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Humber Polytechnic board’s mass resignation followed Ontario ministry’s intervention

The province launched a review and directed members to continue operations but with several restrictions.

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Questions remain about what is going on behind closed doors at Humber college, but “This has upset a lot of people,” said Robert Gordon, Humber’s longest serving president.


Prior to the resignation of more than half of Humber Polytechnic’s board of governors, the Ontario government had launched a third-party review of the college’s governance practices and directed members to continue normal operations but refrain from proceeding with a performance review of the president, holding in-camera meetings, retaining any legal counsel or exchanging emails with staff.

The terms of reference were laid out in a Jan. 14 letter, seen by the Star, from David Wai, deputy minister of colleges and universities. That letter followed one from early December in which Wai alerted the board that concerns about governance practices had been flagged to the ministry and a review was to be initiated. The ministry wouldn’t provide details to the Star but confirmed a review is underway and concerns were initially raised “by external parties.”

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Janet Hurley

Janet Hurley is a Toronto Star journalist and senior writer covering culture, education and societal trends. She is based in Toronto. Reach her via email: jhurley@thestar.ca.

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Top Comments

    1. Comment by Ross.

      Ann Marie Vaughan previously was the President of the College of the North Atlantic (CNA) in Newfoundland from 2011-2016. Ann Marie's contract was not renewed and she left Nfld. for Ontario where she was hired at Loyalist College then went on to Humber. Her sister Mary was dean of business at CNA and she also left to come to Ontario. She worked for Seneca, then Lambton and is now VP at Sheridan.

      The Newfoundland government released a review on the College of the North Atlantic 8 months after Ann Marie Vaughan left which had very critical remarks about how that college operated as reported by the CBC. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/cna-modernization-plan-1.4089746

      The executive summary of the CNA review stated that "The College has operated with systemic and continuous deficits, teaching and learning have not received an appropriate degree of attention, and quality and accountability are not entrenched in the organizational culture,"

      When you read the report on her time at the CNA it makes you wonder if the Ontario colleges who hired her had done their due diligence. Problems at CNA may have indicated there could be future problems in Ontario.

      Humber has a big problem now.

    2. Comment by RON.

      Having had an excellent experience working collaboratively with Humber in reskilling a workforce I agree with the comments of Messrs Gorden and Jones. The Province needs to quickly resolve this situation before any further damage is done to the reputation and

      effective operation of one of the leading educational institutions in Ontario

    3. Comment by Richard.

      So now chapter two has been revealed. The board did not want its hands tied by the province or the CEO as the province begins an investigation into an external complaint. Chapter three may be the results of the provinces investigation...? Somehow it involves the CEO and I suspect this is a money/capital expenditure issue. Despite many many colleges shutting down dozens of programs and in some cases, entire campuses, we have not heard a peep from Humber about its fiscal plans. Humber has 27,000 international students... there is no way that such a dramatic reduction in international students province-wide doesn't have an impact on Humber.

    4. Comment by Andrew.

      Suspected as much. Only entity with more authority than the board is the province--the Ministry of Colleges and Universities. Breakdown in the relationship between Vaughan and the board and the province chose to intervene, which typically involves the bottomline (money). Not a good look. Wai wrote the letter, but at Jill Dunlop's discretion (no doubt passed the buck to Wai, hence her absence). And the individual who stands behind Dunlop? Why Doug Ford, the guy who dropped out of Humber after two months.

    5. Comment by Catherine.

      Please have your reporter make it clear that the current crisis in the post-secondary sector is not simply due to the federal cap on international students but the provincial government's failure to fund post-secondary education properly (the lowest levels of support in Canada) and their insistence that post-secondary institutions use international students as an alternate source of funding.

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