01-24-2020, 10:11 AM
(01-23-2020, 10:06 PM)MacBerry Wrote:(01-22-2020, 11:33 AM)Bytor Wrote: No.
Statscan uses the municipalities as fixed by the province and then decides the metropolitan areas on commuter traffic. So if Brampton is included in the Hamilton CMA, that means a large number of people commute from Brampton to Hamilton for work.
"To be included in the CMA or CA, other adjacent municipalities must have a high degree of integration with the core, as measured by commuting flows derived from previous census place of work data."
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/92-1...ef-eng.htm
Really??? they can do what they want:
"[b]4. Spatial contiguity rule:[/b]
CSDs that do not meet a commuting flow threshold may be included in a CMA or CA, and CSDs that do meet a commuting flow threshold may be excluded from a CMA or CA"
Get out of StatsCan Jail card
And Burlington touches Hamilton so that rule (which is made to keep a CMS contiguous and prevent holes) doesn't apply here. If you look up the census data on statcan.ca you can see that almost as many people commute to a different census division as stay inside Burlington.