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Canada 2006 Census Totally Explained
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Everything about The Canada 2006 Census totally explainedThe Canada 2006 Census was a detailed enumeration of the Canadian population. Census day was May 16 2006. The next census following will be the 2011 Census. Canada's total population enumerated by the 2006 census was 31,612,897.
Summary
Over 12.7 million households, 32.5 million people were expected to be counted. Canada Post delivered census forms by mail to 70% of the country, primarily residents in urban areas. Census enumerators delivered to the remaining 30% of households. Every fifth home received the long questionnaire (53 questions versus 8 questions on the short form). For the first time, Canadian residents were able to go online to fill in their forms. Statistics Canada expected approximately 20% of households to file their surveys electronically. Persistent census staff are contacting tardy households. The total estimated cost of the 2006 census is $567 million spread over seven years, employing more than 25,000 full and part-time census workers.
New in the 2006 Census Questionnaire:
- Education. Where did individuals receive their highest level of education? (Only on extended questionnaire)
- Income. Permission to use income information from individual's income tax file. Income from child benefits. Income tax paid. (Also only on extended questionnaire)
- Access to personal information. Permission to make information public in 92 years.
Questions not asked in the 2006 Census:
Religion. Normally asked only once every 10 years, and the religion question was asked in the 2001 Census.
Education. The number of years of schooling received.
Modified questions:
Education. A separate question for each level of schooling, and type of school attended.
Data products
As the data are collected and digitized, Statistics Canada releases various categories of census data. On March 13, 2007, the first batch of data was released, covering population and dwelling counts by geographical unit. This has been followed by other census reports.
Population and dwelling counts
The first release of 2006 Census data was on March 13, 2007, covering population and dwelling counts by geographical unit.
Population of the provinces and territories
Province / territory
|
Population
|
% Change (2001-2006)
|
Total private dwellings
|
Population density per square kilometre
|
| Newfoundland and Labrador |
505,469 |
-1.5 |
235,958 |
1.4 |
| Prince Edward Island |
135,851 |
+0.4 |
62,753 |
23.9 |
| Nova Scotia |
913,462 |
+0.6 |
425,681 |
17.3 |
| New Brunswick |
729,997 |
+0.1 |
331,619 |
10.2 |
| Quebec |
7,546,131 |
+4.3 |
3,452,300 |
5.6 |
| Ontario |
12,160,282 |
+6.6 |
4,972,869 |
13.4 |
| Manitoba |
1,148,401 |
+2.6 |
491,724 |
2.1 |
| Saskatchewan |
968,157 |
-1.1 |
387,160 |
1.6 |
| Alberta |
3,290,350 |
+10.6 |
1,335,745 |
5.1 |
| British Columbia |
4,113,487 |
+5.3 |
1,788,474 |
4.4 |
| Yukon |
30,372 |
+5.9 |
15,296 |
0.1 |
| Northwest Territories |
41,464 |
+11.0* |
16,774 |
0.0 |
| Nunavut |
29,474 |
+10.2 |
9,041 |
0.0 |
| Canada |
31,612,897 |
+5.4 |
13,576,855 |
3.5 |
* This change is likely overstated due to improvements in coverage of the Northwest Territories in 2006. (External Link )
Age and sex
The second release of 2006 Census data was on July 17 2007, covering age and sex of the Canadian population. Among other findings, Statistics Canada reported that the 65-and-over population was at a record high of 13.7% of the total population of Canada. By comparison, the 2001 census found that the 65-and-over population was 13.0% of the total population of Canada.
Population of each province and territory by age and sex
| Province / territory |
0 to 14 |
15-64 |
65+ |
Males |
Females |
| Newfoundland and Labrador |
78,230 |
356,975 |
70,265 |
245,730 |
259,740 |
| Prince Edward Island |
23,985 |
91,685 |
20,185 |
65,595 |
70,260 |
| Nova Scotia |
146,435 |
628,815 |
138,210 |
439,835 |
473,630 |
| New Brunswick |
118,255 |
504,110 |
107,635 |
355,495 |
374,500 |
| Quebec |
1,252,510 |
5,213,335 |
1,080,285 |
3,687,695 |
3,858,435 |
| Ontario |
2,210,800 |
8,300,300 |
1,649,180 |
5,930,700 |
6,229,580 |
| Manitoba |
225,175 |
761,340 |
161,890 |
563,275 |
585,125 |
| Saskatchewan |
187,695 |
631,155 |
149,305 |
475,240 |
492,915 |
| Alberta |
631,515 |
2,305,425 |
353,410 |
1,646,800 |
1,643,550 |
| British Columbia |
679,605 |
2,834,075 |
599,810 |
2,013,985 |
2,099,495 |
| Yukon |
5,720 |
22,365 |
2,290 |
15,280 |
15,090 |
| Northwest Territories |
9,920 |
29,570 |
1,975 |
21,225 |
20,240 |
| Nunavut |
10,000 |
18,660 |
810 |
15,105 |
14,365 |
| Canada |
5,579,835 |
21,697,805 |
4,335,255 |
15,475,970 |
16,136,925 |
Families, marital status, households and dwelling characteristics
The third release of 2006 Census data was on September 12 2007 and covered families/households, marital status, and dwelling characteristics.
The following table displays various census data (derived from the 20% sample that completed the long questionnaire) on marital status for the Canadian population aged 15 years or more, as well as data on the number of couples by various criteria, and where available the percentage change from the 2001 census:
|
Number
|
% Change (2001-2006)
|
| Population aged 15 years and over |
26,033,060 |
+7.2 |
| Legally married (and not separated) |
12,470,400 |
+3.8 |
| Separated, but still legally married |
775,425 |
+5.7 |
| Divorced |
2,087,390 |
+12.5 |
| Widowed |
1,612,815 |
+4.6 |
| In a common-law relationship |
2,731,635 |
+19.6 |
| In a same-sex union |
90,695 |
+32.6 |
| Same-sex couples |
45,350 |
|
| Male same-sex married couples |
4,010 |
|
| Female same-sex married couples |
3,455 |
|
| Male same-sex common-law couples |
20,730 |
|
| Female same-sex common-law couples |
17,155 |
| All couples |
7,482,780 |
+6.0 |
| Married couples with children |
3,443,775 |
-0.7 |
| Married couples without children |
2,662,130 |
+9.5 |
| Common-law couples with children |
618,150 |
+16.4 |
| Common-law couples without children |
758,715 |
+20.9 |
Immigration, citizenship, language, mobility and migration
The fourth release of 2006 Census data was on December 4 2007 and covered immigration, citizenship, language, mobility, and migration.
Aboriginal peoples
The fifth release of 2006 Census data was on January 15 2008, covering aboriginal peoples.
Labour, place of work/commuting to work, education, language
The sixth release of 2006 Census data was on March 4 2008, covering labour, education and some other topics.
Ethnic origin, visible minorities
The seventh release of 2006 Census data was on April 2 2008, covering ethnic origins and visible minorities and commuting to work.
Income/earnings, shelter costs
The eighth release of 2006 Census data was on May 1 2008, covering income and earnings, and shelter costs.
Advertising
In contrast to 1996 focus-groups that found it important to know the legal requirement at the outset, participants of 2005 focus-groups were annoyed or provoked by draft ads reminding Canadians about the census law. As a result of the finding, Statistics Canada's initial newspaper, radio and TV ads avoided mention of the legal requirement. Instead, reference to the census law was highlighted only in ads appearing after census day, to capture late filers.
To encourage participation, Statistics Canada set aside $13 million for "saturation" advertising, including billboards, bookmarks, inserts in municipal tax bills, and ads on bags of sugar and milk cartons. For comparison, the United States Census Bureau budgeted $166.6 million USD for paid advertising over 3 years for the 2000 Census.
Outsourcing
Statistics Canada reports less than 20% of the work will be outsourced, spending $85M over 5 years. Despite an open public tender process, controversy arose on the announcement of a $43.3 million deal awarded to Lockheed Martin Canada -- a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, the world's largest defense contractor by defense revenue -- for the purchase of scanning and printing software and hardware.
Forms
A variety of forms were available in both official languages, varying in length, colour, and recipient's location.
Most households (80%) received the short form (2A):
English: orange
French: yellow
One in five received the long form (2B):
English: red
French: purple
Federal and provincial employees and their families working in embassies and National Defence bases abroad (2C):
English: purple
French: red
In the three northern territories and on Aboriginal communities and settlements (2D):
English: orange
French: yellow
Census of Agriculture (6):
English: yellow
French: orange
Controversy
Special interest groups have criticised Statistics Canada over the design of questions, accuracy, and the future of the census data:
Question 6: Relationship. Couples in same-sex marriages are offended by and/or object to Statistics Canada's instruction that they use the write-in field "Other" instead of checking the "husband or wife" box.
Question 16: Mother tongue. An anonymous email misinformation campaign advises bilingual francophones to not mention their knowledge of English.
Question 53: Election to release census data after 92 years. Genealogists worry future research will be hampered if Canadians don't check this box. » :Nationally, there was a yes response in respect of 55.58% of persons enumerated in the census. The yes percentage was highest in Prince Edward Island, 64.50%, and lowest in Nunavut, 51.39%. Individual respondents are permitted to change their response to this question by mailing in a request-for-change form.
The quality of data is further hampered by individuals advocating minimal cooperation or non-cooperation, in protest to the outsourcing contract awarded to Lockheed Martin. Many people believed that Lockheed Martin would have access to their information, and that the US government could then access that information through the USA PATRIOT Act. However, despite assurances to the contrary (for example, only Statistics Canada employees would and could handle, store, and access the information), some people refused to participate fully in the Census.
In addition, Statistics Canada's online questionnaire has been criticized over accessibility issues:
Failure to comply with Treasury Board guidelines to meet W3C accessibility recommendations for the visually impaired.
Failure to support open source operating systems. Support for Linux was eventually added, but support for other operating systems was not.Further Information
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