![Ontario student racked up thousands of dollars in debt due to unexplained OSAP delay](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6669971.1669847190!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/denise-daley.jpg)
Ontario student racked up thousands of dollars in debt due to unexplained OSAP delay
CBC
Denise Daley says she and her family have been eating little but noodles due to a delay of more than three months in her Ontario student assistance payments.
Without the $36,000 she needs for tuition, supplies and living expenses, the widowed mother of two has been forced her to rack up late bills, miss rent payments and wreck her credit rating by going thousands of dollars into debt — all because of a problem she says the province wouldn't acknowledge or explain to her.
"Every time I tried to do something, I'd just get shut down," Daley told CBC Toronto.
The second-year student at Toronto's Kikkawa College said she called the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP) at least once a day, never getting through before being disconnected. Daley's financial aid office, which she kept in frequent contact with, couldn't get more information.
"It was really defeating and depressing and awful," said Daley, who finally received the money in late November, more than three months after her school year began.
The province has told CBC News that OSAP delays affect only "a very small number" of the nearly quarter of a million post-secondary students who receive the payments. But Daley said three other students in her class alone were in the same boat until very recently. And the NDP's Colleges and Universities critic, Laura Mae Lindo, said she is hearing about others across the province.
"The big thing that we're hearing right now is that the wait times for OSAP to be decided have shifted from eight to 10 weeks to nearly four months," the MPP for Kitchener Centre told CBC Toronto.
"And the government has just sort of said, 'Oh, now we just do this in 16 weeks,' but a four-month wait to receive your OSAP payment is a huge wait.... It's actually had some people decide to defer their entrance into the university. So that's a huge problem," Lindo added.
"A lot of students are just asking for transparency," she said. At the moment, too many students across the province are finding themselves in this situation and might have made different choices with work or courses if they knew the situation would be like this in advance, Lindo told CBC News.
She said acknowledging there is a problem in the system is essential, but it's something that's not happening right now and it's a source of frustration for many students.
Kara Wheeler, who is in her third year studying social work at Wilfrid Laurier University's campus in Brantford, is one of them.
Wheeler applied for OSAP in mid-July. The OSAP portal, which indicated her estimated approval date, "kept changing and changing," she said. At one point, the site estimated she'd get her approval in November, four months after she applied.
The delay, which had already forced her make a late payment on her rent, began to worry her in the classroom.
"I'm there for 12 hours and I'm thinking, how am I going to eat?" Wheeler said.