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Key numbers on the Canadian family from the census
Canadian Press
Date: Wednesday Sep. 12, 2007 8:44 AM ET
OTTAWA Some key numbers culled from the 2006 census on the Canadian family, released Wednesday by Statistics Canada:
- 54,700 -- Decrease since the last census in the number of married couples with children across Canada.
- 8.1 -- Percentage of the adult population that is divorced. Twenty years ago, the figure was only 3.5 per cent.
- 9.4 -- Percentage of children under the age of five whose mothers are in their 40s. Women are delaying childbirth more than ever before.
- 18.9 -- Percentage increase of common-law couples since the 2001 census. The number of married couples increased by only 3.5 per cent over the same period.
- 19.9 -- Percentage of lone-parent families headed by men. While women still lead most families with just one parent, the number of Mr. Moms is increasing as a result of more joint custody arrangements.
- 24.4 -- Percentage of men age 80 or older who live alone; for women in the same cohort, it's 54.5 per cent.
- 43.5 -- Percentage of young adults in their 20s who are still living at home. In Newfoundland and Labrador, the number is 52.2 per cent.
- 66.8 -- Proportion of households in Stanley, Man., that are made up of couples with children _ the location with the highest proportion in Canada. Stanley, which has a large Mennonite community, also has the country's lowest proportion of lone-parent families (1.7 per cent).
- 77.1 -- Growth rate over the last five years in the number of people age 60 to 64 who are living in common-law relationships.
- 45,345 -- Number of same-sex couples across Canada, of which 7,465 were legally married.
- 209,900 -- Canadian children who share a home with a grandparent. Of that total, 28,200 were being raised by a grandparent because their parents were not living with them.
- 8,896,840 -- Total number of "census families'' enumerated on May 16, 2006. By official definition, a census family "is composed of a married couple or a common-law couple, with or without children, or of a lone parent living with at least one child in the same dwelling. A couple can be of the opposite sex or the same sex.''
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I fail to see just what a minister could learn by an on site visit that he couldn't get from people who are actual experts in the various fields of work involved. It is doubtful that he is any sort of nuclear engineer or expert in construction. Just another photo op...
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