Treat Count 2024: Which B.C. neighbourhoods attracted the most trick-or-treaters? - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 11:39 AM | Calgary | 6.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Treat Count 2024: Which B.C. neighbourhoods attracted the most trick-or-treaters?

Watch as a map fills up with B.C.'s spookiest neighbourhoods on Thursday night, with your participation.

CBC B.C., SFU City Programare collaborating to track the areas with the most visitors on Halloween night

An inflatable grim reaper, and a number of inflatable ghosts arising from a pumpkin, in front of a home.
Which neighbourhood in B.C. gets the most trick-or-treaters? As part of an annual tradition, CBC British Columbia and the SFU City Program are teaming up to track the treats around B.C., with your help. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Halloween night is alwaysa special one in B.C. and beyond, with itstraditions of fireworksand giving away candy to costumed tricksters.

And, in what has become an annual tradition of its own, the CBC is once again teaming up with the Simon Fraser University City Program to runa neighbourhood treat tracker.

TheCity Program promotes citizen involvement in civic issues and its director, Andy Yan, saysHalloween remains one of the best ways to track how the "spirit" of civic participation manifests in different neighbourhoods.

The treat tracking form this year has its usual questions about how many trick-or-treaters you saw and what kind of candy you handed out, but it has a couple of additional ones, too.

A hanging skull decoration on a sunny day.
Halloween decorations are pictured at homes on Trinity Street in Vancouver on Oct. 30, 2023. Andy Yan, director of the SFU City Program, says the street and Vancouver's Douglas Park neigbourhood have historically seen the most visitors on Halloween night. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Those who fill it out will also be asked the optional question of whether they voted in this year's provincial election.

"My whole theory is, Halloween is about civic engagement," Yan said. "The people that do trick-or-treating are more civically engaged."

We're also including a new question about advance trick-or-treat events, as Yan says more families are participating in the activity before Halloween night itself.

And, the form brings back a question about inflation, and whether it'saffecting your Halloween.

How to participate

To help find the neighbourhood in B.C. with the most treats,fillout this formwiththe number of trick-or-treaters who came to your house on Thursday night.

Count the number of costumed visitorsthat came knocking on your door, tell us what you gave them, and show us how you prepared for their arrival.

Then, watch as a colour-coded map reveals the Halloween hotspots and no-shows across B.C.

To get an idea of how it works, you can view last year's results at this link.

Historically, theDouglas Park neighbourhood in Vancouver and the Queen's Park neighbourhood in New Westminsterhave seen the greatest volume of visitors.

WATCH | Costumed kids flood Douglas Park once again:

Hundreds of trick-or-treaters flock to Vancouver's Douglas Park neighbourhood

9 days ago
Duration 1:41
From elaborately decorated houses to one-of-a-kind costumes, Vancouver's Douglas Park neighbourhood was once again a Halloween hot spot this year, with hundreds of families and children going door-to-door to collect candy.

Fill outthe surveyand watch for themap to update on Thursday night:


With files from Akshay Kulkarni