Maybe I'll answer your first question first.
It's not accurate to say that no private career college students receive millennium scholarships. Millennium scholarships are set up for students who are enrolled in at least a two-year program; actually it's 90 weeks in duration. There are a minority of private career college programs that are more than that. I know that at my school we've had a number of students who have received millennium scholarships over the years, but they would be in the minority, not the majority. This points out the deficiencies for students who don't receive them, especially when their neighbour in the class or school is receiving a significant stipend for attending school. So some students do receive them, but they are in the minority.
Your second question is a great one. Private career colleges receive no subsidies from government to operate. I should clarify that by saying that student aid is a loan that's made to students, and there are also a number of federal and provincial programs that support students. Basically, Workers' Compensation and Service Canada will subsidize the education of students, but these involve grants in kind to the student, not to the individual institutions. So we operate purely on the basis of our own revenue.