{"id":3926,"date":"1951-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1951-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1951-vol-32-no-3-this-is-census-year\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:53:05","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:53:05","slug":"march-1951-vol-32-no-3-this-is-census-year","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1951-vol-32-no-3-this-is-census-year\/","title":{"rendered":"March 1951 &#8211; Vol. 32, No. 3 &#8211; This Is Census Year"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The door-to-door canvass                     that will get under way in Canada on June 1st will make all                     the calls by salesmen in a year look like a small operation.<\/p>\n<p> There will be about 20,000 men and women on the field force,                     gathering by direct touch with our people the information                     required for Canada&#8217;s ninth decennial census.<\/p>\n<p>These enumerators will make history in census-taking.                     Their work will be watched by governments in dozens of countries.                     They are expected to revolutionize the age-old practice                     of counting noses. They will use electronics and ball-point                     pens of a special sort, and their&#8217;s will be the first national                     census in the world to take the new &#8220;mark-sense&#8221; method                     of tabulation from door to door.<\/p>\n<p>The census is not a stunt, but a necessity. It is the country&#8217;s                     equivalent of the merchant&#8217;s stocktaking, or of the private                     person&#8217;s inventory to learn what insurance he should carry                     on his house and chattels. The assets to be counted in the                     census are our people and the various attributes that make                     them different from people in other countries.<\/p>\n<p>Without periodical appraisal of our condition and affairs,                     parliament, provincial legislatures, municipalities and business                     people would all work in the dark. No one would know whether                     the country was on the road to success or disaster, or whether                     our standard of living was rising or failing, or what our                     possibilities were for progress in peace or for defence in                     war. There would be no clear picture of our national health                     needs, our national educational level, or of a host of other                     features by which we are able to judge Canada&#8217;s progress and                     plan for the future.<\/p>\n<p>The decisive hour of reckoning is 12 o&#8217;clock midnight, standard                     time, on the night of May 31st to June 1st. Everyone born                     before that hour, and everyone dying after it, is to be counted                     in the population.<\/p>\n<h3>It is Nothing New<\/h3>\n<p>It is nothing new to require that people stand up periodically                     to be counted. The census goes back 5000 years in Babylonia                     and China, and three or four thousand years in Egypt and among                     the Children of Israel. So no one in Canada needs to feel                     miffed because a man calls asking questions.<\/p>\n<p>In olden times the purpose was to list the number of fighting                     men in a country, or to levy taxes: today&#8217;s objective is to                     plan constructively for every citizen&#8217;s welfare.<\/p>\n<p>Credit of taking the first census of modern times belongs                     to Canada. The year was 1666; the census was that of the Colony                     of New France. It was a record of every person by name, on                     a fixed date, showing the age, sex, place of residence, occupation                     and conjugal condition. There were 3,215 persons listed. The                     original document of 154 pages is in the Archives of Paris,                     but anyone interested in this unique event may see a transcript                     in the Public Archives at Ottawa.<\/p>\n<p>The event is notable because the first modern census in                     Europe dated only from the 18th century (in France and England                     from the first of the 19th century) and in the United States                     of America there was no census of the country as a whole before                     1790. The achievement of Canada&#8217;s colony on the St. Lawrence                     in instituting what is today one of the principal instruments                     of government in every civilized country calls for our appreciation.<\/p>\n<p>The British North America Act, under provision of which                     Canada became a self-governing Dominion, and subsequent                     legislation, provided for censuses to be taken in 1871 and                     every tenth year thereafter. In addition, a midway census                     is taken of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.<\/p>\n<h3>Secrecy of the Census<\/h3>\n<p>Census facts are not public property. Marco Polo tells us                     that in one place he visited every householder was compelled                     to write over his door the names of all in his household and                     the number of horses he had. In the 1790 census in the United                     States, six hundred officials knocked on doors, asked five                     questions of whoever answered, then tacked their lists on                     the walls of local taverns. People who had been skipped could                     read all about their neighbours and, if they were so minded,                     add their own names and comment.<\/p>\n<p>In Canada, the answers given by individuals to census questions                     are absolutely confidential. Every employee of the census                     is bound by a special oath and penalty against divulging any                     fact whatsoever that may have been learned through the census.                     The Bureau of Statistics is forbidden to issue any statement                     that would directly or indirectly reveal information about                     a particular person or concern.<\/p>\n<p>But that is not all. Census information obtained from or                     about you may not be used for taxation or military purposes.                     It is expressly forbidden by law to use census data to tax                     a person or to call him for military service.<\/p>\n<h3>About Counting Heads<\/h3>\n<p>The country is divided into census districts, each of which                     is placed in charge of a census commissioner. These districts                     are divided into sub-districts, varying in population                     from 600 to 800 in rural districts and from 1,000 to 1,500                     in urban centres. The sub-district is allotted to a census                     enumerator, who conducts the house-to-house and                     farm-to-farm canvass.<\/p>\n<p>The only possible way to get a complete snapshot picture                     of our population would be to require every citizen to sit                     down at midnight on May 31 and fill out a form for himself                     or herself and one for everyone in the family who could not                     write. That, of course is impracticable. It would take the                     next ten years to check up to see that everyone really did                     send in a form. So we have to make house-to-house                     calls.<\/p>\n<p>Then there are Canadians travelling abroad, Canadians in                     diplomatic posts abroad; Canadian aircrew on flights abroad,                     the Royal Canadian Navy and Merchant Marine and, of course,                     the United Nations Special Force.<\/p>\n<p>There is no exception for any regular Canadian resident,                     whether he be in hospital, travelling on a train or on a boat,                     fishing off the East or West Coasts, in penitentiary, or away                     from home while attending school.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone is assigned to the locality in which he or she                     is regularly domiciled, and not merely counted in the place                     where found. This is important, because it affects parliamentary                     representation and provincial subsidies, and is necessary                     to many governmental bodies in planning housing, public health,                     and transportation needs.<\/p>\n<h3>Uses of the Census<\/h3>\n<p>First and biggest practical use of the census figures is                     constitutional and legal. The census is taken periodically                     with the prime purpose of determining our representation in                     the federal parliament,<\/p>\n<p>By the British North America Act, amended in 1946, representation                     was assigned to each province on the basis of dividing the                     total population of the provinces by the number of parliamentary                     ridings, and dividing the population of each province by the                     quotient so obtained. Readjustments are to be made after each                     decennial census, so that should the population of any province                     have increased or decreased by the amount of the quotient                     mentioned by the Act, that province will have its representation                     in parliament increased or decreased accordingly.<\/p>\n<p>In the readjustment after Canada&#8217;s last census, Quebec gained                     eight seats, Ontario gained one, Nova Scotia gained one, and                     British Columbia gained two. Manitoba and Saskatchewan each                     lost a seat. New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Alberta                     remained unchanged. Seven seats were given Newfoundland upon                     entry into Confederation, and seats in the House of Commons                     now number 262.<\/p>\n<p>But the census has wider uses than to fix electoral representation.                     It shows, from the widest possible angle, the stage we have                     reached in evolution of our national life.<\/p>\n<p>For example, one of the vital matters affecting both individuals                     and the economic prospects of the nation is the labour force                     status of individuals. How many are working? How many are                     seeking work? How many are outside the labour force because                     of keeping house, going to school, being ill or retired?<\/p>\n<p>The census cannot make a detailed examination into the skill                     of every Canadian, but it gives much that is useful. It tells                     for each part of the country the number of doctors and nurses,                     carpenters and electricians, housemaids and stenographers,                     with information about each occupation on age, education,                     language spoken and so on. The census is a unique record of                     our manpower and skills.<\/p>\n<p>Another thing the census tells is the extent of immigration                     and the amount of movement within the country from province                     to province. You might be curious about the number of immigrants                     who came to this country in the boom immigration period who                     are still here: the census will tell. Or you might wish to                     know what has happened to population as a result of wartime                     munitions manufacture in Quebec and Ontario, of the finding                     of oil in Alberta, of the development of mineral resources                     in Quebec: the 1951 census will tell you the answers. Or you                     may be interested in the much-talked-about trend                     from farm to city: the census will tell you the extent of                     the movement dominion-wide, and also the sectors where                     it is most and least pronounced.<\/p>\n<h3>Business Uses of the Census<\/h3>\n<p>The census will give business people a better opportunity                     to increase the efficiency with which they plan, sell, market                     and advertise.<\/p>\n<p>The manufacturer and distributor must know, if they are                     to project the future sensibly, how many people there will                     be as potential customers. This does not mean in numbers only.                     What kind of people will they be as to age and sex? Where                     will they be living; in what provinces; in town or country?                     Are the town people living downtown or in the suburbs? Where                     is expansion justified? What quotas should be given salesmen?<\/p>\n<p>By consulting the census figures, bankers are supplied with                     a variety of information they need for sound appraisal of                     business development and of investment conditions and opportunities.                     Boards of trade, chambers of commerce, and other service institutions                     of the kind are enabled to advise and assist municipal authorities                     in community planning, locating new schools, erecting electric                     sub-stations, and so on. These organizations are better                     able to point out to manufacturers and retailers the advantages                     of obtaining factory sites and sales outlets, by telling the                     census figures on the labour market and local purchasing power.<\/p>\n<p>There is, in fact, scarcely a branch of business activity                     that does not have some specific use for census figures. As                     a lighter evidence, consider the census report of the number                     of stenographers in the country: it has been used by manufacturers                     of typewriter ribbons in estimating how many ribbons they                     should produce in a year.<\/p>\n<p>The census can be of service to all kinds of persons, from                     youths leaving school to employers seeking workpeople. It                     tells how many persons there are in Canada skilled in trades,                     professions and arts. It tells what the earnings from wages                     and salaries are in these various pursuits, what the state                     of employment is, both as to immediate vacancies and the long-term                     trend. It indicates the ages of people in each line of work,                     and what level of earnings they have reached at various ages.<\/p>\n<p>In these days when young people are faced with an ever-increasing                     problem in deciding what to take up as a life work, the census                     is a splendid background for study. It cannot provide ready-made                     choices, or an infallible guide, but it can be made to contribute                     to constructive and instructed thinking.<\/p>\n<h3>Age is Important<\/h3>\n<p>The need to know the ages of people so as to calculate the                     future population possibilities of the land is one good reason                     for including this question in the census, but there are others.<\/p>\n<p>Industry has found that its sales are closely related to                     the number of people in particular age-sex groups. The                     market for certain types of women&#8217;s clothing is an obvious                     example; magazines have specialized appeal to sex and age                     groups; both baby carriages and wheel chairs are age-dated.<\/p>\n<p>Without age data it would be impossible to estimate the                     cost of old age pensions or family allowances, and the governments                     would have to move blindly in making up their budgets. Medical                     services use the distribution of ages and sexes to find the                     potential number of blood donors in various areas. Town planners                     need this classification if they are to plan intelligently                     for areas with which they are concerned. Insurance companies                     need these figures in calculating the mortality rates, and                     social workers need them to deal with problems of dependency                     represented by persons in the very young and very old age                     groups. Educational authorities in provinces and municipalities                     must know the population by age groups if they are to provide                     adequate school accommodation. In fact, there are so many                     urgent needs for information about the ages of our people                     that this is one of the most important of the census questions.<\/p>\n<p>In ten censuses, covering a century of Canada&#8217;s life, the                     percentage of our population under twenty years has gone down                     from 56.3 to 37.5, and the percentage of our population over                     64 has risen from 2.7 to 6.7.<\/p>\n<h3>Special Censuses<\/h3>\n<p>As compared with the relatively few questions in the population                     form, the agricultural questionnaire contains many. Being                     a census of industry, it must include queries about the numbers,                     area and output of everything produced on the farm, besides                     other questions illuminating the condition of the farm business.<\/p>\n<p>The census authorities have shortened the 1951 agricultural                     questionnaire considerably from the 643 questions it contained                     in 1941, and a number of questions have been put on a sample                     basis whereby only 20 per cent of the farmers are called upon                     to answer them. A copy will be mailed to farm operators in                     advance of the census date.<\/p>\n<p>A special questionnaire will be used in the three Prairie                     Provinces and British Columbia dealing with irrigation.<\/p>\n<p>For the first time in our history, we are calling the roll                     in commercial fisheries. Fishermen have, of course, been included                     as individuals in every previous census, but the fishing industry                     has not been covered as a whole in the same way as has agriculture.                     The main purpose is to obtain information on the development                     and economic and social circumstances of fishermen. The assistance                     given by the Prices Support Board can result in maximum benefits                     only if it is based on accurate and detailed information.<\/p>\n<p>Housing is to be surveyed again. In the 1941 census a survey                     was made of every tenth dwelling, collecting 27 facts relating                     to dwelling, equipment, and financial facts related to tenancy                     and ownership. The 1951 survey will cover housing conditions                     in much greater detail, and will be done on a sample basis                     in respect of every fifth home.<\/p>\n<p>It is expected that the housing survey, in conjunction with                     the individual census, will provide a new measurement of living                     conditions. Depressed areas will be revealed. Data about conveniences                     will provide manufacturers and distributors with a wealth                     of material for market analysis.<\/p>\n<h3>How It is Done<\/h3>\n<p>And now, how is all this done&nbsp;? How are the forms made                     up? Who decides what questions to ask? How many staff are                     needed? What is the cost? When do we get the results?<\/p>\n<p>There is a centralized office at Ottawa, where the key man                     is Herbert Marshall, Dominion Statistician. He is assisted                     by several men who are experts in various fields, such as                     agriculture, mathematics and social analysis.<\/p>\n<p>Two main duties devolve upon the census depart. merit: to                     collect the information, and to compile it into reports. The                     collecting is done by census commissioners, one for each electoral                     district, and somewhere about 19,000 enumerators hired under                     direction of the commissioners.<\/p>\n<p>Enumerators work on a piece-rate basis, depending for                     their remuneration on the number of persons they enumerate,                     or the number of reports they complete.<\/p>\n<p>In a recent test the rate was 8 cents for each person enumerated                     in the population count, 10 cents for each housing report,                     and 50 cents for each farm reported on. Enumerators are also                     paid for the time they spend while being trained. An energetic                     enumerator should earn from $8 to $10 a day.<\/p>\n<p>What are the qualifications? It is hard work, and the enumerator                     must, first of all, be in good health. The man doing rural                     work should have a car. All enumerators must be able to take                     a fairly heavy and intensive programme of instruction lasting-three                     or four days. They must be reliable, so that our information                     will be accurate. They must be trustworthy, because the result                     of their work is secret. And, finally, they must be available                     for full time work during the census period.<\/p>\n<p>Enumerators are required to use courtesy and tact in collecting                     the information, but citizens should bear in mind that refusal                     to answer a census question is penalized by law. Even in this                     enlightened age, there still are some people who think the                     census taker is something like a member of the OGPU or MVD                     out to grab all their belongings for the State. Instead of                     that, the census taker is fulfilling one of the functions                     of a democracy, which is co-operation of all for the                     good of all. The more truthfully and promptly questions are                     answered, the easier it will be all around.<\/p>\n<p>What are the questions? There will be eight documents used                     in the 1951 census: (1)population; (2) blind and deaf; (3)                     housing; (4) agriculture; (5) irrigation; (6) live stock and                     greenhouses elsewhere than on farms; (7) commercial fishermen;                     (8) distribution.<\/p>\n<p>Through courtesy of the Dominion Statistician, we are able                     to include with this Monthly Letter a form containing the                     general population questions. These have to be answered by                     or for every living Canadian. The form we have printed will                     enable you and your family to play a census &#8220;game&#8221; now, by                     filling in the information, and then you will be ready with                     the answers when the census man calls.<\/p>\n<h3>Wonderful Machines<\/h3>\n<p>Huge books and forms are no longer in style. Last census                     the enumerators carried around forms two feet four inches                     wide; this year they will have forms about seven inches square.                     These are called &#8220;mark-sense&#8221; forms. The enumerator merely                     makes a mark in the right space instead of writing your answer                     in full. He uses an electrographic pen.<\/p>\n<p>Then, instead of transcribing the information laboriously                     by hand, in the old manner, the census people will feed the                     cards into a machine. Wherever the special ink appears, an                     electrical contact will be made and a hole will be punched.                     There emerges from the machine a fully punched card, ready                     for automatic counting or for filing.<\/p>\n<p>The electronic statistical machine is one of the &#8220;wizards&#8221;                     among machines. It will reject cards containing errors. For                     example, if the enumerator has put a mark opposite &#8220;6&#8221; for                     a lad&#8217;s age, and another mark opposite &#8220;married&#8221;, the circuits                     won&#8217;t take it. Similarly, if a farmer&#8217;s card has a hole punched                     to indicate he got something like $55 a bushel for his wheat,                     the circuits won&#8217;t take that either. These cards would be                     thrown out by the machine for correction.<\/p>\n<p>The machines are merely rented to the Canadian Government.                     When our census is finished, they will be shipped to some                     other country.<\/p>\n<p>Taking everything into consideration &#8211; men, machines, printing,                     and all the rest &#8211; it is estimated that the cost of our census                     will be about $9 million. More than 70 per cent of the money                     goes to enumerators throughout Canada, and to staffs in the                     regional and central offices. The whole sum works out at about                     64 cents per person.<\/p>\n<h3>Internationally Important<\/h3>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s census is of interest not only to Canadians, but                     to people in many other lands. Every wave length will carry                     the news when it is released about the end of the year.<\/p>\n<p>As the outcome of effort by the United Nations, some 40                     countries are counting heads during 1950 and 1951. In the                     Western Hemisphere, 22 countries are working co-operatively                     to take a census of the Americas &#8211; the first attempt to gather                     vital economic and social information about the 300 million                     inhabitants of North and South America at about the same time.<\/p>\n<p>Each nation takes its own census, of course, but certain                     facts have been agreed upon so that a reasonably accurate                     comparison may be made of the resulting figures.<\/p>\n<p>It is interesting, in this connection, that Nathan Keyfitz,                     senior research statistician of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics,                     has been sent on loan to Burma, where he will help plan the                     census of 1952. In this way, among others, Canada is co-operating                     with the Technical Assistance Administration of the United                     Nations.<\/p>\n<p>With the co-operation of all our people, we shall have                     at this year&#8217;s end a full-length portrait of ourselves.                     The first rough total should be published by November, and                     by December the count should be available for municipalities.                     The first detailed results should be ready by March 1952,                     telling such things as age distribution, sex, and so on. The                     complete report is expected by March 1953.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[31],"class_list":["post-3926","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-31"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>March 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 3 - This Is Census Year - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/march-1951-vol-32-no-3-this-is-census-year\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"March 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 3 - This Is Census Year - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The door-to-door canvass that will get under way in Canada on June 1st will make all the calls by salesmen in a year look like a small operation. 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There will be about 20,000 men and women on the field force, gathering by direct touch with our people the information required for Canada&#8217;s ninth decennial census. 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