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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/03/2010 (5970 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Did the provincial government set a precedent for providing capital grants to private schools by giving Canadian Mennonite University a $150,000 capital grant last summer?
Has the province opened the floodgates?
Advanced Education Minister Diane McGifford adamantly denies that the government’s decision to contribute $150,000 last summer to a $603,500 lab and classroom upgrade project under the federal government’s shovel-ready economic stimulus program sets a precedent for provincial capital funding for private schools.
Department of Advanced Education documents obtained under the Freedom of Information act show that on May 25, 2009, McGifford’s personal assistant Jeremy Read asked senior bureaucrats if the province had ever before provided a capital grant to CMU.
“We are not aware of any capital support in the past (for) CMU,” replied Carlos Matias, a program analyst with the council on post-secondary education.
CMU president Gerald Gerbrandt welcomed the money and says CMU plans to approach the government about more capital funding.
Some of Manitoba’s largest faith-based schools, such as Linden Christian School, St. Mary’s Academy and Westgate Mennonite School have ambitious expansion projects that are not receiving a single penny of public capital money.
The government says it does not give capital grants to private schools — but it gave $150,000 to CMU.
And CMU would certainly like to see more capital money, Gerbrandt said.
“Sure, we would like to see ourselves receive capital grants,” he said. “We have not had formal discussions around it. That doesn’t mean we won’t.”
The Department of Advanced Education says unequivocally that CMU is a private institution, a government official said, though the deal with the former Conservative government to establish CMU in the late 1990s gives the school some of the benefits of a public university.
But the province insists that the $150,000 capital grant for CMU was a one-time decision that does not set a precedent.
McGifford said the money was part of a federal-provincial initiative aimed at helping colleges and universities expand and repair their research and education facilities and was a special case.
“We recognize the value of work done by the CMU, and it was a modest amount of money,” she added.
Providence College also received federal infrastructure cash this past summer, but did not receive nor expect a penny from the province, because it’s a private school, said president August Kunkel.
“The province must consider infrastructure funding for CMU, as it does for the other provincial universities (including St. Boniface College as part of the University of Manitoba),” said Kunkel.
The Department of Advanced Education’s statement on capital funding for CMU said:
A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between CMU and the provincial government was put in place in the late 1990s under the previous government and that agreement is still in effect.
The memorandum includes a provision that the Canadian Mennonite University would receive the same funding increases or decreases as public universities.
CMU is still considered a private post-secondary institution. Its status has not changed.
Providence College does not have the same type of funding agreement with the province, although it does receive operating funds.
The terms of the Knowledge Infrastructure Program were set by the federal government as part of its Economic Action Plan, and the funding is a “one-time capital infusion.”
Private numbers
The amount of publicly funded operating grants which each of the province’s funded private schools received in 2007-2008, the percentage of that school’s operating budget paid for by taxpayers, and that school’s spending per student:
Academie Islamique du Manitoba $36,877 64.5 $6,350
Alhijra Islamic School $673,444 96.2 $4,219
Austin Christian Academy $127,635 70.1 $5,436
Balmoral Hall $1,426,771 16.4 $20,366
Beautiful Saviour Lutheran School $227,635 32.9 $7,555
Calvin Christian School $2,223,675 63.4 $6,617
Cartwright $40,812 42.3 $12,069
Children’s House $21,066 9.3 $8,377
Christ the King $666,324 60.2 $6,475
Christian Heritage $448,808 59.4 $7,091
Community Bible Fellowship Christian $145,542 72.6 $5,492
Dufferin Christian $896,997 71.6 $5,950
Faith Academy $1,801,897 70.3 $5,439
Gray Academy $2,328,399 39.2 $11,307
Green Acres $57,376 90.0 $3,983
H.B. Community School $80,080 88.3 $4,220
Holy Cross $1,140,900 94.1 $5,866
Holy Ghost $862,862 81.6 $4,877
Immaculate Heart of Mary $833,377 67.6 $5,884
Immanuel Christian $769,101 65.0 $6,796
Kola Community School $10,825 30.9 $14,001
Lakeside Christian $134,134 75.8 $5,283
Linden Christian $3,316,799 60.9 $6,850
Mennonite Brethren Collegiate $2,308,282 47.7 $8,376
Mennonite Collegiate Institute $565,472 31.3 $12,558
Mennville Christian $136,136 83.7 $4,783
Montessori Learning Centre $26,731 10.1 $9,266
Morweena (grades 11 and 12 only) $64,064 99.0 $4,044
Northern Shield $205,734 29.9 $13,452
Odanah $98,107 90.8 $3,999
Oholei Torah School $31,792 51.8 $7,669
Ohr Hatorah Day School $90,793 23.8 $11,890
Our Lady of Victory School $380,238 53.8 $7,393
Pine Creek $42,357 96.5 $4,181
Red River Valley Junior Academy $292,090 57.7 $6,444
Silverwinds $66,018 79.3 $4,265
Springs Christian Academy $2,221,164 52.0 $7,804
St. Aidan’s $105,187 67.5 $6,776
St. Alphonsus $835,041 72.5 $5,743
St. Boniface Diocesan $742,164 59.9 $7,121
St. Charles Academy $858,223 56.1 $7,518
St. Edward $746,957 72.5 $5,726
St. Emile $848,954 69.6 $6,305
St. Gerard $777,732 84.6 $4,893
St. Ignatius $886,622 58.6 $7,185
St. John Brebeuf $963,624 67.9 $6,083
St. John’s-Ravenscourt $2,794,317 19.2 $18,594
St. Joseph The Worker $543,642 76.2 $6,795
St. Mary’s Academy $2,374,545 48.8 $8,246
St. Maurice $2,439,064 59.4 $6,593
St. Paul’s High $2,370,479 47.0 $8,657
Steinbach Christian High $934,199 59.1 $6,818
The King’s School $1,036,146 68.5 $6,257
The Laureate $333,234 30.6 $19,486
University of Winnipeg Collegiate $1,409,297 36.9 $6,745
Westgate Mennonite $1,218,671 43.9 $9,104
Westpark $865,619 67.7 $6,000
Wingham School $76,076 98.9 $4,049
Winnipeg Mennonite Elementary $1,571,744 50.1 $8,266
Winnipeg South Academy $90,265 12.9 $6,896
Source: The department of education’s FRAME (Financial reporting and Accounting in Manitoba Education) report for independent schools 2007-2008. Percentages calculated by WFP using provincial data.
Nick Martin
Former Free Press reporter Nick Martin, who wrote the monthly suspense column in the books section and was prolific in his standalone reviews of mystery/thriller novels, died Oct. 15 at age 77 while on holiday in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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