S-Ranger said:and that you hicks are all over the place spewing propaganda (hick-spew) based on ignorance
Hank C said:The New Ontario: Corridor Of Power
IN THE 1800s aboriginals called it the Wolf’s Track, and you’d have been hard-pressed to find anyone on it. Today the Edmonton-Calgary corridor is one of the fastest-growing regions in the world and boasts a population of nearly 2.5 million souls, more than Manitoba and Saskatchewan combined.
___________________________________________________________
% of % of % of
Population Pop Province Province Canada
1996 2001 Change (1996) (2001) (2001)
1,913,339 2,149,586 236,247 70.9 72.3 7.2
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Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Toronto_AreaIn 2001, Statistics Canada included a new level of census management called Census Regions, roughly equivalent to an American Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA).
____________________________________________________________
% of % of % of
Population Pop Province Province Canada
1996 2001 Change (1996) (2001) (2001)
1,913,339 2,149,586 236,247 70.9 72.3 7.2
____________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Population
Name Type 2001 1996 Change
___________________________________________________________________
Toronto C 2,481,494 2,385,421 A 96,073
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_______________________________________________________________________
Population Pop % of
Name Type 2001 1996 Growth GTA
_______________________________________________________________________
01-Toronto Division 2,481,494 2,385,421 96,073 48.83
_______________________________________________________________________
Toronto ................... C 2,481,494 2,385,421 96,073 48.83
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
02-Peel Regional Municipality 988,948 852,526 136,422 19.46
_______________________________________________________________________
Mississauga ............... C 612,925 544,382 68,543 12.06
Brampton .................. C 325,428 268,251 57,177 6.40
Caledon ................... T 50,595 39,893 10,702 1.00
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
04-York Regional Municipality 729,254 592,445 136,809 14.35
_______________________________________________________________________
Markham ................... T 208,615 173,383 35,232 4.11
Vaughan ................... C 182,022 132,549 49,473 3.58
Richmond Hill ............. T 132,030 101,725 30,305 2.60
Newmarket ................. T 65,788 57,125 8,663 1.29
Aurora .................... T 40,167 34,857 5,310 0.79
Georgina .................. T 39,263 34,777 4,486 0.77
Whitchurch-Stouffville .... T 22,008 19,835 2,173 0.43
East Gwillimbury .......... T 20,555 19,770 785 0.40
King ...................... TP 18,533 18,223 310 0.36
Chippewas of Georgina
Island First Nation ...... R 273 201 72 0.01
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_______________________________________________________________________
05-Durham Regional Municipality 506,901 458,616 48,285 9.97
_______________________________________________________________________
Oshawa .................... C 139,051 134,364 4,687 2.74
Whitby .................... T 87,413 73,794 13,619 1.72
Pickering ................. C 87,139 78,989 8,150 1.71
Ajax ...................... T 73,753 64,430 9,323 1.45
Clarington ................ T 69,834 60,615 9,219 1.37
Scugog .................... TP 20,173 18,837 1,336 0.40
Uxbridge .................. TP 17,377 15,882 1,495 0.34
Brock ..................... TP 12,110 11,705 405 0.24
Mississaugas of
Scugog Island ............ R 51 ¶ ¶ 0.00
_______________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________
11-Halton Regional Municipality 375,229 339,875 35,354 7.38
_______________________________________________________________________
Burlington ................ C 150,836 136,976 13,860 2.97
Oakville .................. T 144,738 128,405 16,333 2.85
Halton Hills .............. T 48,184 42,390 5,794 0.95
Milton .................... T 31,471 32,104 -633 0.62
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Municipality of Toronto 2,481,494 2,385,421 96,073 48.83
Rest of GTA 2,600,332 2,243,462 356,870 51.17
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TOTAL 5,081,826 4,628,883 452,943 100.00
_______________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
% of % of % of
Population Pop Province Province Canada
1996 2001 Change (1996) (2001) (2001)
____________________________________________________________
6,142,346 6,704,598 562,252 57.1 58.8 22.3
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______________________________________________________________________
Population % of Real % of 2004
July 1, Pop GDP GDP GDP
JURISDICTION 2004 TOTAL 2004 TOTAL USD@0.85
______________________________________________________________________
Ontario* 12,407,347 38.80 470,300** 42.04 399,755
Québec 7,547,728 23.61 234,445 20.96 199,278
Greater Toronto Area 5,654,350 17.68 305,000 27.26 259,250
British Columbia 4,201,867 13.14 139,205 12.44 118,324
Alberta 3,204,780 10.02 135,837 12.14 115,461
City of Toronto 2,603,180 8.14 129,000 11.53 109,650
Manitoba 1,170,229 3.66 35,136 3.14 29,866
Saskatchewan 994,300 3.11 33,168 2.96 28,193
Nova Scotia 937,509 2.93 25,271 2.26 21,480
New Brunswick 752,078 2.35 20,867 1.87 17,737
Newfoundland & Labrador 517,284 1.62 15,248 1.36 12,961
Prince Edward Island 137,861 0.43 3,365 0.30 2,860
Northwest Territories 42,851 0.13 3,838 0.34 3,262
Yukon Territory 30,856 0.10 1,206 0.11 1,025
Nunavat Territory 29,673 0.09 862 0.08 733
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TOTAL 31,974,363 100.00 1,118,748 100.00 950,703
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______________________________________________________________________
Population % of Real % of 2004
July 1, Pop GDP GDP GDP
SUMMARY 2004 TOTAL 2004 TOTAL USD@0.85
______________________________________________________________________
(ON+QC) Total 19,955,075 62.41 704,745 62.99 598,800
(ON+QC+BC) Total 24,156,942 75.55 843,950 75.44 717,125
Rest - (ON+QC) Total 12,019,288 37.59 414,003 37.01 351,903
Rest - (ON+QC+BC) Total 7,817,421 24.45 274,798 24.56 230,316
Prairie (AB+SK+MB) Total 5,369,309 16.79 204,141 18.25 173,520
(MB+SK) Total ^ to AB 2,164,529 6.77 68,304 6.11 58,058
Atlantic Total 2,344,732 7.33 64,751 5.79 55,038
Territory Total 103,380 0.32 5,906 0.53 5,020
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___________________________________________________________________
Population GTA Real GTA
GREATER TORONTO AREA July 1, Population GDP* GDP
COMPARISONS 2004 <--Minus 2004 <--Minus
___________________________________________________________________
Atlantic (Atl.) 2,344,732 3,309,618 64,751 240,249
Atlantic+Territories 2,448,112 3,206,238 70,657 234,343
MB+SK 2,164,529 3,489,821 68,304 236,696
SK+Atlantic 3,339,032 2,315,318 97,919 207,081
MB+Atlantic 3,514,961 2,139,389 99,887 205,113
MB+SK+Atlantic 4,509,261 1,145,089 133,055 171,945
MB+SK+Atl.+Terr. 4,612,641 1,041,709 138,961 166,039
Alberta (AB) 3,204,780 2,449,570 135,837 169,163
Alberta+Saskatchewan (SK) 4,199,080 1,455,270 169,005 135,995
Alberta+Manitoba (MB) 4,375,009 1,279,341 170,973 134,027
Alberta+Atlantic 5,549,512 104,838 200,588 104,412
Alberta+Atl.+Terr. 5,652,892 1,458 206,494 98,506
Prairie (AB+SK+MB) 5,369,309 285,041 204,141 100,859
Prairie+Atlantic 7,714,041 -2,059,691 268,892 36,108
Prairie+Atl.+Terr. 7,817,421 -2,163,071 274,798 30,202
BC 4,201,867 1,452,483 139,205 165,795
BC+Atlantic 6,546,599 -892,249 203,956 101,044
BC+SK+MB 6,366,396 -712,046 207,509 97,491
BC+SK+Atlantic 7,540,899 -1,886,549 237,124 67,876
BC+MB+Atlantic 7,716,828 -2,062,478 239,092 65,908
BC+MB+Atl.+Terr. 7,820,208 -2,165,858 244,998 60,002
Quebec 7,547,728 -1,893,378 234,445 70,555
Quebec+Atlantic 9,892,460 -4,238,110 299,196 5,804
Quebec+MB+SK 9,712,257 -4,057,907 302,749 2,251
BC+AB 7,406,647 -1,752,297 275,042 29,958
BC+AB+NB+PE 8,296,586 -2,642,236 299,274 5,726
BC+AB+NS+PE 8,482,017 -2,827,667 303,678 1,322
Greater Toronto Area 5,654,350 0 305,000 0
BC+AB+NS+PE+Terr. 8,585,397 -2,931,047 309,584 -4,584
BC+Prairie+Atlantic 11,915,908 -6,261,558 408,097 -103,097
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Hank C said:Every day 50,000 vehicles use the four-lane divided thoroughfare known as Highway 2.
Source: Travel Alberta - http://www1.travelalberta.com/content/travellingto/take.cfm?roadtripID=6 Highway 2 North from Calgary to Edmonton (a.k.a. the Calgary-Edmonton "corridor")Highway 2 North from Calgary to Edmonton
Alberta’s major north/south transportation corridor follows the historic Calgary-Edmonton Trail.
The highway between Calgary and Edmonton follows an old wagon trail and is dotted with historic sights and interesting attractions.
Head north from Calgary and pass through several small farming communities. :shock: along the way. Stop at Olds and view the area’s past in a display of historic photographs and artifacts. Innisfail is the site of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Dog Training Centre, :shock: the only one in Canada. :shock: Visit the Innisfail Historical Museum, a recreated pioneer village that looks at life from the late 1800s to 1930. [Not difficult from the Albertas given that most of them are still in the 1800s and early 1900s.]
Red Deer, one of Alberta’s major centres for conventions and meetings, is almost halfway between Calgary and Edmonton. Located in an intensive grain and cattle farming area, the city :?: also has an active oil and gas industry. The name comes from Scottish immigrants who mistook elk for the red deer of their homeland and named the area. [A screw-up. What else is new in the Albertas. What else is there but screw-ups?
A city?
A Adjusted figure due to boundary change. For further information, see the http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/standard/popdwell/Content.cfm "Content Considerations]".Code:____________________________________________________________ Geographic Population Code Official Name Type[1] 2001 1996 %Change ____________________________________________________________ Red Deer CA 67,707 60,080 A 12.7 ___________________________________________________________ 4808011 Red Deer C 67,707 60,080 12.7 ___________________________________________________________
1 Census subdivisions (CSDs) are classified into 46 types according to official designations adopted by provincial or federal authorities. Two exceptions are Subdivision of Unorganized in Newfoundland and Labrador and Subdivision of County Municipality in Nova Scotia, which are geographic areas created as equivalents for municipalities by Statistics Canada in cooperation with these provinces for the purpose of disseminating statistical data. Click to view all census subdivision types by abbreviation and type.
Source: Source: Statistics Canada - http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/standard/popdwell/tables.cfm Population and Dwelling Counts
_____
That's barely the "population" of a municipal Ward in Toronto.]
Visitors come to Red Deer every summer when the International Folk Festival and Westerner Exhibition take place in July and in August. [Oooh, I can' wait. A hick whoe-down. "Break our the fancy overalls, Jethro, we's a going ta 'tha city'."]
Meaning “Place of Peace” in Cree, Wetaskiwin is a city in stature :?: and a rural community in atmosphere. :?:
[Ya, we call those "cities" rural villages regardless of what they happen to call themselves.
Source: Source: Statistics Canada - http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/standard/popdwell/tables.cfm Population and Dwelling CountsCode:____________________________________________________________ Geographic Population Code Official Name Type 2001 1996 %Change ____________________________________________________________ Wetaskiwin CA 11,154 10,959 1.8 ___________________________________________________________ 4811002 Wetaskiwin C 11,154 10,959 1.8 ___________________________________________________________
That's the "population" of an apartment building in Toronto.
End the tour by spending a couple of days touring the sights of Edmonton, the provincial capital.
Known as Canada’s “festival city”, Edmonton hosts Fringe actors, folk and jazz musicians, ethnic dancers and, of course, all the colour and fun of the famous Klondike Days, :shock: in a series of summer celebrations. [Wow.]
Other year-round attractions include the Odyssium, Muttart Conservatory, Provincial Museum of Alberta, and the Alberta Legislature Building.
Source: http://www.reviewcta-examenltc.gc.ca/Submissions-Soumissions/Txt/Canadian%20Chamber%20of%20Commerce%20(2).txt Canadian Chamber of CommerceCanada's busiest corridor is the 401-Autoroute 20 corridor running from Windsor to Quebec City. Ontario and
Quebec generate more than 60 per cent of the total vehicle-kilometres driven on the National Highway System.
The second busiest corridor is a portion of the Trans-Canada Highway in the lower mainland of British Columbia running from Chilliwack to Vancouver. British Columbia generates 14 per cent of the total vehicle-kilometres driven in Canada.
The third busiest corridor is Highway 2 running between Calgary and Edmonton; Alberta generates 11 per cent of the vehicle-kilometres driven in Canada.
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(Millions of dollars)
Exports by Imports by TOTAL trade Share in
Border Crossing Point road road by road per cent
______________________________________________________________________
Windsor/Ambassador, Ont. 58,513 61,224 119,737 34.6
Sarnia, Ont. 26,162 22,251 48,413 14.0
Fort Erie, Ont. 34,186 15,077 49,263 14.2
Lacolle, Que. 12,658 5,074 17,731 5.1
Lansdowne, Ont. 9,068 5,297 14,366 4.2
Pacific Highway, B.C. 7,594 6,085 13,680 4.0
Emerson, Man. 6,344 6,573 12,917 3.7
Niagara Falls, Ont. 97 8,833 8,930 2.6
Coutts, Alb. 4,591 3,934 8,524 2.5
Philipsburg, Que. 5,355 2,875 8,230 2.4
North Portal, Sas. 2,016 3,538 5,554 1.6
Woodstock, N.B. 2,374 725 3,099 0.9
Rock Island, Que. 2,415 581 2,996 0.9
Other points 12,079 20,542 32,622 9.4
Total Road Trade 183,451 162,610 346,061 100.0
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Source: Same document above, http://www.tc.gc.ca/pol/en/Report/anre2004/report_highlights_e.htm Report Highlights section.
- Trucking accounted for 62 per cent of trade with the United States, rail 18 per cent, pipeline 11 per cent, air six per cent and marine three per cent.
- Almost 76 per cent of the trade (in value terms) between Canada and the United States carried by trucks took place at six border crossing points: Windsor/Ambassador Bridge [interstates in and around Detroit], Fort Erie, Sarnia and Lansdowne in Ontario, Lacolle in Quebec, and Pacific Highway in British Columbia. [No Calgary-Edmonton trail? Oh right, pipelines to real markets/economies. And rail to ship out that live cattle, handing even those jobs away for the last century right up until 2003. How did that work out? How many "federal" meat processing plants were built in "Alberta" over its unbelievable stupidity?]
- In 2004, commercial transportation services accounted for 4.1 per cent of Canada's value-added gross domestic product (GDP). In 2003, in relation to provincial/territorial GDP, the importance [not existence of] of transportation was most significant in Manitoba, British Columbia and New Brunswick. Ontario and Quebec contributed 57.8 per cent of commercial transportation activity nationally under GDP, while Alberta and British Columbia contributed 28.4 per cent.
Source: Canada Online - OntarioAbout a third of the Canadian population lives in this large central province of Canada [38.86 percent, actually; a third is 33.33%, as of the January, 2006 estimates that Hank C was so anxious to point out]. Almost 60 percent of all manufactured exports coming out of Canada come from Ontario.
Hank C said:Dubbed the “Western Tiger” by the TD Bank Financial Group
Source: http://www.alberta-canada.com/westernTiger/index.cfmYou've tracked the Western Tiger this far [ooh, ahh]
. . . now get the numbers that prove the competitive advantage of investing in Calgary and Edmonton!
Discover more about the advantages of Calgary and Edmonton, and why TD Economics says the Calgary-Edmonton corridor encompasses
" . . . an American-style wealth while retaining a Canadian-style quality of life"
Cost Comparison Reports
To help us evaluate the performance of our "Western Tiger" marketing campaign we would appreciate learning which state (or province) you reside in:
What state or province are you from? <dropdown>
Hank C said:the corridor connects Edmonton, a sprawling metropolis serving the oil sands, to Calgary, a sprawling metropolis answering the continent’s insatiable appetite for natural gas. In between lie more growing concerns such as Red Deer, an agriculture and oilpatch centre dominated by evangelical churches that serves as a trading area for nearly two million people. A land of new subdivisions, sleek SUVs and cellphone-armed engineers and dealmakers, the region’s commercial heart — try $105 billion in related investments — furiously outpaces southern Ontario’s. Its standard of living is actually closer to that of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the wealthiest nation on earth.
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Geographic Population
Code Official Name Type 2001 1996 %Change
____________________________________________________________
Calgary-Edmonton Corridor 2,149,586 1,913,339 12.3
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
Calgary CMA 951,395 821,628 15.8
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4806016 Calgary C 878,866 768,082 14.4
4806014 Rocky View No. 44 MD 30,688 23,326 31.6
4806021 Airdrie C 20,382 15,946 27.8
4806019 Cochrane T 11,798 7,424 58.9
4806017 Chestermere T 3,414 1,911 78.6
4806026 Crossfield T 2,389 1,899 25.8
4806804 Tsuu T'ina Nation
145 (Sarcee 145) R 1,982 1,509 31.3
4806022 Irricana VL 1,038 823 26.1
4806024 Beiseker VL 838 708 18.4
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________________________________________________________________
Land
Population Area Population
Name 2001 1996 Growth Km2 Density
________________________________________________________________
Toronto 2,481,494 2,385,421 96,073 629.91 3,939.4
Peel Region 988,948 852,526 136,422 1,241.99 796.3
York Region 729,254 592,445 136,809 1,761.64 414.0
Durham Region 506,901 458,616 48,285 2,523.48 200.9
Halton Region 375,229 339,875 35,354 967.04 388.0
______________________________________________________________
Toronto 2,481,494 2,385,421 96,073 629.91 3,939.4
______________________________________________________________
Rest of GTA 2,600,332 2,243,462 356,870 6,494.15 400.4
______________________________________________________________
TOTAL 5,081,826 4,628,883 452,943 7,124.06 713.3
______________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
Geographic Population
Code Official Name Type 2001 1996 %Change
____________________________________________________________
Edmonton CMA 937,845 862,597 8.7
___________________________________________________________
4811061 Edmonton C 666,104 616,306 8.1
4811052 Strathcona County SM 71,986 64,176 12.2
4811062 St. Albert C 53,081 46,888 13.2
4811034 Parkland County CM 27,252 25,222 8.0
4811059 Sturgeon County MD 18,067 15,945 13.3
4811049 Spruce Grove C 15,983 14,271 12.0
4811016 Leduc C 15,032 14,346 4.8
4811056 Fort Saskatchewan C 13,121 12,408 5.7
4811012 Leduc County CM 12,528 12,292 1.9
4811048 Stony Plain T 9,589 8,274 15.9
4811013 Beaumont T 7,006 5,838 20.0
4811068 Morinville T 6,540 6,226 5.0
4811018 Devon T 4,969 4,496 10.5
4811064 Gibbons T 2,654 2,748 -3.4
4811065 Redwater T 2,172 2,053 5.8
4811019 Calmar T 1,902 1,797 5.8
4811066 Bon Accord T 1,532 1,493 2.6
******* Bruderheim T 1,202 1,198 0.3
4811804 Stony Plain 135 R 1,100 959 14.7
4811069 Legal T 1,058 1,095 -3.4
4811806 Wabamun 133A R 998 858 16.3
4811805 Alexander 134 R 839 709 18.3
4811021 Thorsby VL 799 725 10.2
4811045 Wabamun VL 601 645 -6.8
4811024 Warburg VL 560 549 2.0
4811046 Spring Lake VL 457 425 7.5
4811014 New Sarepta VL 382 359 6.4
4811038 Seba Beach SV 109 124 -12.1
4811020 Sundance Beach SV 37 35 5.7
4811042 Lakeview SV 15 15 0.0
4811044 Kapasiwin SV 15 10 50.0
4811022 Itaska Beach SV 10 8 25.0
4811039 Betula Beach SV 10 6 66.7
4811041 Point Alison SV 10 6 66.7
___________________________________________________________
Statistics Canada said:1 Census subdivisions (CSDs) are classified into 46 types according to official designations adopted by provincial or federal authorities. Two exceptions are Subdivision of Unorganized in Newfoundland and Labrador and Subdivision of County Municipality in Nova Scotia, which are geographic areas created as equivalents for municipalities by Statistics Canada in cooperation with these provinces for the purpose of disseminating statistical data. http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/standard/popdwell/Definition.cfm?FN=geo012
Click to view all census subdivision types by abbreviation and type.
Hank C said:Red Deer, an agriculture and oil patch centre dominated by evangelical churches that serves as a trading area for nearly two million people. A land of new subdivisions, sleek SUVs [ya, Made in Ontario and keep buying them] and cellphone-armed engineers and dealmakers, the region’s commercial [mad cow dung stinky oblivious hick] heart — try $105 billion in related investments — furiously outpaces southern Ontario’s. Its standard of living is actually closer to that of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the wealthiest nation on earth.
____________________________________________________________
Geographic Population
Code Official Name Type 2001 1996 %Change
___________________________________________________________
Red Deer CA 67,707 60,080 12.7
___________________________________________________________
4808011 Red Deer C 67,707 60,080 12.7
___________________________________________________________
Kyle Korleski said:Alberta has ...