A designated place (DPL) is a type of community or settlement identified by Statistics Canada that does not meet the criteria used to define municipalities or population centres. DPLs are delineated every 5 years for the Canadian census as the statistical counterparts of incorporated places such as cities, towns, and villages.[1]
Though lacking separate municipal government, DPLs otherwise physically resemble incorporated places. They are created by provincial or territorial governments for the purpose of providing data for settled concentrated populations that are identifiable by name but are not legally incorporated under the laws of the province/territory in which they are located.[1] The boundaries of a DPL therefore have no legal status, and not all unincorporated communities are necessarily granted DPL status.
Some designated places may have a quasi-governmental status, such as a local services board in Ontario or an organized hamlet in Saskatchewan. Others may be formerly unincorporated settlements or formerly independent municipalities that have been merged into larger governments, and have retained DPL status in order to ensure statistical continuity with past censuses.
DPLs are similar to the function of census-designated places in the United States, but are defined differently. One significant difference is that Statistics Canada applies the designation to much smaller communities than does the United States Census Bureau.
Statistics Canada indexes designated places numerically, with each designated place referred to by a unique six-digit code, the first two digits of which are the Standard Geographical Classification code for the province or territory in which the place is located, an example being 590066 for Shawnigan Lake in British Columbia.[2]
As of the 2016 census, Statistics Canada requires small communities or settlements to meet the following criteria in order to become a designated place:[1]
In 2006, the criteria required for a community to be defined as a designated place included:[3][4]
The status of designated place was created for the first time in the Canada 1996 Census.[4] Prior to 1996, such areas were only counted as regular enumeration areas within the applicable census divisions, and no special aggregation of figures was published.[4]
The provinces and territories of Canada can also have their own designated place types. The following are the designated place types as recorded in the 2016 census. (There were no designated places in Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories, and Nunavut for the 2016 census.)[1][5]
Designated place type[1] | Province/territory |
---|---|
CFA — Class IV area | Nova Scotia |
DMU — Dissolved municipality | Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta |
DPL — Designated place | Newfoundland and Labrador |
IRI — Indian reserve / Réserve indienne | British Columbia |
IST — Island trust | British Columbia |
LNC — Localité non constituée | Quebec |
LSB — Local service board | Ontario |
LSD — Local service district / District de services locaux | New Brunswick |
LUD — Local urban district | Manitoba |
MDI — Municipalité dissoute | Quebec |
MDP — Municipal defined places | Ontario |
MET — Métis settlement | Alberta |
NCM — Northern community | Manitoba |
NVL — Nisga'a village | British Columbia |
NS — Northern settlement | Saskatchewan |
OHM — Organized hamlet | Saskatchewan |
RPC — Retired population centre / Centre de population retiré | Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan, British Columbia |
SE — Aboriginal settlement | Yukon |
UNP — Unincorporated place | Alberta, British Columbia |
UUC — Unincorporated urban centre | Manitoba |
In the 2021 Census of Population, there were 1,685 designated places in Canada, an increase from 1,629 in the 2016 Census of Population.[6] Designated places are present in nine provinces and two territories.[6] Only Prince Edward Island and the Northwest Territories were without designated places in 2021.[6]
There were no designated places in the Northwest Territories in 2021.[6]
In the 2021 census, Nunavut had one designated place,[6] an increase from none in 2016.[5]
Name[7] | Type[8] | 2021 Census of Population[7] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population (2021) |
Population (2016) |
Change (%) |
Land area (km2) |
Population density (per km2) | ||
Kugluktuk | Retired population centre | 956 | 1,057 | −9.6% | 0.34 | 2,811.8/km2 |
There were no designated places in Prince Edward Island in 2021.[6]
In the 2021 census, Yukon had two designated places,[6] an increase from one in 2016.[5]
Name[9] | Type[10] | 2021 Census of Population[9] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population (2021) |
Population (2016) |
Change (%) |
Land area (km2) |
Population density (per km2) | ||
Carmacks Landing Settlement | Aboriginal settlement | 206 | 168 | +22.6% | 2.41 | 85.5/km2 |
Two Mile and Two and One-Half Mile Village | Interim protected land | 162 | 188 | −13.8% | 1.24 | 130.6/km2 |