What a difference three years can make to the diversity of a province.
Rural Saskatchewan used to have difficulty attracting and retaining immigrants but small communities around the province are now becoming increasingly cosmopolitan.
The Rural and Small Town Canada Analysis Bulletin released by Statistics Canada on Monday provides a snapshot of Canada’s rural and small town areas in 2006 — a time when immigrants accounted for 5.3 per cent of the nation’s population. In Saskatchewan, immigrants accounted for 2.6 per cent of the total population — 0.3 per cent were new immigrants.
Between 2001 and 2006, 15,000 people left Saskatchewan — the highest net migration in the country, said Roland Beshiri, co-author of the Statistics Canada report.
“The migration of people in general looked very bad at that time for Saskatchewan,” he said. “It sounds as though things are much better now.”