Concordia defers sabbaticals, offers retirement program due to foreign student drop
MONTREAL — Montreal’s Concordia University says it’s not renewing some teaching contracts and deferring previously approved sabbaticals because of major budget shortfalls due in part to federal and provincial immigration policies.
The university is also offering full-time faculty voluntary retirement packages, part of a suite of cost-cutting measures president Graham Carr announced earlier this week to help the school’s finances recover.
Concordia’s struggles reflect the difficulties universities across the country are facing because of restrictions on international students. Quebec has placed caps on foreign student enrolment; Canada, meanwhile, plans to cut in half the planned number of student visas for the next three years, bringing it down to 155,000 in 2026 from about 306,000 in the previous year’s plan.
In consequence, post-secondary institutions across Canada have been experiencing deep budget cuts due to reduced income from international student tuition fees, which tend to be four to five times higher than those paid by domestic students.


