Thanks for this Michael. I really like this line of thinking and also really appreciate
the op-ed you put together, I will pass on to our exec. Team and see if they have any
concerns or comments related to the work and if we can “safely” put our names on there.
Much appreciated
Amanda Coolidge, MEd [she/her]
Director of Open Education, BCcampus
Cell: 250 818 4592 • Email: acoolidge@bccampus.ca<mailto:acoolidge@bccampus.ca>
Twitter: @acoolidge <http://www.twitter.com/acoolidge> • LinkedIn:
amandacoolidge<https://www.linkedin.com/in/amandacoolidge/>
Learning. Doing. Leading.
BCcampus.ca<https://bccampus.ca/> • @BCcampus<https://twitter.com/BCcampus>
• #BCcampus<https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCcampus?src=hash>
For thousands of years the səl̓ilwətaɁɬ təməxʷ (Tsleil-Waututh), Skwxwú7mesh-ulh Temíx̱w
(Squamish), W̱SÁNEĆ, and the Songhees Nation of the Lək̓ʷəŋən (Lekwungen) Peoples have
walked gently on the unceded territories where we now live, work, and play. We are
committed to building relationships with the first peoples here, one based in honour and
respect, and we thank them for their hospitality.
From: Canadaoer <canadaoer-bounces(a)mail.bccampus.ca> on behalf of Michael McNally
<mmcnally(a)ualberta.ca>
Date: Thursday, February 6, 2020 at 4:00 PM
To: Canada OER <canadaoer(a)mail.bccampus.ca>
Subject: [Canadaoer] A Declaration on OER Funding
Hi Everyone,
As some of you may be aware, the University of Alberta will be hosting an OER summit on
May 20, 2020, and as part of the planning process, I've been handed some leeway
(thanks Krysta) for the final plenary session. Based on some conversations with
colleagues here in Alberta, one idea I've had is that it would be nice to finish the
day with some sort of tangible outcome/takeaway. After ruminating about this for a bit
(and in relation to ongoing discussions over the listserv on national advocacy), I've
been thinking about how nice it would be to conclude the day with a declaration,
specifically in relation to OER funding.
If I had to sum up my thinking in a sentence it would be - the declaration would call on
governments that generate revenues from student loans to invest 1% of those revenues into
OER. This approach would end up implicating the federal government because of the Canada
Student Loans Program (CSLP). For reference this number would work out to $8.73 million
this year (or roughly the same as the $8m the Finance Committee recommended in 2017, and
slightly less than the US Federal Investment, which is currently $7 million, but in USD).
My sense is that when you suggest 1% of revenue go back into textbook affordability you
have a reasonable starting point. That said, I'm open to alternate suggestions.
In terms of background the federal government holds over $18 billion in student debt (with
an array of provincial and territorial programs adding in another $10 billion in student
loan debt). While there have been calls for the elimination of all revenues on student
debt (the Canadian Federation of Students has argued for this, and the NDP had it in their
last platform), it is important to note that the CSLP program actually doesn't
'profit' in that expenses are greater than revenues. Also, the federal
government rather regularly writes-off bad debt from the CSLP. According to the most
recent annual report from 2016-17
(
https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/programs/canada-stud…)
the amount of bad debt the government writes off is in the $160-$175 million range, or
(conveniently enough) 1% of the overall loan value. In Jan of this year, the Feds wrote
off another $163m
(
https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/2019/01/28/liberals-write-off-163-…)
again in the roughly 1% amount range. Also, it should be noted that revenues on the CSLP
are predicted to grow (this isn't good news, but it would mean that the 1% value
would also increase). The Parliamentary Budget Officer predicts that CSLP revenue will
rise to $1.4b by 2024 (which would make the OER fund about $14 million).
Thus, I'm reaching out to all of you to see if perhaps we might be able to work
toward some declaration. The idea being the declaration is worked on in advance, and then
read and signed at the May 20, 2020 event (of course we'd have a mechanisms for those
who can't be present in Edmonton to sign the declaration). I'd be willing to do
some leg work here locally to see how we might get some broader pick-up of the declaration
reading/signing. As I noted earlier, I'm open to other suggestions on funding ideas,
but I thought targeting loan revenues was a) a way to implicate the federal government, b)
it also implicates most of the provinces (excluding QC) and the Yukon, c) there is a
degree of simplicity to this approach as opposed to going after a marker tied to education
spending. If there are a few supporters, then I'm happy to try to see this
through.
Finally, just before the holiday break, I mused at trying to frame some of the issues for
a Hill Times op-ed. I have a draft if anyone wanted to critique/comment/add their name to
it (
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OUfYOsozemjcAoAiMfqpA-887eyEXqJAOeZk-6A…)
- I'm happy for any feedback. I'll admit it is a clunky piece (dealing with the
idea of 1% of loan revenue funding mentioned earlier), but my rough sense is the audience
for a Hill Times op-ed isn't the general public. At the end of the day, if this gets
rejected (which wouldn't surprise me), I'll probably still aim for something in
Policy Options.
Michael
--
Michael B. McNally,
Associate Professor, Faculty of Education (School of Library and Information Studies)
5-171 Education North, University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta CANADA T6G 2J4
mmcnally@ualberta.ca<mailto:mmcnally@ualberta.ca>
Phone: 780-492-3934
Fax: 780-492-2430