How Vancouver Island University's Financial Stability Strengthened Its City

Vancouver Island University has returned to financial health, with its Board of Governors approving a $5.3 million surplus for 2025-26 and a projected $1 million surplus for 2026-27. VIU enrolls 12,644 students and serves as a primary talent pipeline for Nanaimo employers across healthcare, manufacturing, and technology. Its applied research partnerships attract national funding and recognition. Financial stability positions VIU to remain a full partner in Nanaimo's long-term economic development. Vancouver Island University has been part of Nanaimo's fabric for nearly a century. It has trained the nurses, tradespeople, engineers, and entrepreneurs who helped build the region's workforce. For a mid-sized city built on diverse business and industry, it is one of the anchors that makes everything else possible. Which is why the news about VIU's return to financial stability matters more than most people realize. "VIU is no longer playing defense," said Dr. Dennis Johnson, VIU's Interim President and Vice-Chancellor. "We're investing in what comes next, for our students, our region, and the long-term health of this institution." After years of managing international enrollment volatility, rising operating costs, and deferred maintenance pressures, VIU enacted a deficit mitigation plan that required reducing its workforce by more than 200 positions. It was a difficult period for the university and for the community that depends on it. But it worked. On May 28, VIU's Board of Governors approved a 2026-27 budget projecting a $1 million surplus, following a $5.3 million surplus in 2025-26. Two consecutive years of surplus after years in the red marks a pivotal turning point in the institution's future. Universities are easy to take for granted. But if they begin to struggle, the effects ripple outwards into the communities that depend upon it. Fewer research partnerships, constrained program offerings, and reduced capacity to attract talent and investment compounds over time, chipping away at a region's strength. With 12,644 students enrolled as of May 2025, VIU feeds directly into the regional workforce through co-ops, work-integrated learning, internships, and permanent employment after graduation. Many choose to stay in Nanaimo, contributing skills, entrepreneurship, and spending power to the local economy. On average, a VIU bachelor's degree graduate earns $574,000 more over their working life than someone who entered the workforce with only a high school diploma. Multiply that across thousands of graduates who remain in the region and the compounding effect on Nanaimo's economic base and employee skillset becomes clear. Employers across key sectors, from manufacturing and technology to healthcare and professional services, depend on that pipeline. Long-term economic resilience depends on it too.
