Truro News

More and more, ‘average Canadian’ is anything but

- The caNadiaN Press

OTTaWa

Increasing­ly, the face of the average Canadian is anything but average.

There was plenty of diversity on display in Wednesday’s deposit of Statistics Canada census data, including 250 different ethnic origins across the country, and hints of more to come: visible minorities could comprise fully one-third of Canadians by 2036 as immigratio­n drives population growth not just in the cities, but across the country.

The release marks just the latest — and second-to-last — in a year-long series of statistica­l snapshots of the Canadian condition, one that also heralded the return of data from the much-maligned long-form census for the first time in a decade.

The census portrait began with a population boom out West and a commensura­te spike in the number of households. Wednesday’s release showed a similar trend for two groups: the largest overall increase in the Indigenous population was in western Canada over the last decade, while the share of recent immigrants to the Prairies more than doubled over the last 15 years.

“Immigrants are diffusing across the country,” said Michael Haan, a sociology professor at Western University in London, Ont.

‘“What it’s forcing us to do, collective­ly, is think about our entire nation as being composed of immigrants, rather than just major cities.”

Nearly half of major metropolit­an areas are comprised of visible minorities, noticeably Toronto and Vancouver, said Doug Norris, chief demographe­r at Environics Analytics. But the figures are also on the rise in places like Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg, and Calgary, he added.

“Places that people didn’t think were culturally diverse are becoming now culturally diverse.”

Statistics Canada has been saying through the census that Canada is becoming more diverse with the latest data dump showing that more immigrants are arriving from Africa than ever before, placing ahead of Europe for the first time.

“The challenge is to make sure that they fully integrate into Canadian society. So there are challenges coming with this diversity as well,” said Jean-Pierre Corbet, assistant director of the social and aboriginal division at Statistics Canada.

Statistics Canada has already documented a historical­ly high number of seniors — a demographi­c soon to see everincrea­sing numbers of Indigenous people — as well as children staying at home longer, more generation­s than ever living under Canadian roofs, a moderate increase in income levels and the changing face of the working poor.

Wednesday’s revelation­s included word that younger Canadians are opting less for home ownership, choosing instead the rental route as housing prices climb ever higher.

Aboriginal children face a poverty rate of just over 30 per cent, compared to 17 per cent in the wider population, the census found.

And more than 7.6 million Canadians identify as a visible minority, representi­ng 22.3 per cent, just over one-fifth of the national population. That’s an almost five-fold increase from 1981, when visible minorities made up 4.7 per cent of the population.

“What comes through is diversity across all characteri­stics,” said Norris, who spent three decades at Statistics Canada.

Diversity is no stranger to the Cree Nation of Chisasibi.

According to the census, the small community on the eastern coast of James Bay has residents whose ethnic origins include the Caribbean, South America and Africa. The economic developmen­t officer for the band administra­tion is from Sri Lanka, Highlights

Statistics Canada has released the latest findings from the 2016 census, this time focusing on Indigenous Peoples, immigratio­n and housing.

Some selected highlights:

• The census counted 1.67 million Indigenous people in Canada in 2016, accounting for 4.9 per cent of the total population — up from 3.8 per cent in 2006 for a growth rate of 42.5 per cent over the last 10 years, four times the rate of the non-Indigenous population.

• The average age of the Indigenous population was 32.1 years, nearly a decade younger than the non-Indigenous population at 40.9 years. The census counted 145,645 children aged 0-4, 8.7 per cent of Aboriginal people in Canada.

• One in five Indigenous people in Canada is living in a dwelling that needs “major repairs,” while one in 10 lives in a household that has a space shortfall of at least one bedroom.

• However, 7.3 per cent of Indigenous people in Canada are 65 or older, compared with 4.8 per cent in 2006 — and that proportion could double by the year 2036.

• The census counted 145,645 Indigenous children aged 0-4 in 2016.

• The number of people who identified as First Nations reached 979,230 last year, up 39.3 per cent over 2006, while the Metis population grew by 51.2 per cent over the same period to 587,545 people. The census recorded 65,025 Inuit, 29.1 per cent higher than in 2006.

• Winnipeg (92,810), Edmonton (76,205), Vancouver (61,460) and Toronto (46,315) reported the largest Indigenous population­s, while the highest proportion of Aboriginal people were in Thunder Bay (12.7 per cent), Winnipeg (12.2 per cent) and Saskatoon (10.9 per cent).

• In 2016, 7.5 million people — about 21.9 per cent of the total population — reported being foreign-born individual­s who immigrated to Canada. In 1921, the census reported that proportion at 22.3 per cent, the highest since Confederat­ion. Statistics Canada projects that proportion could reach between 25 and 30 per cent by 2036.

• The census counted 1,212,075 new immigrants who permanentl­y settled in Canada between 2011 and 2016, 3.5 per cent of the total population last year.

• 60 per cent entered under the economic category, 26.8 per cent to join family already in Canada and 11.6 per cent as refugees. During the first four months of 2016, refugees accounted for one-quarter of all immigrants admitted to Canada, thanks to an influx of refugees from Syria.

• Asia, including the Middle East, remains the largest source of recent immigrants to Canada at 61.8 per cent, followed by Africa at 13.4 per cent. Europe — once dominant in this category at 61.6 per cent in 1971 — ranked third at 11.6 per cent. and has been in the community for almost a decade.

The community welcomes them all, but finding housing is becoming ever more difficult.

Chief David Bobbish said there is a need for 400 more homes in the community to ease overcrowdi­ng. Government spending only helps build about six houses a year, Bobbish added, leaving many families packed into too-small homes - a common plight across Indigenous communitie­s in Canada.

“You don’t have any choice but to live in a house with other people,” he said. “Even evictions are difficult. You cannot evict people if they have nowhere to go.”

In Chisasibi, the community is looking for new ways to build homes and promote private ownership - efforts that may not get caught in the latest tranche of statistics.

Other communitie­s, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike, are looking for ways to make it easier for people to afford a roof over their head. Bobbish says addressing an acute housing shortage in his community could have wider ramificati­ons.

“There are houses that have 10 or 15 people living under one roof. This is what creates a lot of social issues.”

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