Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Students prepare to push Liberals on promises

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Oct, 2015 12:55 PM

    OTTAWA — Student groups say young voters — a group that typically registers some of the lowest turnout levels in the country — cast more ballots in last week's federal election than they did four years ago.

    The Canadian Alliance of Student Associations estimates that youth voter turnout was up by about 10 per cent since 2011, based on consultations with member campuses.

    The exact number won't be known until Elections Canada releases detailed breakdowns of voter turnout in the coming months.

    Elections Canada numbers show 70,231 people came out to special offices set up on 38 campuses during a four-day stretch prior to advance voting, which took place over the Thanksgiving long weekend.

    The offices were established as part of a pilot project to get more students out to vote.

    The Canadian Federation of Students said the wait time at some campuses was as long as an hour: More than 400 students crammed the special office on the Ryerson University campus in downtown Toronto on the Wednesday before the long weekend, while Memorial University in St. John's saw 1,100 students line up out the door on the last day the office was open.

    CFS national chairperson Bilan Arte said the numbers help to undermine the reputation of young people as politically apathetic.

    The figures have emboldened student groups to lobby the incoming Liberal government to make it easier to pay for post-secondary school and to create jobs for young people upon graduation.

    "We need to make sure that the Trudeau government not only does what it said it would do, but actually goes beyond that," Arte said.

    Viviane Bartlett, CASA interim executive director, said students believed they had their voices heard during the election and her group "will be here to ensure the government continues to listen during their four-year mandate."

    The Liberals have made sweeping promises to make it easier for students to pay for school and to get a job upon graduation.

    The Liberals have promised to spend $1.47 billion over four years on a youth job strategy that promises to create 40,000 jobs for young people in each of the next three years and waive employment insurance premiums for 12 months for businesses who give a full-time job to anyone 18 to 24.

    The Grits are also planning to eliminate education tax credits for books and put the approximately $2 billion in savings towards non-repayable grants to students, a move student groups say should make it easier to pay for an education.

    "But it doesn't do very much to actually address the systemic issues that we have around access across the country," Arte said. "It doesn't address high tuition fees that continue to skyrocket from coast to coast. It doesn't present a national vision for post-secondary education."

    Those issues are likely to come up when CASA officials wander on to Parliament Hill as part of their annual lobbying blitz where they have some 150 meetings with cabinet ministers, MPs, senators and top civil servants.

    "Our job really is to work with the government in a collaborative manner to ensure that there is an investment in the issues that matter to students," Bartlett said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Preliminary Hearing For Accused B.C. Polygamist, Case Heads Straight To Trial

    A lawyer prosecuting the accused polygamist leader of a fundamentalist Mormon commune has opted to forego a preliminary inquiry and head straight to trial.

    No Preliminary Hearing For Accused B.C. Polygamist, Case Heads Straight To Trial

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts
    The rise of so-called precarious employment in Canada — mainly work in the services and retail sectors — has brought with it some questionable employer practices that have employees stressed out and labour activists fuming.

    Waiting For Work: Canadian Retail Workers Face Volatility Of On-Call Shifts

    Edmonton Police See Bleak Future For People Duped By Bogus Fortune Tellers

    They say victims across Canada have paid between $2,000 and $15,000 to self-proclaimed fortune tellers.

    Edmonton Police See Bleak Future For People Duped By Bogus Fortune Tellers

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrowed To $593 Million In July

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrowed To $593 Million In July
    Statistics Canada said Thursday that the trade deficit narrowed to $593 million in July from June's revised deficit of $811 million. The June deficit had initially been reported at $476 million.

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrowed To $593 Million In July

    Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail

    Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail
    Guido Amsel was back in front of a Winnipeg judge Wednesday for the second part of his bail hearing.

    Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail

    Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP

    Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP
    Atsumi Yoshikubo, who was 45, was last seen Oct. 22, 2014, as she walked along a highway north of the city.

    Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP