Good afternoon. Thank you for having me here today.
My name is Sarah Laframboise, and I am a Ph.D. student studying biochemistry at the University of Ottawa. I'm also executive director of Support Our Science, which is a grassroots organization unified under the mission of increasing funding for graduate students and post-docs in Canada.
I am honoured to be here today and would like to thank this committee for its work in honour of science and research. I had the pleasure of speaking to you on your top talent study almost exactly a year ago. I am thankful to the committee for including our calls for graduate students and post-docs in that report.
It is frustrating, however, that in the year since my appearance there has been no action by our government to solve these problems. During this time, we've had 7,000 scientists and 40 scientific associations sign an open letter. We've had 3,500 signatures on a petition that MP Richard Cannings delivered to the House of Commons. We rallied on Parliament Hill in August. We spoke to MPs, ministers, media and the public about our cause and sent over 2,000 emails to our MPs, but this wasn't enough. Budget 2023 contained no new funding for graduate students and post-docs.
Last week, nearly 10,000 graduate students, post-docs, faculty and supporters walked out of 46 different institutions across Canada. Today, I brought some from the Ottawa crew with me. I'll ask them to stand for a moment.
They should all be doing their research right now. They should be in their labs. I should be in my labs, but we all came here today to show you how critical this is to our community.
Many of these students have helped me launch a national survey investigating graduate students' finances, which painted a bleak but very clear picture of the financial realities of being a graduate student in Canada.
Eighty-six per cent of graduate students have experienced stress and anxiety about their finances. Nearly 40% of students have difficulty paying for necessities like rent and food, and 31% have considered leaving their schooling due to financial concerns. For a country that boasts about our innovation, this is unacceptable.
While other young adults are starting families and investing in their futures, graduate students and post-docs are struggling to just get by.
You will hear many times in these meetings that the scholarships for graduate students and post-docs have not changed in 20 years, but what exactly does this mean for Canada?
This means that every day we are losing our highly trained scientists to the United States and Europe where they don't have to live in poverty and will make two to three times more money than they would here in Canada. This means that our businesses are losing highly skilled workers. This means that every day, we are failing Canadian innovation by defining who can take on the financial challenges of higher education and excluding those who can't. This is a lost potential on a personal level and a national level.
Eleven years ago, I decided to pursue a career in science. As a first-generation student, I self funded my education and took on $100,000 in student debt to be where I am today. When my partner and I hit difficult times early on in my master's degree, I nearly had to drop out of my program when I couldn't make my tuition payments.
I'm 28 years old this year, and I can't buy a home because I don't have an income in the eyes of a bank. I have often worked two to three jobs at a time to subsidize my income. I have no savings, and I rely on my partner's income for stability. I look around, and my peers and family think I'm the smart one, but in reality, I feel like the one left behind.
I am just one example. There are thousands more with their own stories of struggle, inequality and crippling debt. Some have gone as far as living in vans and doing clinical trials just to make ends meet.
Every year that the government doesn't invest in graduate students and post-docs, we are telling the brightest minds in our country that they don't matter, that they don't belong in Canada.
I would like to end my remarks with some clear and strategic recommendations. First, we ask that scholarships and fellowships be increased by 50% to match inflation over the last 20 years, and index these awards to prevent this from happening again in the future. These scholarships set a benchmark for how much we should award the best scholars in Canada.
Second, we ask for a 50% increase in the number of graduate student scholarships and to double the number of post-doc fellowships to allow for more to benefit from these awards directly.
Finally, we call on the government to implement the Bouchard report and increase funding to the tri-councils by 10% per year for the next five years in order to increase grant funding. This will allow increases to graduate student and post-doc pay through their supervisors, leaving a lasting impact on the whole community.
Thank you for your time. I look forward to answering questions.