Brandon University left behind in latest budget
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Manitoba’s universities have been under attack by the Manitoba government.
Since the 2017 budget, funding below the rate of inflation has resulted in a substantial revenue shortfall. After years of freezes, this year’s budget saw an across-the-board increase of 11.7 per cent in funding for postsecondary education.
While this is a substantial increase, it still leaves the sector with $48 million less than it would have had the government increased funding at the rate of inflation since 2017.

Brandon University president David Docherty (right) raises the Canadian flag in front of BU along 18th Street. (File)
This year’s budget also saw an unequal distribution of this funding, with the University of Winnipeg receiving a 20.2 per cent increase, 10.8 per cent for the University of Manitoba, and 10 per cent for the Université de St. Boniface. Brandon University received only 3.5 per cent increase in the provincial grant.
As the only university outside Winnipeg, Brandon University can and must play a crucial role in post-secondary education. An accessible university that provides educational opportunities for Manitobans is crucial in ensuring the vitality of rural Manitoba.
With such an unfair share of funding, Brandon University will struggle to keep up with the recent inflationary pressures. This leaves faculty, students, staff as well as the wider Brandon community in jeopardy.
With a small budget compared to U of W and U of M, an increase to the operating grant at BU would be comparatively affordable for a government that has now found funding for a wide variety of other sectors. In its 2022 budget, Brandon’s university received just under $41 million in funding from the provincial government; an increase of 3.5 per cent provides an additional $1.4 million to the institution.
In contrast, a 10.8 per cent increase to the grant at the U of M provides that institution with an additional $37.8 million in funding — a figure that equates to 90 per cent of BU’s 2022 grant in its entirety. A funding increase in line with other institutions would allow our university to recruit and retain professors and staff across all of its faculties, ensuring stability for years to come.
Simply put, bringing the funding increase for Brandon University to 10.4 per cent (the middle ground between the universities of Manitoba and St. Boniface) would provide BU with an additional $4.2 million. That’s only an additional $2.8 million increase from the current budget grant provided, or 0.01 per cent, of the total provincial budget.
Budgets are about choices, and by not increasing the grant at Brandon University, the Manitoba government has made its choices clear.
A choice to invest in every university — provided that university is in the City of Winnipeg.
A choice to tell young people in Westman that their institution closer to home doesn’t deserve the same funding increases as those in Winnipeg, and students will be forced to move to Winnipeg for the programs they need.
A choice to say that we value education, but not in rural Manitoba.
A choice to say that while the federal government increases equalization payments to Manitoba by over a billion dollars, or 16.8 per cent, those living in rural Manitoba shouldn’t share in that investment.
It is also curious why the Manitoba government has increased funding for higher education in an election year after years of funding cuts and rising tuition fees.
It appears those pursuing post-secondary education living outside of Winnipeg are being treated unfairly.
Will they choose to prioritize Brandon University?
That’s the $2.8-million question.
» Zach Fleisher is the co-ordinator for the Manitoba Organization of Faculty Associations.