|
January 24, 2003
One in 10 Inuit live in
the South, census shows
More than 5,000 live
outside the Arctic
JIM
BELL
Aboriginal population numbers
from Statistics Canadas 2001 census show that more than 10 per cent of
Canadian Inuit live in southern Canada.
In 2001, census-takers
counted 1,380 Inuit living in Ontario, 3.1 per cent of all Canadian Inuit counted
that year.
In the rest of southern
Canada, not counting the northern territories, Ontario, Quebec and Labrador,
census-takers counted 3,145 Inuit seven per cent of all Canadian Inuit
scattered throughout British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba,
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.
From Nanaimo, B.C., where
there are 25 Inuit, to St. Johns, Nfld., where there are 210, there are
Inuit scattered amongst a long list of Canadian cities and towns.
The largest concentrations
of Inuit living south of the treeline are in Ottawa-Gatineau (910), Yellowknife
(660), Edmonton (465), Montreal (435), Toronto (355) and Vancouver (260.)
There are also Inuit living
in such unlikely places as Abbotsford, B.C., Summerside, P.E.I., and Leamington,
Ont.
In all of Canada, Statistics
Canada counted 45,070 Inuit. Thats a 12 per cent increase from 1996, when
Canadas Inuit population was at 40,220.
Half of those people
22,560 live in Nunavut.
Another 9,535 Inuit
21.2 per cent of the total live in Quebec; 4,555, or 10.1 per cent, live
in Newfoundland and Labrador; and 3,905, or 8.7 per cent, live in the Northwest
Territories.
Statistics Canadas
Quebec total includes 435 Inuit living in Montreal, 35 in Quebec City, 15 in
Sept-Isles, 10 in Val-dOr, and 10 in Chicoutimi-Jonquiere.
Added to the 4,525 Inuit
counted in Ontario and the rest of southern Canada, that may mean that more
than 5,000 Inuit not only live outside the four Inuit land claim settlement
regions they live outside the Arctic.
Statistics Canada released
the numbers this week as part of a "demographic profile" of aboriginal
people, put together from the results of Canadas 2001 census.
They found that 976,305
people in Canada identified themselves as being either North American Indian,
Métis, or Inuit 3.3 per cent of Canadas total population.
Inuit make up only five per cent of the total aboriginal population.
Meanwhile, the Inuit Tapiriit
Kanatami is pouncing on this weeks aboriginal census numbers and using
them to support its call for more social housing, and better health care in
Inuit communities.
ITK says a survey based
on the 1996 census showed that Canadas 53 Inuit communities need 8,800
new social housing units, and that the 12.1 per cent increase in the Inuit population
shows that even more are needed.
"The government of
Canada has a fiduciary obligation to provide social housing in Inuit communities,"
ITK president Jose Kusugak said in the news release.
ITK also says the numbers
show that more services are needed for Inuit youth and elders, since the size
of both groups is increasing.
Youth make up 57 per cent
of the Inuit population, while the median age in Arctic communities is only
20 years, compared to the national average of 37 years.
But the number of Inuit
over the age of 65 years is increasing too, from 1,015 in 1996 to 1,405 in 2001.
ITK says that shows that there will be a need for more home care, elders
facilities, and support services for elders in the future, and a need to deal
with an increase in chronic diseases.
The census numbers also
show that use of the Inuktitut language is generally strong among Inuit, with
about 70 per cent of Inuit respondents reporting that they are capable of carrying
on a conversation in Inuktitut.
The five communities with
the largest populations reporting an Inuit identity were Iqaluit (3,010 Inuit),
Arviat (1,785 Inuit), Rankin Inlet (1,680 Inuit), Kujjuuaq (1,540 Inuit), and
Baker Lake (1,405 Inuit.)
An aboriginal peoples
survey, containing 146 questions, was conducted at the same time as the 2001
census.
The Inuit portion was done
as a collaboration between Statistics Canada, Laval University, Inuit Tapiriit
Kanatami, the Labrador Inuit Association, Makivik Corporation, Nunavut Tunngavik
Inc. and the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation.
|