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Mike Sadava, The Edmonton Journal
( U1 c( @6 k1 q4 q- JPublished: Friday, March 30, 2007
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* C2 f3 g. ?: I( W7 u% B5 T6 GEDMONTON - Albertans are starting to be Saskatchewan-bound in growing numbers.. j5 S' X. [7 T2 A
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For the first time since 1996, more people are moving from Alberta to Saskatchewan than the other way around. It's part of a slight slowdown in Alberta's population growth, which is still increasing at four times the rest of the country.
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1 C/ j4 p: @" ^; L2 i. ?According to Statistics Canada, 128 more Albertans moved one province east in the last three months of 2006.
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Cam and Crystal Hamilton and their 11-month-old son Brady move back to Regina from Edmonton. Now they're in a bigger house and debt-free.
# y( l% }2 v- d9 o$ w0 EPhotograph by : Regina Leader-Post: c# B5 l3 t/ u* f8 B6 X7 @
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That is not a huge number, but it is creating smiles in Regina.
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"This is a good batch of numbers," said Roy Schneider, spokesman for Saskatchewan Industry and Resources. "We were bleeding so many people to Alberta for such a long time I'd be happy to see (a net increase from Alberta of) two.% T& d+ W$ L; O6 D
( ~5 }, y/ D* a$ \- E! e! VFor years, between 2,000 and 4,000 Saskatchewan residents per quarter would head out to Alberta in search of the good life.9 `4 a* K: q) a6 w/ l- h5 _
; X7 O% h4 a% VEven in the third quarter of 2006, Saskatchewan experienced a net loss of 994 people to Alberta, and the province launched an ad campaign, extolling the better life of Saskatchewan in billboards popping up around Edmonton., W# X$ L8 k: J* z& `; I
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Statistics Canada hasn't tracked who these people are, but Crystal and Cam Hamilton, who moved back to Regina at the beginning of the year, might be typical.
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8 E- w2 I- ?# X& J7 FCam moved here eight years ago to take a course in architectural drafting.
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There were no jobs in Regina in his field, so he stayed in Edmonton to work. Crystal followed him here and they married, eventually buying a house in Lymburn in southwest Edmonton.' B0 T- w1 k; I, N6 r, k
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After having their son Brady, who is now 11 months old, they decided it would be nice to be back in Regina with family, and that became possible.7 W$ N7 T8 s a) \* z
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"Because the economy is so much bigger in Saskatchewan now, there are jobs again," Crystal Hamilton said.
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/ Q& S+ T/ ^! ^They ended up with a tidy nest egg from the move and managed to pay off their debts. The Edmonton house they bought two years ago for $157,000 got them $306,000, and they built a new, larger home in Regina for $190,000.
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"We're financially set now," she said. "It was perfect timing and turned out to be good idea in many ways."' h6 t. t, d7 I4 W% Z, U) E# P
. s/ j& L- V9 W! n" [4 iShe said they liked Edmonton, other than the traffic, and made a lot of friends here who they will miss.; n4 d5 ?; w& b4 O
9 t o l! x, C( n y8 P"It was sad to move, but it's also good to be back."3 @# i! P, d7 ~' n T8 Z1 W
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Vicki Delnea and her husband Rod had similar reasons for moving to Regina from Calgary -- the difference in the cost of housing enabled them to pay off their mortgage.
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"In the end you have to figure out your priorities, and for us it was not being on the hamster wheel," she said.
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While she is from London, England, Rod was originally from Regina, and it will be great for her three-year-old, Joshua, to know his grandparents, she said.% W7 T1 O& B" X c6 A
2 f3 w2 B8 c" ?) b& K X3 B" qRod, who works in marketing, was able to keep his job and is working out of a home office, which saves him a 40-minute commute.* Q& ~+ }6 ~. A, I. R9 s' n8 n
9 c- j; `2 {3 m4 Y& w"Everybody thought we were crazy moving here because there is a stigma against Saskatchewan. When we told them Regina, they said: 'Why?' We said: 'Why not?' "
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' f4 c9 `2 N: kSo far Delnea loves the city, finding her neighbours friendly and not missing the traffic of Calgary.# J2 T, m, d' ?0 B. |( l' U& S
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Frank Trovato, a demographer in the sociology department at the University of Alberta, said it's not surprising to see more people moving to Saskatchewan after such a long period of net outflow of people to Alberta.& N; ~2 g" R$ R O; _! D! ~, Z' c
7 A( O( q. {1 a) c& Q& r"When you see there's a lot of people moving to a place, there's also a countercurrent back," Trovato said.
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) n( v+ U5 J1 D$ K8 P8 FThere are likely a number of factors at play, including the lower cost of housing and greater economic opportunities back in Saskatchewan, but there were probably a number of people who found that Edmonton didn't provide the opportunities they were hoping for, he said.
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"Not everyone who moves to a province is there permanently," Trovato said.
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, Z- r, |& r/ X2 YTerry Hincks, a Regina city councillor and realtor, said Albertans are buying a lot of homes in Regina, either as revenue property or to eventually be their place of residence.
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8 t7 F' r$ U4 Y1 d, x% Z) j"It seems that every time I pick up the phone it's either 780 or 403 (area codes)."
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5 E/ G( [7 ^7 hReal estate prices are still much lower than Edmonton -- $130,000 to $150,000 can still get you a decent three-bedroom home -- but are starting to rise. February set a new record in Regina, with 250 houses sold.. b* i6 v2 {+ ]7 d G% B1 m2 O! H }; K
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AGAINST THE TIDE
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6 o+ J0 v* E) U) o3 }No. of people moving from Alberta to Saskatchewan: 2,838
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' y! _- G8 y. t* d( TNo. of people moving from Saskatchewan to Alberta: 2,710
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- a6 }0 s# t. A/ z# Y5 e9 l. i4 D. M4 RNet loss for Alberta: 128
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/ Q7 g/ Y. v) b! N3 q, n# tNet inflow of migrants to Alberta from the rest of Canada: 11,800
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: v/ S- | ?; W4 l2 oNet inflow of migrants in the fourth quarter 2005: 17,1000 ^" u# A6 F2 o$ p+ J K9 w
0 l" c- |6 z' ?5 v" CPopulation growth Alberta: 0.65 per cent+ g5 w$ a5 X. c4 V
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Population growth for Sask.: 0.21 per cent- n7 ]8 b- ^* d6 a7 t0 L) S
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Population growth for all of Canada: 0.14 per cent
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Source: Statistics Canada figures for fourth quarter, 2006 |
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