Toronto Star

Atlantic Canada fading to grey

Aging population leaves schools with too much space and not enough kids

- BRETT BUNDALE THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX — Maitland District Elementary once bustled with activity.

Today, the students are gone, the northern Nova Scotia school a symbol of the relentless exodus from Atlantic Canada that was made plain again Wednesday by the latest census numbers from Statistics Canada.

The red brick school, with its cheery classrooms and gleaming halls, was built at the height of the baby boom and filled with students and hope.

Decades later, the school’s enrolment had dwindled to 20 students, its classrooms nearly empty and hallways deserted. The school board put multiple grades in one class and put off badly needed maintenanc­e.

In 2015, Maitland District was shuttered altogether, the few kids left in the village bused to other schools.

“We don’t have the students to fill all our schools,” said Trudy Thompson, chairperso­n of the Chignecto Central Regional School Board. “Our senior population is growing by leaps and bounds. We just don’t have the kids.”

Rural classrooms across Atlantic Canada have been gutted by a demographi­c squeeze of low birth rates, youth out-migration and an aging population, leaving schools with an oversupply of space and shortage of kids. And it’s only going to get worse. “From 2011 to 2016, the Atlantic provinces saw the biggest decline in the proportion of people aged 15 to 64, and in general, the largest increase in the proportion of seniors,” Statistics Canada reported as it released the latest tranche of data from last year’s census.

“In 2016, almost one in five people in the Atlantic provinces was 65 years of age and older — the highest proportion in the country.” That proportion was just 12.3 per cent in Alberta, which was a bustling, job-heavy magnet for struggling young workers prior to the collapse of oil prices in 2015.

That gap is the largest since Confederat­ion, the agency said, and “if current trends hold, this difference between the provinces with the highest and lowest proportion­s of seniors could reach almost 15 percentage points by 2031.”

The phenomenon of Atlantic Canada’s missing children is the product of a multitude of factors, from declin- ing religiosit­y to the death of family farms.

“As the population gets older, there are fewer women of child-bearing age and a lower birth rate,” said Eddy Ng, a professor at Dalhousie University’s Rowe School of Business in Halifax.

“There is also a shift in societal values,” he said. “As we become more secular, we tend not to have as many children.”

Disappeari­ng family farms and shrinking resource sectors have also curbed the number of children in a household.

“Children in the past have been contributo­rs to the family enterprise,” said Janice Keefe, Mount St. Vincent professor and director of the Nova Scotia Centre on Aging.

“If you think about farming or fish- ing or those types of primary industries that tended to define the Atlantic region, children were heavy participan­ts in that enterprise,” said Keefe. “But a changing economy and shifting expectatio­ns of what we do to support our children, like the formalizat­ion of recreation, has made bigger families expensive.” Compoundin­g the problem of a lower birth rate is young people moving west for work.

“The economy in Atlantic Canada is not a friendly place for young people to find steady work,” said University of Prince Edward Island political science professor Don Desserud.

“We have an extraordin­ary quality of life here but there is a lack of opportunit­y to keep young people here and to attract immigrants.”

That coveted quality of life — affordable real estate, short commutes, access to nature — is in fact drawing baby boomers to the region.

“We’re seeing baby boomers that are retiring and looking for a slower pace of life moving here,” Ng said. “They’re cashing out their real estate in Toronto or other cities and mov- ing here, and it accelerate­s aging in the region.”

The combinatio­n of an aging population and fewer children has resulted in what Michael Haan calls an “infrastruc­ture mismatch.”

“You don’t need as many schools as you once did because you don’t have as many young people,” the University of Western Ontario associate professor said.

“Converting schools to retirement homes is something to think about.” Economic developmen­t expert Donald Savoie said often school closures are the “final nail” in a community’s coffin.

Still, he said government­s should be closing schools faster to put the money into health care instead.

“We’re not closing schools as fast as we ought to and we’re not transferri­ng money to health care to the extent that we should,” said Savoie, Canada Research Chair in Public Policy and Governance at the University of Moncton. “There are fewer students populating our schools, so government­s need to put the money where there is a greater need.”

“Our senior population is growing by leaps and bounds. We just don’t have the kids.” TRUDY THOMPSON CHAIRPERSO­N CHIGNECTO CENTRAL REGIONAL SCHOOL BOARD

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Maitland District Elementary School, built at the height of the baby boom and once filled with students, was shuttered in 2015 due to a shortage of kids.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Maitland District Elementary School, built at the height of the baby boom and once filled with students, was shuttered in 2015 due to a shortage of kids.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada