Calgary grows by 11,166 people due mainly to more babies, says census - Action News
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Calgary

Calgary grows by 11,166 people due mainly to more babies, says census

The 974 resident gain from net migration is a contrast to 2016, when Calgary saw a negative net migration losing about 6,500 residents.

Population hits 1,246,337 as city reverses trend of more people moving away than arriving

Calgary saw a net migration of 974 people in the past year, after losing about 6,500 the previous year, according to the city census released Thursday. (Rachel Maclean/CBC)

Slightly more people moved into Calgary than leftin the past yearafter a period of thousands leaving, according to city census resultsreleased Thursday.

The 974 resident gain from net migration isin contrast to 2016, when Calgary saw a negative net migration losing about 6,500 residents.

The city currently has a population of 1,246,337an increase over the past year of 0.90 per cent, or11,166 people.

The city says that's mostly due to Calgarians having more than enough babies to balance out deaths.

Calgary's annual census covers the time periodbetween April 2016 and April 2017, and is meant to collect data to inform municipal policy decisions and applications for grants, which are often secured on a per capita basis. This year's had a response rate of 98.1 per cent, the city said.

The City of Calgary issued this map showing the percentage change of its population. (CBC News Graphics)

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.

The slight growth by less than 1,000 people across the city is a signal Calgary may need to plan for slower population growth, University of Calgary planning professor Sasha Tsenkovatold CBC News on Thursday. Calgary used to gain people in large numbers, like the more than 36,000 people between in 2012 and 2013.

"[Now] it's not the arrival of new people coming to the city because of jobs," she said. "This new pattern requires a different strategy, so people can live in neighbourhoods and stay."

Shrinking neighbourhoods

Some Calgary neighbourhoods have lost a handful people in the past year, like the northeast community of Falconridge, which is down 529, and the southeastarea of Dover, down 444.

Other communities lost big numbers compared to their populations. Eau Claire, a community of mostly highrises on the north edge of downtown, along the Bow River, lost 11.5 per cent of its residents.

Fastest growing areas

The Beltine, another downtown Calgary community, gained among the most residents of all Calgary communities. The area added more than 1,200 residents, a jump of almost five per cent from 2016. Over the past five years, the Beltine's population has gone up by 15 per cent.

In a press conference Thursday morning, Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi said the city must grow in sustainable ways so it can keep up with infrastructure. The goal, he said, is to build density in the core and existing neighbourhoods, where services like transit and schools can be expanded instead of built from scratch.

"For a long time, so much of our infrastructure has focused on the outskirts of the city, making it easier to live there and making it harder to live in established neighbourhoods," Nenshi said.

"I think we have a much better balance now."

'Not healthy or sustainable'

Right now, Calgary's fastest growing community is a newersuburb in the far southeast, called Auburn Bay. It gained 1,870 residents in a year. Over the past five years, the community has almost doubled in size.

Most of the population jumps 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.

Tsenkova says the slower growth of the city does suggest council should look to putting more people in established neighbourhoods, rather than building newones on the outskirts.

"Otherwise we'll hollow the city out, and that's not healthy or sustainable," theplanning professor said.

Vacancy rate at 4.76

The civic census shows new construction and renovations of housing continues to rise, as well, by 1.44 per cent in the past year.

Meanwhile, 25,553 housing units are sitting empty, as the vacancy ratehasrisen from 4.3 per cent last year to 4.76 in this latest census.

Calgary will be focusing on building density where services already exist, the mayor says. (Evelyne Asselin/CBC)

Anything exceeding five per cent in the housing market is "extremely alarming," Tsenkova said.

"That's a very clear message" that the city needs to address density, she said.

"The downtown is a very important driver of the economy and defines the identity of the city."

Nenshitold reporters he's "not fussed" about the current vacancy rate, but thatthe city is aiming for a sustainable lower one.

Full results of the City of Calgary survey are available online.