-Rose, CNC's vice-president of student affairs. 'We will survive in our communities, with our communities.'

CNC's Response: Program Cuts, Layoffs, and Campus Closures

To balance its 2026-27 budget—approved just days before the strategy launch—CNC made tough calls. The Fort St. James satellite campus closed on March 31, 2026, eliminating a vital outreach point 115 km northwest of Prince George. Programs like English language learning, kinesiology diploma, Community and School Support, and Associate of Arts in Modern Classics were axed, leading to at least seven faculty positions lost and over 16 staff layoffs, early retirements, or eliminations since fall 2024. Further workforce reductions loom as enrollment data solidifies.

President Cindy Heitman underscored the gravity: 'Balancing this budget required thoughtful, and at times difficult, decisions. We did not take these lightly. Every step was guided by our responsibility to ensure CNC remains strong, sustainable, and able to serve our students and communities into the future.' Despite the pain, popular domestic-heavy programs in nursing, allied health, human services, trades, and technology remain fully enrolled, providing a silver lining.

Aerial view of College of New Caledonia main campus in Prince George, British Columbia

Unpacking the 'Create Your Possibilities' Youth Strategy

The cornerstone of CNC's pivot is the 'Create Your Possibilities' strategy, designed to engage northern B.C. youth from elementary through secondary school. Unlike past broad recruitment efforts, this targets domestic students intentionally, fostering early familiarity with CNC's offerings. The launch event drew over 150 students from local school districts for campus tours, program demos, and cultural activities like drumming performances.

Key components include:

  • Hands-on workshops and site visits to spark interest in trades, health sciences, and university transfers.
  • Partnerships with K-12 schools for dual-credit programs, allowing high schoolers to earn college credits.
  • Mentorship and career pathway mapping to make CNC feel like 'home' for local youth.
  • Targeted marketing highlighting affordability, small class sizes, and community ties.

Carter-Rose emphasized belonging: 'The goal is for youth in northern B.C. to see CNC as a place where they belong.' Early signs are promising—domestic FTE has grown by 300 students annually over the past three years, a nearly 20 percent increase.

Student Perspectives: Building Excitement for Local Futures

Feedback from participants underscores the strategy's potential. Stella Lovell, a student from Prince George Secondary School, shared: 'It was really exciting and new... It helps you to kind of square in what you want to do when you are older.' Such voices highlight how early exposure demystifies post-secondary education for rural youth, many of whom might otherwise leave the region for opportunities elsewhere.

For more on the launch event and student reactions, see the detailed CBC News coverage.

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Northern B.C.'s Unique Challenges and Opportunities

Northern British Columbia faces acute higher education hurdles: geographic isolation, small population bases, and industries like forestry, mining, and energy demanding skilled workers. International students previously filled gaps, injecting economic vitality—each contributes thousands annually to local housing, food, and services. Their decline exacerbates labor shortages in health care and trades, where CNC trains frontline workers.

Yet, opportunities abound. Domestic growth aligns with provincial priorities for regional self-sufficiency. CNC's strategic enrollment management, underway for five years, positions it to rebound. Industry partnerships for apprenticeships and alumni engagement for donations are ramping up alternative revenues.

A September 2025 report from the Prince George Citizen detailed the enrollment crunch, noting CNC's proactive shift ahead of the curve.

Broader Impacts Across Canadian Colleges

CNC's story mirrors a national crisis. Smaller and rural institutions bear the brunt, with program mergers, campus closures, and layoffs widespread. In Ontario and B.C., colleges report multi-million-dollar shortfalls. Federal audits confirm impacts exceed expectations, prompting calls for policy tweaks.

However, successes like CNC's domestic surge offer blueprints. Colleges emphasizing vocational training in high-demand fields—nursing, welding, early childhood education—are stabilizing faster. Government reports project stabilization in 1-2 years as markets adjust.

Students touring College of New Caledonia during Create Your Possibilities launch event

Financial Roadmap: From Deficit to Sustainability

CNC's 2026-27 budget prioritizes core programs while trimming non-essentials. Vacant positions are frozen, admission caps reviewed, and new international offerings limited to PGWP-eligible fields. Domestic focus leverages lower costs and higher retention—local students stay, bolstering the economy.

Long-term, CNC eyes philanthropy, industry-sponsored seats, and expanded dual credits. Heitman projects recovery: 'We're adapting thoughtfully to serve our communities.'

Stakeholder Views: A Balanced Perspective

Leaders praise resilience. Carter-Rose: 'Having so many international students was wonderful... but we're here to serve our community.' Educators note challenges in maintaining diversity but welcome stable funding. Community partners value sustained training pipelines. Critics urge federal relief, but CNC's proactive stance earns nods.

For enrollment planning insights, refer to CNC's Institutional Accountability Plan.

Future Outlook: Thriving Through Adaptation

Looking ahead, CNC anticipates 2026 open houses in Quesnel and Prince George to draw prospects. With domestic momentum and policy clarity, enrollment could rebound by 2027. Challenges persist—rural attraction, housing—but strategies like micro-credentials and online hybrids position CNC strongly.

This pivot exemplifies resilience in Canadian higher education, turning crisis into community-centric renewal.

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Actionable Insights for Prospective Students and Families

Northern B.C. youth: Explore CNC via open houses, dual credits. Parents: Note affordability (domestic tuition ~$4,000-$6,000/year). Career changers: Trades programs fill labor gaps with high employability (90%+ in health/trades).

  • Apply early for fall 2026—deadlines loom.
  • Leverage scholarships for northern residents.
  • Visit CNC Future Students for program fits.
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Frequently Asked Questions

🎯What is CNC's 'We will survive' strategy?

It's part of the 'Create Your Possibilities' youth initiative targeting northern BC domestic students via early K-12 engagement, campus tours, and dual credits to build enrollment sustainability.

📉Why did CNC shift to domestic recruitment?

Federal study permit caps (down to 437k in 2025) and BC's 30% intl limit caused $7.1M revenue drop last year, projected $8.7M more, forcing program cuts and layoffs.

🌍How have international caps impacted CNC enrollment?

Intl students fell from 40-70% of ~3,000 FTE to sharp declines (500 FTE drop this fall). Only ~12/80+ programs now PGWP-eligible.

✂️What programs were cut at CNC?

English language, kinesiology diploma, Community Support, Modern Classics; Fort St. James campus closed. Core domestic programs like nursing/trades intact.

📈How is CNC growing domestic enrollment?

+300 FTE/year past 3 years via dual credits, open houses, mentorship. Launch event drew 150+ youth.

💬What do CNC leaders say about sustainability?

VP Shelley Carter-Rose: 'We will survive in our communities.' Pres. Cindy Heitman: Tough decisions ensure long-term strength.

🏔️Impact on northern BC communities?

Intl drop hits local economy; domestic focus sustains workforce training in trades/health amid isolation challenges.

🇨🇦Are other Canadian colleges affected similarly?

Yes—rural/small institutions face closures/layoffs; vocational programs faring better per federal audits.

🔮Prospects for CNC in 2026-27?

Budget balanced; domestic growth, partnerships eyed for recovery in 1-2 years. 2026 open houses upcoming.

👨‍🎓Advice for northern BC high schoolers?

Attend CNC events, explore dual credits, apply early for affordable programs with 90%+ employability in key fields.

📚How to learn more about CNC programs?

Visit CNC Future Students for 80+ options in health, trades, transfers.