Description for chart 6
Police-reported hate crimes, by census metropolitan area, 2011

The title of the graph is "Chart 6 Police-reported hate crimes, by census metropolitan area, 2011."
This is a bar clustered chart.
This is a horizontal bar graph, so categories are on the vertical axis and values on the horizontal axis.
There are in total 33 categories in the vertical axis. The horizontal axis starts at 0 and ends at 20 with ticks every 5 points.
There are 1 series in this graph.
The horizontal axis is "rate per 100,000 population."
The vertical axis is "Census metropolitan area."
The minimum value is 0 and it corresponds to "Saguenay and Saint John."
The maximum value is 17.9 and it corresponds to "Peterborough."
There is an average vertical line for Canada with a value of 3.9.

Data table for chart 6
  rate per 100,000 population
Saguenay 0.0
Saint John 0.0
Thunder Bay 0.8
St. John's 1.1
Edmonton 1.3
Trois-Rivières 1.3
Regina 2.3
Montréal 2.6
Windsor 2.6
Kelowna 2.7
Québec 2.8
Victoria 3.3
Winnipeg 3.5
Saskatoon 3.6
Kingston 3.7
St. Catharines–Niagara 4.3
Greater Sudbury 4.3
Moncton 4.3
London 4.4
Abbotsford–Mission 4.5
Sherbrooke 4.7
Gatineau2 4.8
Barrie 5.0
Toronto 5.1
Calgary 5.1
Brantford 5.3
Vancouver 5.9
Halifax 5.9
Guelph 6.3
Kitchener–Cambridge–Waterloo 7.7
Ottawa1 8.7
Hamilton 15.9
Peterborough 17.9
Ottawa refers to the Ontario part of the Ottawa–Gatineau CMA.
Gatineau refers to the Quebec part of the Ottawa–Gatineau CMA.
Note(s):
A census metropolitan area (CMA) consists of one or more neighbouring municipalities situated around a major urban core. A CMA must have a total population of at least 100,000 of which 50,000 or more live in the urban core. To be included in the CMA, other adjacent municipalities must have a high degree of integration with the central urban core, as measured by commuting flows derived from census data. A CMA typically comprises more than one police service. CMA populations have been adjusted to follow policing boundaries. The Oshawa CMA is excluded from this chart due to the incongruity between the police service jurisdictional boundaries and the CMA boundaries. In 2011, coverage for each CMA was virtually 100%, with the exception of Saskatoon (99%), Brantford (95%), Windsor (92%), Toronto (91%), Hamilton (73%), and Barrie (70%).
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, Incident-based Uniform Crime Reporting Survey.
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