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Greater Toronto Area vs Toronto CMA

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From [the Census metropolitan area article before its incorporation here]:

"All CMAs are subdivided into census tracts. A CMA may be consolidated with adjacent Census Agglomerations if they are socially and economically integrated. This new grouping is known as a consolidated CMA, and the component CMA and CAs are known as the primary census metropolitan area (PCMA) and primary census agglomeration(s) (PCA). A CMA may not be consolidated with another CMA."

"A CMA may not be considated with another CMA according to what?" What is the Oshawa CMA and part of the Hamilton CMA doing in the Greater Toronto Area (Ontario government administration area)? A qualifier is needed, such as, whatever Statistics Canada has to say about it, with a citation.

Too bad that there is no link for the Toronto CMA but it most certainly is not the Greater Toronto Area. And what documentation from Statistics Canada states anything about census tracts other than around census agglomerations that end up with 50,000 or more people in them? Show everyone the census tracts (and explain them, or provide citation that explains them) inside CMAs or even CAs with 50,000+ in "agglomerated" population. Note also that the Labrador "City" CA didn't have the requisite 10,000 between the CSDs making up the CA of Labrador "City", both of type T = Town, Labrador City (Town), Wabush (Town). CMAs, for no apparent reason, don't lose their "status" as such when, not if they do lose the requisite 100,000 in whatever alleged relationships, which is going to happen to the Thunder Bay and Greater Sudbury CMAs fairly soon if they keep losing the population they have been over the last couple of censuses, but not CAs.

Statistics Canada states nothing about CAs not losing their "status" when they lose the required 10,000 in alleged economic and cultural integration and Labrador Town, Wabush Town, don't have 10,000 in total population, period. Another StatsCon job.

The GTA is made up of Census Divisions (counties of whatever name, according to provincial legislation and unorganized nothings, type UNO): Toronto Division (nothing it in but the Toronto CSD), Peel, York, Durham and Halton Regional Municipalities make up the GTA. Everything federal, as usual, makes absolutely no sense around Toronto and its Toronto CMA thing is completely ignored, other than when there are no other stats to use around whatever, due to the Ontario feds not doing their jobs around Toronto as usual.

Greater Toronto Area vs. Toronto [census] metropolitan area, 2001

After each census subdivision (CSD) / municipality name the census division (CD) name is abbreviated as follows:

TD = Toronto Division
PR = Peel Regional Municipality
YR = York Regional Municipality
DR = Durham Regional Municipality
HR = Halton Regional Municipality
SC = Simcoe County
DC = Dufferin County

___________________________________________________________________
                                                 Population
Name                               Type   2001      1996     Change
___________________________________________________________________
Toronto (TD)                         C 2,481,494 2,385,421 A 96,073
Mississauga (PR)                     C   612,925   544,382   68,543
Brampton (PR)                        C   325,428   268,251   57,177
Markham (YR)                         T   208,615   173,383   35,232
Vaughan (YR)                         C   182,022   132,549   49,473
Burlington (HR) * .................. C   150,836   136,976   13,860
Oakville (HR)                        T   144,738   128,405   16,333
Oshawa (DR) * ...................... C   139,051   134,364    4,687
Richmond Hill (YR)                   T   132,030   101,725   30,305
Barrie-unofficial or otherwise (SC)  C   103,710    79,191   24,519
Whitby (DR) * ...................... T    87,413    73,794   13,619
Pickering (DR)                       C    87,139    78,989    8,150
Ajax (DR)                            T    73,753    64,430    9,323
Clarington (DR) * .................. T    69,834    60,615    9,219
Newmarket (YR)                       T    65,788    57,125    8,663
Caledon (PR)                         T    50,595    39,893   10,702
Halton Hills (HR)                    T    48,184    42,390    5,794
Aurora (YR)                          T    40,167    34,857    5,310
Georgina (YR)                        T    39,263    34,777    4,486
Milton (HR)                          T    31,471    32,104     -633
Whitchurch-Stouffville (YR)          T    22,008    19,835    2,173
[New Tecumseth] (SC) **              T    26,141    22,904    3,237
[Orangeville] (DC) **                T    25,248    21,498    3,750
[Bradford West Gwillimbury] (SC) **  T    22,228    20,213    2,015
[Whitchurch-Stouffville] (YR) **     T    22,008    19,835    2,173
East Gwillimbury (YR)                T    20,555    19,770      785
Scugog (DR) * ...................... TP   20,173     7,244    1,336
King (YR)                            TP   18,533    18,223      310
Uxbridge (DR)                        TP   17,377    15,882    1,495
Brock (DR) * ....................... TP   12,110    11,705      405
[Mono] (DC) **                       T     6,922     6,552      370
Chippewas of Georgina Island
 First Nation (YR)                   R       273       201       72
[Mississaugas of
 Scugog Isand] (DR) * .............. R        51         ¶        ¶
________________________________________________________________________

Incompletely enumerated Indian reserve or Indian settlement. For further information, see the “Special Notes”.

* ... Municipalities/CSDs with one asterisk and a line of periods are in the version of the Toronto city-region the Ontario feds created but are not in the confederate "[census] metropolitan area" ([C]MA) version.

[]** Municipalities in brackets followed by two asterisks are not in the "Greater Toronto Area" the Ontario feds created but are in the confederate version of the Toronto city-region ([C]MA).

Derived from: Statistics Canada - Population, Dwellings and Geography (Index), Census Subdivisions (CSDs) - Municipalities then by CMA and CD (Toronto Division, Peel, York, Durham and Halton Regional Municipalities) to get both alleged “official Toronto city-regions”.

Date modified (by source): 2002-07-16
Last updated/checked: 2005-02-18
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Census Subdivisions (Municipalities) not included in the Toronto CMA but included in the GTA

___________________________________________________________________
                                                 Population
Name                               Type   2001      1996     Change
___________________________________________________________________
Burlington (HR) .................... C   150,836   136,976   13,860
Oshawa (DR) ........................ C   139,051   134,364    4,687
Barrie-unofficial or otherwise (SC)  C   103,710    79,191   24,519
Whitby (DR) ........................ T    87,413    73,794   13,619
Clarington (DR) .................... T    69,834    60,615    9,219
Scugog (DR) ........................ TP   20,173     7,244    1,336
Brock (DR) ......................... TP   12,110    11,705      405
Mississaugas of
 Scugog Isand] (DR) ................ R        51         ¶        ¶
___________________________________________________________________
TOTAL                                    583,178   503,889   79,289
___________________________________________________________________

Barrie has a 400-series highway (the 400) running right to/from it at the 401 through Toronto, the 401 at the 400 is jammed pretty much all the time and it gets even worse on the weekends in the summers, because we don't know any "city folk" who have or ever will just hang around in Toronto all the time. If you can't get out of the province or country on a weekend, at least get up north to a cottage, campground, little provincial park, and usually via the 400, which runs right to Barrie, which, due to the amount of commuting involved on weekdays,should either be its own CMA given that it had over the 100,000 requisite population in 2001 and cannot possibly not be socially and economically integrated with itself (but it's still a CA because Abbotsford, BC became a CMA in the 2001 Census and so did Kingston, ON and how "fair" would it be to obey LAWS and regulations by adding two CMAs to south Ontario and only 1 to the Lower Mainland?), or become part of the Toronto CMA. But it's going to be part of the Toronto CMA anyway, so there's really no point in turning it into its own CMA then just adding it to the Toronto CMA.

Census Subdivisions (Municipalities) added to the Toronto MA (in exchange for the above) but not included in the GTA

___________________________________________________________________
                                                 Population
Name                               Type   2001      1996     Change
___________________________________________________________________
New Tecumseth (SC) ................. T    26,141    22,904 A  3,237
Orangeville (DC) ................... T    25,248    21,498    3,750
Bradford West Gwillimbury (SC) ..... T    22,228    20,213    2,015
Mono (DC) .......................... T     6,922     6,552      370
___________________________________________________________________
TOTAL                                     80,539    71,167    9,372
___________________________________________________________________

Not Barrie, when if anything at all in Simcoe County is going to be part of the Toronto CMA, it's Barrie, not puny little New Tecumseth or or Bradford West Gwillumbury, or little Orangeville or whatever a Mono is from Dufferin County.

Burlington is allegedly part of the Hamilton CMA but is part of the GTA because we don't pay any attention to the confederates here, other than around the money they're constantly stealing from us to hand out to everyone else. Oshawa is a CMA but is part of the Greater Toronto Area, so either get a proper Toronto CMA article set up or drop the double brackets around it -- because no one can possibly refer to the GTA as any confederate CMA.

It is an outright lie, let alone misleading, and lies do not belong in any encyclopedia.

Oops. I forgot to propose a solution. Why not just get rid of the "Common/Corporate Name" column given that every CMA is called exactly what it's called by Statistics Canada according to this. And then get the links for every CMA from Census, "Show me data on the community I live in" and select the CMA links after entering Toronto, Montreal, etc., a bunch of CMA stats for each CMA? --S-Ranger 01:36, 17 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Proposition #1

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List of CMAs

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Rank Statistics Canada Name Province Largest Municipalities
1Toronto CMAOntarioToronto, Mississauga
2Montreal CMAQuébecMontreal, Laval
3Vancouver CMABritish ColumbiaVancouver, Surrey
4Ottawa-Hull CMAOntario, QuébecOttawa, Gatineau
5Calgary CMAAlbertaCalgary, Airdrie
6Edmonton CMAAlbertaEdmonton, St. Albert
7Quebec (City) CMAQuébecQuebec, Lévis
8Winnipeg CMAManitobaWinnipeg, Selkirk
9Hamilton CMAOntarioHamilton, Burlington
10London CMAOntarioLondon, St. Thomas
11Kitchener CMAOntarioKitchener, Cambridge, Waterloo
12St. Catharines-Niagara CMAOntarioSt. Catharines, Niagara Falls
13Halifax CMANova ScotiaHalifax Regional Municipality
14Victoria CMABritish ColumbiaVictoria, Saanich
15Windsor CMAOntarioWindsor
16Oshawa CMAOntarioOshawa, Whitby
17Saskatoon CMASaskatchewanSaskatoon
18Regina CMASaskatchewanRegina
19St. John's CMANewfoundlandSt. John's, Mount Pearl
20Greater Sudbury CMAOntarioGreater Sudbury
21Chicoutimi-Jonquière CMAQuébecChicoutimi
22Sherbrooke CMAQuébecSherbrooke
26Abbotsford CMABritish ColumbiaAbbotsford, Mission
26Kingston CMAOntarioKingston, South Frontenac
27Trois-Rivières CMAQuébecTrois-Rivières
28Saint John CMANew BrunswickSaint John, Rothesay
29Thunder Bay CMAOntarioThunder Bay

  • All CMA external sources, Statistics Canada, 2001 Census by CMA name, All Data
  • National ranking via Statistics Canada, Population Counts, Land Area, Population Density and Population Rank, for Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2001 Census

_____

The thing is that most editors publishing stats on Wikipedia Canada for CMAs, CDs, CAs, CSDs, don't even know that these data exist (and often don't know what CMA, CD, CA, CSD even mean); or they are making very broad (completely worthless) interpretations, from nothing that any interpretation is needed for.

The same tables/templates (with different data) can be brought up for any CD ("county" by whatever name), CSD (municipality by whatever or no type) or CA (bizarre "town-regions" out in the middle of Nowhere in many cases, but not in south Ontario).

I managed to locate the missing CSDs and also corrected the ranking and removed whatever Saguenay, Quebec is, because it's not a CMA or a CA. The ranking may not "make sense" to the oblivious but with the source for it, it's a no-brainer to look at the national population ranks and plenty are doubled up (certainly around CSDs) and there are CAs with higher populations than CMAs. Just click on the source and you'll see for yourself. --S-Ranger 06:15, 17 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

CMA Defintion

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Perhaps, it could be made clear what population density threshold must be crossed to be added to a CMA. As an American, we have a rule for urban areas that a Census division (tract) only has to have population density of 193 square kilometers to be included in an attached urban area. It seems to me that CMA's are much closer to how Americans define urban areas, as opposed to how we define metropolitan areas (i.e. by commuter exchange). So, what is the population density threshold for a census division to be added to a CMA in Canada? --Criticalthinker (talk) 19:37, 23 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Related to the CMA defintion, this page says that a CMA “an area must register an urban core population of at least 100,000 at the previous census.” However Stats Canada says on their site[1] that a CMA is:

Area consisting of one or more neighbouring municipalities situated around a core. A census metropolitan area must have a total population of at least 100,000 of which 50,000 or more live in the core. A census agglomeration must have a core population of at least 10,000.

So, is the core requirement 50,000 or 100,000? —Thempp (talk) 18:06, 19 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]

The requirement is now 50,000. If I recall correctly, StatCan reduced the threshold from 100,000 to 50,000 sometime between the 2006 and 2011 censuses. This article therefore needs updating. Hwy43 (talk) 19:09, 19 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't quite recall correctly. It was changed in time for the 2006 census. Scroll down to "Changes prior to the current census" at this link. Hwy43 (talk) 19:21, 19 March 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Coming back seeking further clarification on something. When we're talking about "urban core population" are we talking about that being a single core municipality or some other measurement? Also, unless the requirement has been changed yet again, the page still speaks of the threshold being 100,000. --Criticalthinker (talk) 14:27, 6 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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Dissemination Blocks and ID Explanations

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This article indicates that the smallest census units in Canada are Dissemination Areas, but the Canadian Census Bureau also maintains geographies smaller than Dissemination Areas (Dissemination Blocks).

[2]Canadian Census Bureau Shapefile Downloads

Furthermore, a helpful guide on interpreting dguids would be a nice addition to this article. Here is a sample dguid for a dissemination block: 2021S051260010121. Clide24777 (talk) 22:05, 16 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

What is the Canadian Census Bureau?

Dissemination blocks are the smallest published geography of census data by Statistics Canada since 2001. A properly sourced two or three-sentence section following the Dissemination areas section could summarize what they are. But Wikipedia is not a manual or guidebook, so there is no room for a description on how to interpret their unique identifier codes. Such is not encyclopedic. Hwy43 (talk) 03:20, 17 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]