:
I call this meeting to order. Welcome, everyone.
We are meeting in a webcast session.
[Translation]
Welcome to meeting number 12 of the Standing Committee on Science and Research.
[English]
We're happy tonight to welcome Ms. Vignola, as well as Madame Lapointe.
The Board of Internal Economy requires that committees adhere to the following health protocols, which are in effect until June 23, 2022: All individuals wishing to enter the parliamentary precinct must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19, and all those attending in person must wear a mask, except for members who are at their place during proceedings.
Please contact our clerk for further information on preventive measures for health and safety.
As the chair, I thank you for always adhering to these measures, because I will enforce them.
[Translation]
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format pursuant to the House order of November 25, 2021.
[English]
I'd like to outline a few rules to follow.
Interpretation services are available for this meeting. You may speak in the official language of your choice. At the bottom of your screen, you may choose to hear floor audio, or English or French.
[Translation]
I remind you that all comments should be addressed through the chair.
[English]
When you're not speaking, your microphone should be muted. The clerk and I will maintain a speaking order.
To all our witnesses, welcome.
This is about top talent, research and innovation. Tonight we're very pleased to welcome, from the Canadian Association of University Teachers, David Robinson, executive director; from the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, Dr. Robert Myers, director; and from Polytechnics Canada, Ms. Sarah Watts-Rynard, chief executive officer, and Mr. Devon Blaskevitch, policy analyst. Welcome.
Each group will have five minutes. At the four-and-a-half-minute mark, I will hold up a yellow card and you will know that you have 30 seconds left.
We will begin. Again, welcome to our witnesses.
We'll begin with the Canadian Association of University Teachers. Mr. Robinson, the floor is yours for five minutes.
:
Good evening, and thank you.
I would like to begin by acknowledging that I am joining you this evening from the unceded and traditional territory of the Algonquin people.
I’m very grateful for the invitation to be here tonight on behalf of the Canadian Association of University Teachers. We represent 72,000 faculty, academic librarians and professional staff at more than 120 post-secondary institutions in all provinces across the country.
As an organization, we're uniquely positioned to comment on the issue of the recruitment and retention of researchers and scientists in Canada because our members are scientists and researchers themselves. They're also the teachers and instructors training the next generation of researchers and scientists.
As everyone on the committee knows, it is the higher education sector that does much of the heavy lifting when it comes to Canada's gross domestic expenditures on research and development, and this is a strength we can build on.
The investments we make in university and college research equips us to better understand the social and natural world in which we live so that we can tackle the many social, environmental, economic and public health challenges we face. We can spur innovation and enhance the quality of life for all Canadians.
In budget 2018, the government made significant investments to boost basic research funding, but there remains more distance to go to close the gap identified by the government's expert panel on fundamental science. To continue to attract and retain academic research talent, we need to continue to invest in basic university research, because this is vital for scientific advancement that leads to innovation.
While quick-to-market applications of science are appealing in the short term, fundamental world-changing science and innovation are rarely predictable and most often emerge from longer-term and fundamental discoveries driven by scientific curiosity.
Think of the 19th century Irish physicist John Tyndall, who asked the question, “Why is the sky blue?” That simple question led Tyndall to the discovery of basic properties of light that paved the way eventually for the development of lasers and other innovations. More recently, think of the basic science that underpins the mRNA vaccine platform, or the discovery of properties of magnetism that was necessary to develop MRIs.
We have a strong foundation in the higher education sector, but there are cracks emerging that I want to focus on. One of the biggest is related to the ongoing shift toward precarious employment at our post-secondary institutions.
As you've heard from others, full-time tenure-track academic employment provides the necessary stability needed for longer-term academic research. However, by our estimates, more than a third of academic staff, who are also highly educated researchers, are now employed on short-term teaching-only contracts. Because it's teaching only, it means their research potential is largely untapped, and even if they want to pursue research on their own time, obstacles remain. Without tenure or a tenure-track appointment, it's difficult, if not impossible, for contract academic staff to secure research grants through the federal funding agencies. Facing this uncertainty, many contract staff may abandon research altogether. Graduate students may question the attractiveness of the profession.
Finally, I'd like to emphasize that we need good-quality data about the entire academic staff workforce to fully understand its composition and challenges. Right now, Statistics Canada’s university and college academic staff system survey, a survey that collects data on academics and Canada’s research talent in universities, currently does not capture any information for contract academic staff, those working at colleges or any employment equity data beyond gender. Without this data, we simply don't know about the full composition of our academic research community, or what barriers may exist that prevent the full participation of all. Expanding this survey would greatly assist us in understanding the academic research workforce, how to better support our researchers and how best to harness their potential.
In conclusion, I want to reiterate that the higher education sector is essential to Canada's research future. Compared to other OECD countries, it is our strength that we need to build on. We must ensure that academic researchers, those in early career stages or those who are already established, are afforded decent working conditions, job security and equitable opportunities. These are essential if we are to attract and retain research talent. The federal government can play an important role in building upon this strength and foundation with clear action and support for academic researchers and for basic science.
Thank you.
:
Thank you so very much, Mr. Robinson. We appreciate your being here.
We will now go to the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, and we'll be hearing from Dr. Myers for five minutes, please.
Dr. Myers, should we come back to you? You'd like us to come back. We will do that, sir.
With that, if it's okay with Polytechnics Canada, we will hear from you for five minutes, please.
The floor is yours.
Good evening, Madam Chair and honourable members. I appreciate the opportunity to address you as part of this important study on how best to attract and retain science and research talent in Canada's post-secondary institutions.
I'm the CEO at Polytechnics Canada, a not-for-profit association representing 13 research-intensive, publicly funded polytechnics and institutes of technology. Collectively, our members provide education and training to more than 370,000 learners each year. Polytechnic institutions across Canada mobilize state-of-the-art facilities, equipment and expertise to deliver solutions to partners across industrial and social sectors, always in partnership and often with the help of student talent. As a result, institutions have a flexible and agile applied research infrastructure that adapts to the unique requirements of a partner and their project.
To give you some context, last year, polytechnics conducted more than 3,700 applied research projects with 2,600 industry partners. More than 23,000 students contributed to these projects, which included the development of more than 3,300 prototypes. Member institutions deployed nearly $39 million in federal funding and leveraged another $61.9 million from other sources. This essentially means they were able to secure $1.58 for every $1.00 that was invested by the federal government.
When it comes to attracting and retaining research talent, it is important to understand how polytechnics and colleges differ from their university colleagues. Research is largely undertaken by expert faculty who bring industry experience to their teaching careers. Research is not built into the formula of an instructor's time; it is absolutely extracurricular. This can pose real challenges, because academics who participate in applied research need to be backfilled in the classroom.
Attracting and retaining research talent comes with some fundamental challenges. Less than 5% of all federal investments in post-secondary research are allocated to this sector. If you're a researcher, this balance of funding sends a pretty clear message that you should go elsewhere, yet the type of research required by Canada's private sector—projects that support prototype development, commercialization, productivity improvements and job creation—is desperately needed. This calls for a rebalancing of funding formulas.
Applied research projects take a special kind of talent. They're people who understand industry challenges and develop pragmatic solutions in partnership, yet polytechnics do this work in a funding environment that's stacked against them. For example, while the college sector is technically eligible under the Canadian research chair program, allocations are based on funding received from tri-councils in the previous year. The college and community innovation program, which is the major and often only source of federal research funding, is excluded from this calculation.
The evaluation of Canada research chair applications is built around a history of publications and participation in peer review committees, but neither is an outcome associated with college applied research. Further, the peer review process inherently favours university researchers. When we've looked at why our members are successful in competitions, we've found that at least one member of the application review committee had a college affiliation, so populating those research review committees with individuals with knowledge of the polytechnic and college sector space is essential to ensuring equitable participation.
With challenges like that in mind, I have three broad recommendations for your consideration.
The first is appropriate funding that needs to be available to support polytechnic applied research. The ecosystem is under dire financial pressure. For example, the COVID rapid response grant for colleges was unable to support 71% of eligible projects, leaving 164 partners behind. While the number of partners on applications under the college and community innovation program has steadily increased since 2016, it hasn't kept up. In 2020, 715 partners could not be accommodated due to grant constraints.
Second, the peer review process must be adjusted to ensure the inclusion of people who have a solid understanding of polytechnic and college applied research.
Finally, it's time to end the exemption across tri-council funding formulas of the college and community innovation program. Now well past its pilot phase, this program has become integral to delivering private sector innovation, and its exclusion has pushed polytechnics and colleges to the periphery of the research ecosystem. I would say that's not a great place from which to attract top talent—
:
My apologies for what happened earlier. I'm not sure what happened.
In any event, my name is Rob Myers. I'm the director of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics here in Waterloo, Ontario.
I'd like to start by thanking the committee for the important work you're doing in helping to shape Canada's future.
Here's a bit about Perimeter. We're an independent, non-profit research centre that's supported by a public-private partnership. We're not funded like universities. We're not eligible for most granting council programs.
While I have no particular ask today, I do agree with past witnesses who've shared the need for stable and continuing support for Canada's research community and in particular for our talent pipelines.
Perimeter has a single focus, which is to pursue breakthroughs in our understanding of the universe. Such breakthroughs are vital. One major discovery in physics can have profound long-term ramifications for all of science and technology, but it's a long game.
Currently at Perimeter we're the home to 25 permanent faculty, 22 faculty who are part time and appointed with nearby universities, over 50 post-doctoral researchers and about 80 graduate students registered with nearby universities. When we think about recruitment, we think about recruitment at all of those levels. As you've heard, it's getting harder and harder to recruit talent for Canadian research organizations, so I want to share some thoughts on our approach.
Talent attraction is not just about a competitive salary, although that's important. Part of the strategy we take is calculated risks on unusual thinkers. We look for bold researchers who are brilliant, ambitious and adventurous. Most of them have multiple offers, so we need to provide something special. To attract them, we provide opportunities and experiences to maximize their potential: no teaching requirements, a collaborative atmosphere, freedom from the publish-or-perish treadmill, great administrative services and the flexibility to capitalize on new research opportunities. I must add that brilliant people want to work with other brilliant people. There's a strong cluster effect here at the institute and throughout “Quantum Valley” in the Waterloo region.
Let's look at some examples. On the first slide, we see the image just unveiled this morning of Sagittarius A*, the black hole at the centre of our own galaxy. It's a very challenging picture to take, and Perimeter's Avery Broderick was instrumental in this effort. Avery, who's cross-appointed at the University of Waterloo, was attracted here because of the support we could offer in the form of a research community, computing resources and resources for students and post-docs. In turn, Avery has given Canada a share in historic scientific achievements. That, in turn, helps us attract more talent.
On slide number two we see Kendrick Smith. Kendrick doesn't fit the usual categories that a university might look for; however, at Perimeter, he found the freedom to combine his talents in theoretical research, software engineering and data analysis. His software innovations have transformed Canada's giant telescope into a global leader in radio astronomy. Interestingly, the same software that Kendrick developed is now used to stress-test computer chips for a large manufacturer.
The last emblem that you see in the bottom corner is to remind me that, also during the pandemic, Kendrick applied his skills in collaboration with the medical community to develop a software package that helps us track COVID mutations.
Moving to slide three, we see Estelle Inack, originally from Cameroon. She chose Canada over a very lucrative position with a U.S. tech giant. She came here because she wanted to pursue her ideas with Canadian Roger Melko, who leads the Perimeter Institute Quantum Intelligence Lab. Today she's not only a top researcher who is producing innovative new machine learning algorithms, but she's also founded a start-up in Toronto based on her research.
These are just three people whom we've been able to recruit.
In closing, I just want to note that although I started by talking about the long game, it's interesting how that strategy has short-term payoffs, which I've tried to illustrate with these examples.
Thank you.
Madam Chair, if I run out of time, I'll ask you, Sarah, to submit this in writing. You have a few seconds left.
I know you talked about ending the tri-council exemption of the college and community innovation program, the CCIP. I know you've recommended some changes. Would you have any other recommendations that you haven't mentioned? Second, do you need another source of funding besides the CCIP?
:
That's a big topic. It's a strategic direction that we're trying to advance.
We've had successes with outreach to high school students. At the master's level, we've reached gender parity in our all of our programs. It's fair to say that with more senior levels at the faculty level, we have much more work to do.
We also have various programs, like the Emmy Noether fellows program. We designed it to support early-career faculty members and researchers in their careers. That also has a spinoff effect. We recently recruited Katie Mack, who is an outstanding cosmologist and science communicator from the United States. She's come here and now holds the Hawking chair at the Perimeter Institute.
In fact, we have a grassroots effort called the PI inclusive platform that is working to advance inclusion, diversity, accessibility and equity across the entire spectrum of our efforts and activities here.
One last note is that at the board level, we currently have a board of seven members, and five are women. Our board is well ahead of the curve and a good role model for our faculty members.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
My first questions will be for Mr. Robinson.
Mr. Robinson, in the latest report from the Canadian Association of University Teachers, CAUT, you said the following concerning posts–pandemic recovery:
If “normal” means a return to an increasing erosion of the academic job in favour of precarious contracts with little to no benefits, we need to envision a new normal.
If I understand correctly, the phenomenon you are describing is a precariousness that impacts people. What is the impact of that precariousness on talent attraction and retention in academics? How are universities, in general, overcoming that precariousness?
Finally, how can the federal government help reduce precariousness, or how can it increase talent attraction and retention?
:
Thank you for the question.
It's a complicated, complex issue that I think is going to require greater co-operation between the federal government and the provinces. Obviously, labour issues and labour law are a provincial jurisdiction, and the teaching component of education is a provincial jurisdiction.
Looking at the root causes of the increase in casualization of employment is particularly important. As I said earlier, this is a largely untapped resource. We have an enormous number of people who are highly qualified and trained to be researchers but who can't get a job that recognizes their research ability. I think this is like leaving a treasure buried in the ground. We simply can't afford to do that.
In other jurisdictions, the European Union has developed a fixed-term directive on contract work that has been applied in the university, college and post-secondary sector. That's been effective in providing some security for the long-term research that's often required.
Ultimately it's a funding issue too. One reason we've seen a growth in precarity is that institutions are squeezed in terms of overall funding. I think there's potential for renewed federal partnership with the provinces in providing adequate funding for institutions.
:
I will talk about funding now.
Grant amounts have not been changed in over two decades. In your pre-budget submission, you recommend increasing grant amounts, even doubling them, moving toward a 50:50 grants and loans model and implementing a granting program that would help develop open education resources.
How are students currently affected by the fact that grant and loan amounts have not been increased?
I would also like you to tell us a bit more about open education. As a former teacher, I am curious.
:
With regard to bursaries and grants, providing adequate funding is absolutely important, particularly for people in that critical post-doctoral position who are looking for post-doctoral appointments. One of the impacts is that bursaries and grants have not kept pace with the rate of inflation. In some cases the subsistence that is provided for our researchers is below the poverty line, and people graduate with enormous amounts of debt. That's also a factor: Do I throw my hat into the academic employment ring, where I may not get a full-time job and I may have to work for several years and have to pay off all this debt as well? Looking at the impact of debt on career choices is certainly important.
Ultimately, if we want to make the career attractive, we have to provide the conditions necessary for people to do their work. That's where people will go. I think Dr. Myers was kind of hinting at that. It's not just a money issue; it's also having the whole range of working conditions that are essential. Fundamental to that, if you're going to engage in a long-term research project, you need stability of employment. That's where many contract academic staff get stuck. They get stuck in the routine of just taking on teaching contracts, and the research falls by the wayside. When full-time positions do eventually come up, they're kind of left out of the mix, because they haven't been active in research for a number of years.
Particularly in that early career stage, finding some ability to help people to avoid that rut would be enormously useful.
:
Thank you, and thanks to the witnesses for being here.
I'm going to stay with Mr. Robinson to let him finish up on that theme, because, as he said, it was a complicated thing. From some of the reports that CAUT has done, the actual percentage of university budgets that relates to salaries has dropped steadily over the years. I'm imagining that's because they're spending more on other things, whether it's research or infrastructure.
Could you comment on that? You were just beginning to touch on that, getting back to concentrating on the education aspects that are so important.
I want to move to Dr. Myers. I'll stay on the same theme.
Dr. Myers, you were talking about it not being an entirely salary-driven process for attracting talent. Part of it is that brilliance attracts brilliance. I think that is something close to what you said.
I also want to make sure of something, because we were having trouble seeing the slides at this end of the room. When you were talking about Dr. Kendrick Smith, I thought I saw a picture of CHIME there.
:
Okay. Thanks very much. I just wanted to get that straight in my mind.
I'm going to move back to Mr. Robinson, if I have a minute or so.
Again, when I worked at the University of British Columbia, I saw the beginning of that erosion of full-time research faculty. They were teaching undergraduate courses like Biology 101, Chemistry 100 and that sort of thing. Now pretty much all of those first-year courses—or a lot of them—are taught by contract teachers who are fully qualified academically to do research but, as you said, are not.
I'm wondering, Mr. Robinson, if you could comment on the effect that has on the inspiration for young scientists who are going into first- or second-year university who I think would really benefit by being taught by researchers who are doing exciting stuff.
I'll switch gears and go to Dr. Myers about the Perimeter Institute.
I'm very intrigued about how that got started. A lot of times you talk about big tech companies, but they start as small tech companies. A lot of times it's the innovative start-ups that take on, at least in technology, some of the tech giants. They're people who are doing things a little bit differently.
It sounds very similar to your story, but I'd like to hear about how that got started.
:
The Perimeter Institute was really the brainchild of Mike Lazaridis. You may know him as the inventor of the BlackBerry. He built the first modern cellphone, this device that we're all dependent on now. He realized that what he had there, in a BlackBerry, was really dependent on blue-sky research from 100 years ago. He really saw the importance of investing in that.
That's really part of our DNA now. It's that long game that I talked about. We're looking for those transformative breakthroughs that are going to change the lives of our grandchildren's grandchildren, but as I was trying to illustrate, along the way there are all of these....
If you take brilliant people and apply them to tough problems, you get all these unexpected spinoffs. It may take the form of pictures of black holes. It may take the form of a new start-up using machine learning to optimize finance portfolios. There's a real investment that Mike made there, and a real vision he had, to carry us forward.
:
We're very fortunate in that I work with blackboards such as the one behind me. I don't have an experimental lab. It was very easy for me and my colleagues here to take our work home and interact via Zoom.
It did slow us down. We were successful, though, in recruiting at all levels. I must say that the place the pandemic hit hardest was in our master's program. Every year we have a class of about 20 to 25 master's students who come for a one-year course. It's largely an international cohort. Unfortunately, because of the pandemic, we were not able to actually bring them to Waterloo. That was very difficult for them.
We managed to do it online, but we made a special effort to bring the students here. We got them all here last September. It really added a lot of energy to the institute. It was really a turning point in opening up again the energy and the presence that they had here in the institute.
Well, I'll just close there. Those are my thoughts on the pandemic.
:
Thank you very much, Ms. Watts-Rynard.
Thank you, Mr. Collins.
I see we have two minutes left.
[Translation]
Mrs. Vignola, you have the floor for one minute.
[English]
Mr. Cannings, you will have one minute after that, to be fair.
Go ahead, Madame Vignola.
Mr. Myers, you said you had special strategies to attract talent and that it was not only a matter of salary, but also of quality of life and good working conditions. I would like you to elaborate on that. If we run out of time, I invite you to answer me in writing. That would be wonderful. Thank you in advance.
What could the federal government do to attract talent, both in Quebec and in the rest of Canada?
This question is for the three of you. Thank you so much.
:
Welcome to our witnesses. We are delighted that you can join us tonight on this study of top talent, research and innovation.
For this panel, we are very fortunate to have as an individual Dr. Kevin Smith, president and chief executive officer, University Health Network.
We welcome you. Since you represent the health sector, we would like to acknowledge all that you've done through the pandemic and your life-saving service.
From the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations, we have Christian Fotang, chair of the board of directors. Welcome.
From the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, we have Dr. Alejandro Adem, the president, and we have Dr. Danika Goosney, vice-president, research grants and scholarships directorate.
We welcome all of you. We're looking forward to your testimony. Each of you will have five minutes. At the four-and-a-half-minute mark, I will raise this card, which lets you know you have 30 seconds left.
We aim to be fair here, so with that, Dr. Smith, we'll begin with you. The floor is yours, and welcome.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you to the members of this distinguished committee.
First I'd like to commend the committee for focusing on how best to support research and innovation in Canada and to attract and retain top talent. This is an issue we are charged with daily at the University Health Network.
My name is Kevin Smith. I have the privilege of serving as president and CEO of UHN, Canada's largest and most prolific research and training hospital. UHN has recently been recognized as one of the top five hospitals in the world by Newsweek. I should note, with some pride, that we're the only hospital among the top 10 hospitals identified by that organization with a universally funded system, whereby all have equal access to outstanding care, care that is informed by and improved through research.
As you know, one of the greatest challenges facing hospitals is a shortage of providers. University Health Network is also Canada's only hospital that has embedded within it a health professional training school, known as the Michener Institute of Education.
Research should include pedagogical or educational research, an incredibly important part of the future of Canada's training programs. Such a model, in our opinion, offers a national opportunity for the development of new professions, including extender professions that might help meet the needs and incredible demands placed upon clinicians for the rapid delivery of clinical care in order to catch up from COVID, coupled with a growing and aging population.
Fully 80% of Canada's health research is undertaken by research hospitals in Canada. That's 80%. This is often missed by many, and is a very important fact for the committee. Of course, our university partners are essential to research and scholarship, but it is the clinical environment research hospitals, and especially those with major research programs and ecosystems, that are very much the engine of this machine.
At UHN, we're very proud and fortunate to have completed almost $500 million of research in the last year. That is mostly money that was spent on salaries of research staff, technicians, technologists, support staff, and of course the scientists themselves. This investment creates thousands of high-quality jobs and a high quality of work life.
Each day we work at retaining and attracting the very finest minds to research in clinical care. Because we are a leading organization, each and every day we see attempts made by other world-leading organizations to recruit away our very brightest and best. Thanks to the Government of Canada, we've been able to stand our ground for some time. We've been able to keep those who are in the greatest demand in Canada. We've been able to attract stars and we've been able to see the world's leading organizations come to Canada, looking to attract those stars as well.
However, COVID and significant investments by other nations have changed everything. We are increasingly struggling to do so, especially at a time when investigators are thinking about quality of work life and access to needed resources.
Presently, Canada spends approximately 1.5% of its total health care budget on health research. This is a very small amount when compared to leading economies of the world. If we wish to maintain our standing in a vibrant research ecosystem, we must consider additional investment. Remember that the limited investment truly pays off. The research sector employs 482,000 Canadians and contributes over $7.8 billion to Canada's GDP.
The current research landscape, using the tri-councils and the CFI, has served Canada well for many years. That said, numerous reports and suggestions have been put forward about how we might better structure the system.
I won't spend my limited time today talking to you about structure, as I believe the structure alone will not significantly advance Canada's competitiveness. Investment is truly what's needed. This investment, whether in infrastructure—both physical or cyber—direct operating grants for researchers, or targeted initiatives, stimulates researchers to ask the most important questions. Researchers are struggling since inflationary pressures in laboratories are increasing at approximately 10% per year, while the CIHR budget for training and investigator-initiated awards has not increased at all.
Canada has been a player on the global stage and must remain strong. This means ballparking our estimates in research investments against other leading research jurisdictions. Unfortunately, Canada has fallen behind. The CIHR budget is approximately 45 times lower than that of the National Institutes of Health in the United States.
That's a fourfold to fivefold per capita difference in investment in health research. That means keeping top talent is more at risk than ever.
Canada's science is world class. It’s affordable. It’s competitive. It directly benefits the lives of Canadians. It attracts industrial investment and highly qualified jobs.
Investing in Canadian research talent—
Good evening, honourable Chair, esteemed committee members and fellow witnesses. I'd like to begin my statement by acknowledging that I speak to you today from Amiskwaciwâskahikan, or Beaver Hills House, now called Edmonton, on Treaty 6 territory.
My name is Christian Fotang. I'm the chair of the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations and I'm also the vice-president of external affairs for the University of Alberta Students' Union.
CASA is a non-partisan, non-profit organization that represents over 275,000 students at colleges, polytechnics and universities from coast to coast to coast. Through a formal partnership with the Union étudiante du Québec, we are a trusted national student voice, and together we represent 365,000 students at all levels across Canada.
First I'd like to thank the committee for the recognition of the importance of student perspectives in federal research funding and innovation.
Innovation, according to the Science, Technology and Innovation Council, is more than research and development; it is transforming knowledge into products and services that Canadians and others in today's global marketplace need, want and will pay for.
As I pursue my biology degree at the University of Alberta, I'm no stranger to the importance of research and innovation. The state-of-the-art research facilities at the U of A have allowed me to use the theories and skills that I learned in the classroom and apply them in real-world practical research. This is thanks to the bursaries and grants available to students that made world-class research at a U15 institution accessible to a kid like me from single-parent household.
Many other researchers like me rely on grants to attend post-secondary education. Specifically, the Canada graduate scholarships provide government-funded research grants to graduate students who help keep Canada at the forefront of industry. Though I myself am not a graduate student, I have heard from graduate students how important this funding is. The tri-council agencies that distribute the Canada graduate scholarships provide over 3,000 graduates and post-doctoral students with $17,500 in grants each year to conduct research at dozens of institutions across Canada.
This funding is esteemed, but the reality is that with the cost of rent rising, groceries getting more expensive and the rising cost of post-secondary education in many provinces, $17,500 over 12 months is just not enough. Students continue to be concerned about how to afford their studies. This financial insecurity can make research opportunities inaccessible for many students. Instead of focusing on academic research and innovation, they are concerned primarily with trying to afford to stay in school. In fact, grants for these student researchers have represented a shrinking portion of the tri-council budget over the past several years.
Since 2015, the government has made significant reinvestments in tri-council budgets, allowing their overall funding to catch and even exceed previous cuts made to the program since 2010. However, funding for the graduate scholarships investments has not kept pace with other investments being provided to research granting agencies. At its peak, student scholarships represented 16.9% of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council funding. Before the 2019-20 award year, student scholarships had fallen to 13% of the SSHRC budget. This downward trend has also appeared in the other two agencies of the tri-council. NSERC's student scholarship funding has gone from its peak of 13.3% to 8.3%, and CIHR student scholarships have fallen from 6.3% to 5.5% of the council's budget over the same period.
CASA estimates that the accumulated gap in funding for student grants since 2011 is $120 million. This is to the detriment of student researchers, who rely on these grants to pay rent, buy groceries and get to and from school while conducting the research mentioned above. The targeted scholarships and fellowships for promising Black student researchers in budget 2022 are important steps in the right direction; however, these proposed investments still do not address the gaps in the Canada graduate scholarships program.
This research funding for students is a fundamental solution to this committee's study today on top talent in research and innovation. This is why CASA has called on the Government of Canada to increase funding for student scholarship programs by $120 million on a recurring basis, plus re-establishing the importance of student scholarships within the overall envelope of the tri-council.
In closing, as Canada continues to invest in innovation, it is important that Canada also invest in the student researchers tasked with solving science's greatest challenges and creating the technology that will advance Canada as a leader in research and innovation.
I look forward to answering your questions.
:
Good evening, Madam Chair and members of the committee. My name is Alejandro Adem. I am the president of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, commonly referred to as NSERC.
Thank you for this opportunity to appear before you for a second time. I am pleased to be joined today by Dr. Danika Goosney, NSERC’s vice-president for research grants and scholarships, with whom I will be sharing my time.
I wish to acknowledge that I am living and working on the traditional ancestral land of the Musqueam people.
[Translation]
Talent, from the perspective of a research funder, is the foundation that underpins the health, well-being and economic success of our country.
Researchers trained in the natural sciences and engineering power discovery, drive innovation and found companies that create well-paying jobs.
[English]
In order to address major challenges like climate change and to keep pace with technological advances in areas like AI and quantum, Canada must focus its efforts on training, attracting and retaining the best and the brightest.
As someone who studied in the United States and then built a career in Canada, I can attest to the fact that Canada’s strong research ecosystem is a real asset when it comes to attracting talent. However, as other countries double down on their investments in science and research, Canada must keep pace.
[Translation]
We must also remain true to our values, breaking down barriers to ensure that the next generation of talent is inclusive and reflective of the diversity of this country.
We must recognize the role of the research ecosystem when it comes to reconciliation and to creating meaningful, accessible opportunities for indigenous students.
[English]
As the current chair of the Canada research coordinating committee, I am pleased to share that we have been working hard to harmonize and streamline our approach to talent development among research funders.
I will now turn the floor over to my colleague Dr. Goosney to share more on the CRCC talent strategy, in addition to providing some reflections on how NSERC supports trainees and how we are tackling challenges within the research ecosystem.
Good evening, Madam Chair and members of the committee.
As a former research scientist and someone who benefited from the support offered to trainees by the Government of Canada, it’s an honour to contribute to this important study.
I wish to acknowledge that I am living and working on the traditional and unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe people.
[Translation]
The pool of talent supported by NSERC and the other granting councils plays a critically important role in powering research in Canada. Simply put, students and postdocs are the engine of the research enterprise.
Participation in research stimulates key growth mindsets essential for success in the labour market—critical thinking, curiosity, experimentation and teamwork, just to name a few.
[English]
NSERC supports these trainees and fellows in two ways: directly through scholarships and fellowships, and indirectly via grants to researchers who hire trainees.
NSERC discovery grant award-holders contribute 70% of their grant money to compensate students working on their research projects. This federal funding plays a critical role in supporting students and in the overall talent ecosystem. I would like to emphasize the importance of the award values of granting council scholarships and fellowships. The fact is that the award values offered by the three granting councils set the bar for student compensation provided by post-secondary institutions through research stipends and other funding sources. In a way, the value of awards offered by the granting councils dictates compensation for trainees and fellows across the country.
It is also a fact that the value of these awards has not changed substantially in a generation. For example, NSERC’s doctoral award has remained almost constant at $21,000 per year since 2004. Considering a mean inflation rate during this period of 1.85%, this means the effective award value has dropped by 42%. This poses a real challenge to students when it comes to covering their basic costs of living.
Furthermore, we know that disadvantaged students are more likely to accumulate debt during their undergraduate degree. These same students may find it challenging to continue on to the master's and Ph.D.-level programs if financial supports are not considered viable. The same situation holds true when it comes to attracting talented international students. However, at the present time, eligibility restrictions also play a role.
[Translation]
We are conscious of these issues.
We are working with our fellow granting agencies to find appropriate solutions.
In the immediate term, we are very pleased with new funding announced in budget 2022 to provide increased support for Black student researchers.
We are also carrying out an important evaluation of talent-support programs to add to the evidence base that exists.
[English]
As Prof. Adem mentioned, under the direction of the Canadian Research Coordinating Committee, we are developing a tri-agency talent strategy—
:
Thank you. I apologize for my poor time planning.
At the end of the day, as my colleagues have talked about, it really is additional investment, whether that's direct investment, investment through taxation credits or investment through creating donation opportunities for securities, as a number of our philanthropic donors have been lobbying for.
As all my colleagues have stated tonight, it really is about getting more of those resources to more researchers to answer good questions and keep them in Canada, particularly as we see more attempts to recruit our very best students and recruit away our very best faculty members.
:
I would say it is most countries.
When I look to those in the United States, the United Kingdom and all parts of the European Union, I see that all advanced economies recognize that Canada provides outstanding research training and has outstanding students. As a result, we're seeing very high-quality publications, citations and outputs in areas such as patents.
The area where we most suffer is the United States. In addition to compensation issues, there are start-up issues. As our chair knows, with organizations like the CFI, an essential ingredient for us to retain young, mid-career and even later-career investigators is having the infrastructure to ensure that they have the resources required. It's not only for the students, but also for the laboratory to be truly cutting edge.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I want to begin by thanking the witnesses who are joining us today for this important study.
I know we will stop hearing from witnesses very soon, but I would like to point out an important element concerning mental health. We are talking about keeping our students in the centres. We know that money is an important issue, but I would like to talk to you about mental health.
I will go to Mr. Fotang.
In 2018, two years before COVID‑19, the Quebec Student Union carried out a large study with 24,000 university students titled “What's Behind the Mask”. That study showed that 58% of university students were experiencing a high level of psychological distress.
Do you think the contracts of that study with 24,000 students apply to students from across Canada?
Do you have any comparable data?
[English]
I will switch to Dr. Goosney and Dr. Smith on the same issue.
[Translation]
A survey carried out in February 2020, obtained by La Presse, reports that 25% of medical externs and researchers even thought about ending their lives during their education. That's one student in four. I thought that was an alarming statistic, given that the students of today are our doctors and researchers of tomorrow.
As president of the University Health Network, what do you think about the situation and what do you know about it?
:
Thank you very much for the very important question.
It is among the top issues that we're working on, both with learners as well as faculty members. Our nursing colleagues in particular have identified burnout and stress as a particularly risky issue. In academic nursing, of course, we're dramatically short. At the University Health Network at the moment, we have an opportunity for 600 nursing hires. They just simply aren't available.
In addition, we're seeing more people within the health professions and the research professions advising their children not to undertake studies in these domains, and I think that's the most concerning aspect of all. Their concerns have been particularly exacerbated through COVID.
I would say that all of the universities and academic hospitals have programs in place to support the psychological well-being of learners and faculty members, but as we're learning, the system has been overwhelmed, so we have a great backlog—not only, as we hear in the media, in areas like surgery, but also in mental health and the importance of mental health. Frankly, an investment of research dollars into the mental health of the provider community and the research community would also be a very welcome initiative.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I will first turn to Mr. Smith.
Mr. Smith, I really admire all your accolades and your decision to stay and work here in Canada.
That can't be a very easy decision to make. What is keeping you here in Canada? You have surely received some pretty attractive offers from abroad. How are you keeping yourself here and how can we ensure that exceptionally talented individuals like you stay in Canada and don't go to the United Kingdom, to European Union countries or to the United States, including the Silicon Valley, to which we are losing many of our talented computer scientists.
What can we do to keep others like we managed to keep you here?
:
You're much too generous about my limited contributions, but thank you. I'm a Canadian and I want to stay in Canada. I want to build Canada. I want to contribute to Canada having the highest quality of life in the world. I think we have all of those things in front of us, and there are opportunities to which we can contribute.
I made that choice many years ago. One of the advantages we have as visiting professors, going elsewhere and being able to experience those environments, is that we also learn that one can get things done in an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary way in very unique ways in Canada. The collaborations we enjoy here are truly remarkable. That said, I've lived through times when we were more investment-rich than we have been of late. As we look to the future, it will be more difficult, and we're seeing new generations of young Canadians who are being encouraged to look at the quality of life, quality of work life and access to the tools that will make them successful. However, I believe that if we can offer those, we'll continue to keep Canadians in Canada.
In addition, just keeping Canadians in Canada isn't good enough: We have to recruit the brightest and the best. We're fortunate to do so at UHN. I can tell you that this week I was fortunate enough to interview colleagues from places like Memorial Sloan Kettering and MD Anderson in the United States, from the Karolinska in Sweden and from leading academic institutions in London. I'm sure we won't get every one of those landed, but we'll land a number, because it remains an attractive place to be.
However, for us to continue to be successful and keep the brightest and the best, we need to be competitive in funding, be it for students, faculty members, infrastructure or direct grant support.
Madame, you're stuck with me for the rest of my career. I'm happy to be here, and fortunate.
:
That's great. We are really happy about that. Thank you.
My next question is for the three of you. You can take turns answering. Given the short amount of time I have left, if you don't have enough time to answer, you can send me your answer in writing. I'm sorry that we have so little time.
We talked about mental health, and I know very well how difficult it is for a student to focus with an empty stomach or when they don't know whether they will be able to pay their rent or have to negotiate it.
Requests are often made to double grants, as Mr. Fotang suggested earlier, and to increase funding. Could that ultimately impact our students' mental health quality?
I'm going to stick with this line. I must say that I was just flabbergasted when I found out a few months ago that the values of these grants and scholarships that support our graduate students—and not just our graduate students, but our best graduate students, the ones who actually qualify for these grants and scholarships—hadn't changed since 2003. I think I was meeting with CASA or perhaps another group.
How does this happen? It's not just that the cost of living has gone up since then; tuition has skyrocketed since then. Now we have students trying to live on $17,000 or $20,000 a year, well below the poverty line and well below minimum wage. I was a grad student, and it was a full-time job.
I don't know.... I guess I'll ask you, Dr. Goosney. Why has it not come to the attention of anyone at the tri-council that these students are suffering? As to whether it's hard on their mental health, I know it's hard on them just to get enough money for groceries. Now they have to work part time or go into debt. Why did this happen? How can we fix it as soon as possible?
:
Thank you so much for your question. This certainly has come to our attention during our consultations for our strategic plan, “NSERC 2030”.
One of the key themes we heard about was an increase for the value and duration of these awards. Many folks commented on the fact that the awards hadn't been increased in the time frame you've mentioned. The recommendation was to increase a greater number, a greater value and a greater duration of these awards. I would say that the reason this situation hasn't been redressed over time is that there has been a constant re-evaluation of the balance between the number of awards we offer and their monetary value. It's a zero-sum game.
In 2015, we did increase the value of the post-doctoral awards from $40,000 to $45,000. Last year, we did increase our portion of the undergraduate student research award from $4,500 to $6,000. We've also increased the duration of the awards to three years instead of two years. Following budget 2019, we did receive 600 new Canada graduate scholarships. We've also invested in paid parental leave by increasing that leave for students from six months to 12 months, which was an investment.
That said, we are aware that with regard to our NSERC post-graduate scholarships and the other tri-council funding, students certainly are facing increasing financial hardship and that the rising cost of living does present a significant barrier to pursuing the graduate-level scholarships. We are committed to working very closely with the two other federal granting councils and with the research community to figure out ways in which we can better support these trainees.
Thank you for your question.
:
Thank you, Madame Chair, and to all the presenters tonight.
Mr. Fotang, I think you had said that you didn't read the Canadian Alliance of Student Associations report called “Investing in Innovators”. I wonder if you could still answer a question.
They had highlighted as two of their recommendations to “Enhance experiential learning opportunities” and “Create opportunities for the international exchange of ideas”.
How do you think the situation has potentially changed between 2017, when the report was written, and now in 2022?
:
The CRCC talent strategy is based in terms of empowering the students, so it's a student-centred, data-driven and evidence-informed strategy. We have it set around pillars of equity, diversity, inclusion, indigenous reconciliation, internationalization and student mobility, better harmonization across the tri-agency and preparing students for alternate career paths outside of and beyond academia.
With that said, that overarching framework, I think, remains relevant through the course of the pandemic and going forward.
That said, themes around embracing networking and enhancing interactions virtually are coming into play, along with better support to students, certainly. Stipend increases are a relevant theme that's coming through, even more because of the impact of the pandemic, recognizing of course that matters of equity, diversity and inclusion within our academic halls, particularly in the students, may have been exacerbated. We know, in fact, it has been exacerbated because of the pandemic.
While these themes were captured at the beginning, they've been made more prominent throughout the course of the pandemic.
Thank you very much for your question.
:
Thank you for the question. It's always great to see another U of Alberta alumnus.
In terms of what can be done to support undergraduate students, as I mentioned before, the doubling of the Canada student grant is huge and supports the average rate of tuition for domestic students, which right now is at about $6,180. Doubling the grant from $3,000 to $6,000 was immense. I've heard stories from our students that a family member who was the primary supporter had passed away and that the grant was the difference between being able to stay in school and continue learning versus having to drop out, so that's one way.
We've had some really great conversations here about the importance of funding and supporting student mental health, and I'd be happy to follow up with the committee on some of those strategies.
The other thing is looking at supports for indigenous learners. Some of the successes we've seen here at the U of A are due to having transition-year programs for indigenous students. When they move to the city, it can be a huge process, and having funding that is able to support them and integrate them into the post-secondary experience is important.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Mr. Fotang, I will put a question to you quickly. You will likely have to answer it in writing, and I am sorry for that. I would like to get your opinion on two topics. When it appeared before the committee, the Quebec Student Union suggested that student representation be added to the boards of the federal granting councils. I would like to get your opinion on that suggestion.
The union also suggested that the number of “super scholarships” be reduced, but that the number of regular scholarships be increased to help more students. I would also like to get your opinion on that.
Thank you, respected witnesses, for joining us today. Your contribution is precious.
I'd like to thank all our witnesses. You have been so gracious with your time, your effort, and your expertise. We know all of you and those that you serve have been impacted by COVID-19 and we want to recognize your service, so thank you to you all. We hope you've had a good experience and we hope you'll continue to engage with this committee.
We'll say good night, and thank you.
The meeting is suspended.
[Proceedings continue in camera]