census Archives | Research & Innovation /research/tag/census/ Thu, 05 Aug 2010 08:00:00 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Professor Carl James on breaking the cycle of violence in Toronto's Flemingdon Park neighbourhood /research/2010/08/05/professor-carl-james-on-breaking-the-cycle-of-violence-in-torontos-flemingdon-park-neighbourhood-2/ Thu, 05 Aug 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/08/05/professor-carl-james-on-breaking-the-cycle-of-violence-in-torontos-flemingdon-park-neighbourhood-2/ The slayings in Flemingdon Park this summer have brought a shadow of violence back to a community where, on the surface, it appeared to have lifted, wrote The Globe and Mail Aug. 3: Flemingdon Park is one of Toronto’s “priority” areas. Census data from 2001 showed that 71 per cent of the 22,000 residents were […]

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The slayings in Flemingdon Park this summer have brought a shadow of violence back to a community where, on the surface, it appeared to have lifted, :

Flemingdon Park is one of Toronto’s “priority” areas. Census data from 2001 showed that 71 per cent of the 22,000 residents were immigrants, and 34 per cent lived below the poverty line. The average family lived on less than $45,000 a year.

. . .

Since 2009, the city has spent $1.5-million to create parks and playgrounds in the neighbourhood. But right now, Flemingdon doesn’t have a bank and its only grocery store is scheduled to open in the fall.

. . .

To help with safety concerns, Toronto Community Housing installed 120 security cameras in Flemingdon Park in 2006, at a cost of close to $1 million. Many cameras have been vandalized, rendering 22 inoperable.

None of these initiatives are likely to break the cycle of violence, according to , a sociology professor in 91ŃÇɫ’s and director of the 91ŃÇÉ« Centre for Education & Community. The way to get through to Flemingdon’s most vulnerable – its youth – is to provide them with opportunities and hope, including better access to education and jobs.

The complete article is .

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ŃÇɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Professor Valerie Preston says making the long-form census voluntary could hamper research on Canada's vulnerable /research/2010/07/15/professor-valerie-preston-says-making-the-long-form-census-voluntary-could-hamper-research-on-canadas-vulnerable-2/ Thu, 15 Jul 2010 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/07/15/professor-valerie-preston-says-making-the-long-form-census-voluntary-could-hamper-research-on-canadas-vulnerable-2/ A growing chorus of Toronto voices, including the director of 91ŃÇɫ’s Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration & Settlement (CERIS), is opposing Ottawa’s plans to change the national census, which gathers in-depth information from Canadians to form public policy, wrote InsideToronto.com and The Beach-Riverdale Mirror July 13: Beginning with the 2011 census, held every […]

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A growing chorus of Toronto voices, including the director of 91ŃÇɫ’s , is opposing Ottawa’s plans to change the national census, which gathers in-depth information from Canadians to form public policy, wrote and The Beach-Riverdale Mirror July 13:

Beginning with the 2011 census, held every five years, Industry Minister Tony Clement is doing away with the mandatory long form, which had been sent to one in five Canadians. The much shorter survey that goes to all Canadians will remain compulsory.

Instead of forcing 20 per cent of the population to fill out the long form under threat of jail time and fines, Clement said a third of Canadians will be sent the long form, which they can voluntarily complete.

But the change has prompted an outcry across the country from people who believe making the long form voluntary will result in less accurate information.

91ŃÇÉ« Professor Valerie Preston, director of CERIS, told Toronto Community News she is upset with the changes. “We have a 97 per cent compliance response to the (mandatory) long form and so it gives us a very complete picture of Canadians. A voluntary survey will not give us anything like that compliance rate. It won’t even approach it,” she said.

Communities such as recent immigrants and lower-income Canadians who move often will be less likely to fill out a voluntary survey, she added. And less reliable census information could mean the needs of the most vulnerable, such as newcomers to Canada, the elderly, the poor and single parents, will be ignored, she said.

“I’m very concerned,” she said. “Without that information, how are you going to transfer (government) funds where they are most needed?”

Preston argued reputable public polling firms, which rely on voluntary responses, can start out with a sample of 17,000 possible respondents but only end up getting answers from 1,000 people.

Republished courtesy of

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