
This week, something is unsettling about passing an NSCC campus. The structures have the same appearance. The Waterfront Campus’s signs still have that recognizable institutional blue glow. However, the atmosphere has changed on the inside. People are not as talkative. Doors remain closed for a bit longer. You could practically hear the inbox notifications falling like tiny, heavy stones throughout the province on Wednesday when acting president Anna Burke’s letter was distributed to employees.
On paper, the figures are clear. Ninety-one positions were lost. There were 45 real layoffs—a hole of fifteen million dollars. Management is the majority of those impacted. Although the unionized cuts—26 in professional support and 15 in operational support—are dispersed more widely across campuses from Sydney to Yarmouth, confidential employees are concentrated around the central office in Dartmouth. It’s the kind of breakdown that falls flat on the individuals involved and fits neatly into a press release.
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Institution | Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) |
| Headquarters | Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia |
| Acting President | Anna Burke |
| Total Positions Eliminated | 91 |
| Confirmed Layoffs | 45 |
| Budget Shortfall | $15 million |
| Provincial Operating Grant Cut | $9.4 million |
| Decline in International Students | From roughly 1,200 to 500 |
| Faculty Roles Affected | None |
| Unions Involved | NSGEU and Atlantic Academic Union |
| Announcement Date | May 6, 2026 |
| Campuses | Five regional campuses across Nova Scotia |
The texture of it is what the spreadsheet misses. advisors for students who were familiar with their children. Librarians who, in ways no one could quite measure, kept the place together. technicians who made repairs before anyone realized they were damaged. One statement made by Neil Cody, the head of the Atlantic Academic Union, stuck with me: you can’t take $15.8 million out of an organization and act as though students won’t notice. Despite the leadership’s preference for gentler wording, that’s just math.
The official position is that no faculty positions were impacted, and that is, in a limited sense, accurate. The term “frontline delivery” is frequently used by the college, as though it makes a clear distinction between teaching and everything else. The line is thinner than that, though, as anyone who has visited a community college will attest. A young person from Cape Breton actually completes a welding program rather than quitting in November, thanks in part to the advisors and counselors. Even if the walls remain upright, the building will lean if sufficient scaffolding is cut.
Here, two forces collided, and it’s important to be truthful about both. Due to federal caps and a general decline in Canada’s appeal as a study destination, the number of international students enrolled fell precipitously from approximately 1,200 to 500. $5.5 million was removed from the books just from that. The operating grant was then reduced by an additional $9.4 million by the province. It’s difficult to dispute NSGEU President Sandra Mullen’s assessment that the provincial decision was shortsighted, particularly in light of the government’s continued emphasis on skilled trades as the province’s economic future.
Minister Nolan Young told reporters on Thursday that the province is still investing, that frontline delivery is intact, and that his thoughts are with the workers. He declined to comment on whether there would be another cut the following year. People at the college took notice of that non-answer, which is a kind of answer in and of itself.
A pattern is emerging throughout the area. In March, Acadia made staff reductions. After losing 100 positions the previous year, Cape Breton University eliminated 50 positions in April. The same shock is being quietly absorbed by universities and colleges throughout Atlantic Canada, albeit at slightly different rates. The NSCC version is merely the most recent and most likely not the final.
There’s a chance, perhaps even a good chance, that the college will stabilize. There is a version of this story where Burke and Baillie’s description of a leaner, more focused organization is accurate. However, as you watch it play out, hear the union statements, and read the cautious corporate language regarding “transition supports,” you get the impression that Nova Scotia’s treatment of the organizations that train its employees has changed. It’s worthwhile to wait to see if that shift is fixed or just normalized.
