3 English CEGEPs Responded To Quebec's Newly Proposed French Language Laws

Dawson, John Abbott & Vanier say students will be pushed to study out-of-province.
Reporter

The directors of the Dawson College, John Abbott College and Vanier College — three English CEGEPs in Montreal — issued a joint statement saying Quebec's newly proposed French-language laws would "push more students to study out-of-province."

Bill 96 proposed caps on the number of students able to attend English-language CEGEPs. The CEGEP directors said the move "will not address the ongoing desire" parents and students have for wanting to attend English schools in Quebec.

Editor's Choice: The SPVM Has Named Its First-Ever Female Motorcycle Officer

The directors "welcomed" the government's initiative to protect the French language, but said more analysis of the proposed bill is needed, specifically on the issue of a French exit exam.

"Many Quebec parents want their children to become bilingual in a French Quebec," the statement said.

"We are proud of the role our institutions play in higher education and of our contribution to Quebec society," the statement reads. "We believe in the principle of freedom of choice [...] as well as admissions based primarily on academic qualifications." 

  • Lea Sabbah
  • Lea Sabbah was a Staff Writer for MTL Blog. Previously, Lea was a radio host on CJLO 1690 AM and her work has been published by Global News, the Toronto Star, Le Devoir and the National Observer. In 2019, she was part of the investigative team that uncovered lead in Montreal's drinking water — a story which won Quebec's Grand Prix Judith-Jasmin. She's a graduate of the journalism program at Concordia University.

Ignoring this little-known Canadian passport rule could ruin your trip before it even starts

You could be denied entry, even if your passport hasn't expired yet.

Montrealers are driving less than almost anyone else in Canada, and here's why

Nearly one in ten Canadians say their monthly car expenses are simply more than they can manage.

Over 25,000 Tim Hortons cups were just recalled in Canada and you could be owed money

Tim's already received 28 reports of incidents in Canada, including one confirmed burn injury.

2 men were arrested at Montreal airport after a mysterious incident caused flight delays

NORAD says its fighter jets were monitoring a situation involving two commercial airplanes bound for Montreal on Wednesday.