CASFAA membership grew from 49 in 1985 to 136 in in 2000, and by 2004 it had increased to 205. In the twenty-five years 1981 to 2005, annual CASFAA Conferences took place at Universities in every Canadian province, providing members opportunities for both professional development and discussion of CSL Program issues with Federal representatives. CASFAA Presidents originated from universities, colleges and technical institutions across the country. In addition to representing the interests of financial aid administrators and students at the federal level at annual meetings of CSL Program personnel (like the National Advisory Group on Student Financial Assistance - NAGSFA), CASFAA Executives submitted formal reports and made presentations to many federal ministries and national task forces.
As early as April 1980, before CASFAA became a separate CACUSS division, a comprehensive submission was made to the Federal Provincial Task Force on Student Assistance - The Role of the Federal Government in the Financing of Post-Secondary Students. Among the many other submissions over the twenty-five years: Proposal for a Part-time Student Loan Program (1984); Federal Work Study: A Proposal (1984); Letter to the Honourable David Crombie, Secretary of State, on Work Study, Contingency Repayment & Loan Remission (1986); Student Financial Aid in Canada: A Position Paper (1987); Communications with Respect to the Canada Student Loan Program: A Position Paper (1992); Response to the Cook-Bennett Report (1992); Submission to the Standing Committee on Human Resources Development on the CSL Program(1994); Brief to the Senate Sub-Committee on Post-Secondary Education (1996); Submission to the House Standing Committee on Finance/Pre-Budget Consultations (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002); Recommendation to the Honourable Paul Martin, Minister of Finance, on the Treatment of Scholarships & Bursaries under the Income Tax Act (2000); Submission to the Standing Committee on Human Resources Development on CSL Program Direct Loan Implementation Issues (2001); CSL Debt Reduction in Repayment Proposal (2001); Submission to the Government Caucus on Post-Secondary Research (2003). A number of the major submissions were provided in both English and French.
CASFAA Executive members took part in many consultations with senior federal government officials and politicians, as well as with organizations such as the Canadian Millennium Scholarship Foundation and CSL Service Providers such as the National Student Loan Centre and its Edulinx Service Advisory Group. Examples: Meeting with the Honourable Serge Joyal, Secretary of State (1984); Meeting with James MacLaren, Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary of State (1985); Meeting with the Canadian Bankers Association (1985); National Forum on Post-Secondary Education (1987); Presentation to the House of Commons Standing Committee on the Secretary of State (1987); Meeting with the Honourable David Crombie, Secretary of State, and Jean Charest, Minister of State for Youth (1987); Roundtable Meetings with the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada on Student Financial Assistance (1996); Meeting with the Chair of the Financial Aid Working Group (FAWG) and Human Resources Development Canada (1997); Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation Think Tank on the Meaning of ‘Exceptional Merit’ in the Canadian Context (1999); Student Debt/Financial Need Think Tank, Association of Canadian Community Colleges (2000); Consultation on Financial Counselling between CASFAA and the Canadian Millennium Scholarship Foundation (2002); Meeting with the Honourable Paul Bonwick, MP (2004).
On September 15, 2000, CASFAA co-sponsored a national conference In Calgary ‘Student Support Policy 2000-2010’ with the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation. CASFAA’s theme presentation was “Student Financial Aid in Canada: A Discussion of Principles”. Among the participants in this event: Prime Minister Jean Chretien and several federal cabinet ministers, as well as the Millennium Foundation President and Bell Canada Board Chair Jean Monty.
In the context of CACUSS re-evaluating its organization, CASFAA's Executive carried out an in-depth review of its divisional status in relation to the role it had established at the national level. In 2001, CASFAA chose to become a standalone non-profit organization outside of CACUSS. New Constitution & Bylaws were developed and approved by the CASFAA membership. An application was made in 2002 to Industry Canada's Corporations Canada for incorporation of the CASFAA name, and it was granted in 2003. Thus, a new era began with CASFAA operating on its own, and continuing to meet the key objectives of membership professional development and input to government student assistance programs.