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Calgary

Online census opens to Calgarians in annual count

The City of Calgary is once again counting its residents as the online census launched this morning.

Door-to-door canvassers will be heading to households that don't fill out online by April 20

Each year the city census looks at Calgary's population, community growth, net migration, natural increase and housing. (Robson Fletcher/CBC)

The city's online census launched Mondaymorning to help track Calgary's population andhousing.

The data is used to help plan city services, and allows the city to apply for some provincial grants like for transportation and libraries.

The city mailed out access codes toCalgarianslast week. You need a code to complete the census. If you don't have one, you can request one online or by phoning the city.

Door-to-door canvassing beginsApril20. If you want more information, head to calgary.ca/census.

The annual civic census is notrelated to the census conducted every five years by the federal government.

Last year's census

The city's population was found to be at1,246,337 in last year's census an increase over the past year of11,166 people, or about 0.9 per cent, mainly because of more babies born in Calgary.

The city used to gain people in much larger numbers, like the more than 36,000 people who moved to Calgary between in 2012 and 2013. But growth has stalled since the recession.

The population totals in the majority of the city's communities stayed stagnant last year, with growth in parts of downtown and in the outskirts.

Most of the population increases are on the edges of the city in newly built subdivisions, such as Cityscape, Nolan Hill, Skyview Ranch, Redstone and Evanston in the north, and Legacy and Mahogany in the south.

Calgary's fastest growing community last year was a newersuburb in the far southeast, called Auburn Bay.