Canada Census 2011: Windsor, Thunder Bay Only Major Cities To Shrink As Automaking, Forestry Suffer

Canada Manufacturing Jobs

First Posted: 02/ 9/2012 7:55 am Updated: 02/ 9/2012 10:26 am

Canada’s population may be growing faster than that of any other G8 country, but there are two Ontario cities that are not reaping the rewards of expansion.

New census data shows that Windsor and Thunder Bay were the only two major Canadian urban centres that experienced a drop in population in recent years -- a reflection, perhaps, of the how the decimation of the automotive and forestry industries is wreaking havoc on local economies.

Their shrinking populations pose another challenge for these cities as they struggle to redefine themselves in the face of a fundamental labour market shift.

In Windsor, where the recession hastened the already precipitous decline of the auto industry, Ron Drouillard, who was laid off from his job at Ford Motor Co. in 2007, says many of his former coworkers have left town.

“There’s no decent-paying jobs in the city. Manufacturing is just gone. That was our base, and there’s nothing replacing it,” says Drouillard. “The downturn in the ’80s was bad, but this is way worse.”

Despite earning a master’s degree after leaving Ford, the father of two has been unable to secure a stable, full-time position.

“We’re still doing our best to hold on and stay here, but I’m anticipating at some point that I’m going to have to move,” says Drouillard, who is currently renovating his kitchen to make it more attractive to potential buyers.

The population of the Windsor Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) shrank by 1.3 per cent between 2006 to 2011, to 319,246. The decline, however slight, is a reversal in the growth that the area experienced during the previous two census periods.

City planner Thom Hunt says the recent population drop is “not surprising.”

“The manufacturing sector is heavily dependent on the automotive industry,” he says, adding that the fate of the border town is closely tied to that of the U.S., which bore the brunt of the downturn.

Manufacturing, the dominant sector in the region by far, made up 24 per cent of Windsor’s labour force in 2006, a slight decline from 2001, when it accounted for 28 per cent. (More recent data is yet to be released.)

Meanwhile, after experiencing a negligible uptick during the previous census period, the Thunder Bay area’s population declined by 1.1 per cent from 2006 to 2011, to 121,596. Though the populations in several smaller cities also dipped, Thunder Bay and Windsor were alone among Canada’s 33 census metropolitan areas to experience a decline.

According to Lakehead University economist Livio Di Matteo, the trend toward out-migration in Thunder Bay reflects the shock to the forestry industry.

“If you look at that five-year interval [2006 to 2011], that’s when most of the aftermath of the forest sector crisis wound its way through the communities in the region and through Thunder Bay,” he says, adding that the employment rate declined by 10 per cent.

The census data released Wednesday doesn’t delve much deeper than the numbers, but experts in both cities cite declining school enrolments as a possible outcome of the out-migration.

Todd Randall, an associate geography professor at Lakehead, says more than a dozen public schools in Thunder Bay have been shuttered in recent years.

“If you’re losing that younger demographic, then you’re not going to be able to operate as many schools,” he says.

In the Windsor area, school boards are facing possible budget shortfalls in the wake of falling student numbers.

But in both Windsor and Thunder Bay, there is a sense that the population decline was not as significant as expected -- a hopeful sign for economies that are making small, but meaningful, strides toward diversification.

In the past year alone, Di Matteo says growth in construction, mining and post-secondary education -- a key component of the oft-touted knowledge economy -- has been a source of strength.

“The population numbers ... are a lagging indicator. I don’t know if they fully capture some of the changes that have been undergoing in the area at present,” he says.

The same is true in Windsor, where Hunt says a number of indicators, including signs of recovery in the U.S. and the recent return to profitability of Chrysler, a significant employer in the city, suggest that the trend toward job loss -- and out-migration -- is easing.

Meanwhile, Hunt says “apocalyptic predictions” about the utter demise of the auto industry helped jump-start a push for greater economic diversification. In recent years, he says financial incentives have helped attract employers in the renewable energy, health sciences and logistics sectors, part of a long-term strategy to re-purpose the city’s existing labour force skills.

“We’ve started to restructure the economy on a number of different sectors. It’ll be a lot more versatile and a less reliant on one sector,” he says. “But that will take a number of years to solidify.”

Loading Slideshow...
  • Canada's 10 Fastest Growing Cities

    Percentages show population growth from 2006 census to 2011 census. Source: Canada 2011 Census

  • 10: Lloydminster, SK - 14%

    A view of the Husky Energy upgrader facility inLloydminster, Saskatchewan where bitumen and heavy oil are converted to synthetic oil. (The Canadian Press Images/Bayne Stanley)

  • 9: Squamish, BC - 14.6%

    Photo: YouTube screencap

  • 8: Cold Lake, AB - 15.4%

    Photo: City of Cold Lake

  • 7: Grande Prairie, AB - 16.8%

    Photo: Kathy Dempsey/Flickr

  • 6: Sylvan Lake, AB - 19.2%

    Photo: Wikimedia Commons

  • 5: Strathmore, AB - 19.7%

    Photo: City of Strathmore

  • 4: High River, AB - 20.6%

    Photo: City of High River Prairie grain elevator and grain storage bins near High River, Alberta with the Rocky Mountains visible in the distance. THE CANADIAN PRESS

  • 3: Steinbach, MB - 22.2%

    Photo: City of Steinbach

  • 2: Fort McMurray (Wood Buffalo), AB - 27.1%

    This Sept. 19, 2011 aerial photo shows a tar sands mine facility near Fort McMurray, in Alberta, Canada. (The Canadian Press, Jeff McIntosh)

  • 1: Okotoks, AB - 42.9%

    Photo: Xz1303, Wikimedia Commons

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Canada’s population may be growing faster than that of any other G8 country, but there are two Ontario cities that are not reaping the rewards of expansion. New census data shows that Windsor an...
Canada’s population may be growing faster than that of any other G8 country, but there are two Ontario cities that are not reaping the rewards of expansion. New census data shows that Windsor an...
 
 
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07:46 AM on 02/10/2012
The new Flint Michigans
It's starting
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uber
01:09 PM on 02/09/2012
Alberta is the moral equivalent of Texas. The only people who move there are the desperate or the disgusting.

Eternally ashamed of the raping of the environment going on there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Warren Yuill
Jesus Built My Hot-Rod
01:59 PM on 02/09/2012
Uber what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uber
03:06 PM on 02/09/2012
You mean a name my computer gave me or the raping of the environment that is shameful?
11:32 AM on 02/09/2012
I was born and raised in Thunder Bay. I am surprised that this data shows Thunder Bay only shrank that much. Sadly, it is a dying town. It's beautiful, and wonderful....but dying.
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12:34 PM on 02/09/2012
I agree, I grew up and went to LU, and visit quite frequently for work. It's a shame, there is such natural beauty in Thunder Bay. Winters kinda suck, but they are tolerable. And the Hoito is the best breakfast restaurant in Canada!

I'll break a Persian for all those that left Tbay.
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11:23 AM on 02/09/2012
"I was born in the land of plenty now there aint enough"
Steve Earle
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11:08 AM on 02/09/2012
Thanks to Premier McGuinty Ontario has become a have-not-Province for the first time in history. Will Toronto become the Detroit of Ontario soon? Keep voting Liberal!
12:23 PM on 02/09/2012
Keep drinking the cool-aid.
07:48 AM on 02/10/2012
Yup because a premier of a province has more influence on the canadian and global economy than the Prime Minister? Give your head a shake
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09:00 AM on 02/10/2012
If the Premier has so little influence then why do we need him? If the PM has so much overriding influence then why aren't all Provinces now Have-Nots?
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05:33 PM on 02/16/2012
Sure looks like Drummond puts the blame of Ontario woes squarely on McGuinty's shoulders eh?
Elmwoodmac
No matter where you go, there you are!
11:04 AM on 02/09/2012
Just don't move to Vancouver. There aren't any jobs.
11:00 AM on 02/09/2012
Who's been premier of Ontario during this decline?
12:23 PM on 02/09/2012
Mike Harris
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foobros
Libbin a lie!
02:03 PM on 02/09/2012
I was no fan of Mike Harris, but I am not of fan of McGuinty either. McGuinty fans seem to be from Toronto. As far as what he's done for the rest of the province, it's had to find something positive. The McGuinty government is closing the jail where I live and will not provide the data to support the decision, because there is no merit to what they're doing. As far as I'm concerned, we don't have good leaders from any party. I think the NDP was our best chance in the last election, but people keep bringing up Bob Rae and the Rae days. I say that we should give them a chance. What do we have to lose? Another thing - Toronto should be separated from the rest of the province as far as elections. Toronto decides everything. The rest of us can wither and twist in the wind.
10:23 AM on 02/09/2012
I'm so glad I did not move to Milton. It was quaint and quiet.......not anymore.
02:02 PM on 02/09/2012
And they apparently have some civic by-law that states that every manhole cover has to be sunk at least 4 inches in the street. Horrible roads there.
09:26 AM on 02/09/2012
Further proof there is no "trickle down" economy.

Why are do so many failed policies such as deregulation and free trade continue to be toted as correct or beneficial when clearly they are not. Oh wait I forgot, the upper 1% is benefitting.

I don’t understand why more and more working people are championing for the upper 1%?

The poor, working poor, working and middle class have lousy lobbyists, unlike the wealthy who have the best that money can buy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Koebelin
Gut feelings are usually gas
09:21 AM on 02/09/2012
I hope for sake of these people moving to AB that they find some way to make the tar sand oil less ruinous to the environment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Uber
01:08 PM on 02/09/2012
There are about 3 people who care about the environment in Alberta, OK?
09:17 AM on 02/09/2012
I read just yesterday that GM is about to post a record profit for this quarter. What happened to all those GM jobs in Windsor, Oshawa, London...

Meanwhile, I hear GM opened a 300 million dollar plant in Russia...
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turkeylurky
Just keepin it real........
10:57 AM on 02/09/2012
GM in Oshawa is doing great - thanks for asking...
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11:12 AM on 02/09/2012
Yes, and all it took was a tax-payers bail-out of a million dollars for every CAW job. What a bargain!
03:35 PM on 02/09/2012
So GM didn't eliminate close to 1000 jobs in Oshawa just 3 years ago?
How great are those people doing?
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