Correctional services statistics

Correctional services Statistics

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Correctional services statistics: Interactive dashboard

Correctional services statistics: Interactive dashboard

The Correctional services statistics: Interactive dashboard provides an overview of correctional services programs in Canada. The dashboard features statistics on average daily counts, community and custodial admissions and the characteristics of adults and youth in the correctional system.

Crime and justice statistics

Crime and justice statistics

Crime and justice statistics provides an overview of the information on the subject of Crime and justice at Statistics Canada.

Adult and youth correctional statistics

Adult and youth correctional statistics in Canada, 2018/2019

Adult and youth correctional statistics in Canada, 2020/2021 provides an overview of adult and youth correctional services in Canada in 2020/2021.

Quarterly Survey of Financial Statements (QSFS): Weighted Asset Response Rate - Q2 2018 to Q2 2019

Weighted Asset Response Rate
Table summary
This table displays the results of Weighted Asset Response Rate. The information is grouped by Release date (appearing as row headers), 2018 Q2, Q3 and Q4, and 2019 Q1 and Q2 calculated using percentage units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Release date 2018 2019
Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2
quarterly (percentage)
August 23, 2019 88.0 85.5 83.5 81.9 65.2
May 24, 2019 88.0 85.5 83.5 67.5 ..
February 26, 2019 77.2 72.1 60.0 .. ..
November 22, 2018 78.5 64.7 .. .. ..
August 23, 2018 70.9 .. .. .. ..
.. not available for a specific reference period
Source: Quarterly Survey of Financial Statements (2501)

Statement outlining results, risks and significant changes in operations, personnel and program

A) Introduction

Statistics Canada's mandate

Statistics Canada ("the agency") is a member of the Innovation, Science and Economic Development portfolio.

Statistics Canada's role is to ensure that Canadians have access to a trusted source of statistics on Canada that meets their highest priority needs.

The agency's mandate derives primarily from the Statistics Act. The Act requires that the agency collects, compiles, analyzes and publishes statistical information on the economic, social, and general conditions of the country and its people. It also requires that Statistics Canada conduct the census of population and the census of agriculture every fifth year, and protects the confidentiality of the information with which it is entrusted.

Statistics Canada also has a mandate to co-ordinate and lead the national statistical system. The agency is considered a leader, among statistical agencies around the world, in co–ordinating statistical activities to reduce duplication and reporting burden.

More information on Statistics Canada's mandate, roles, responsibilities and programs can be found in the 2019–2020 Main Estimates and in the Statistics Canada 2019–2020 Departmental Plan.

The Quarterly Financial Report:

  • should be read in conjunction with the 2019–2020 Main Estimates;
  • has been prepared by management, as required by Section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act, and in the form and manner prescribed by Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat;
  • has not been subject to an external audit or review.

Statistics Canada has the authority to collect and spend revenue from other federal government departments and agencies, as well as from external clients, for statistical services and products.

Basis of presentation

This quarterly report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting. The accompanying Statement of Authorities includes the agency's spending authorities granted by Parliament and those used by the agency consistent with the Main Estimates for the 2019–2020 fiscal year. This quarterly report has been prepared using a special purpose financial reporting framework designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities.

The authority of Parliament is required before moneys can be spent by the Government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.

The agency uses the full accrual method of accounting to prepare and present its annual departmental financial statements that are part of the departmental results reporting process. However, the spending authorities voted by Parliament remain on an expenditure basis.

B) Highlights of fiscal quarter and fiscal year-to-date results

This section highlights the significant items that contributed to the net increase in resources available for the year, as well as actual expenditures for the quarter ended June 30.

Comparison of gross budgetary authorities and expenditures as of June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, in thousands of dollars
Description for Chart 1: Comparison of gross budgetary authorities and expenditures as of June 30, 2018, and June 30, 2019, in thousands of dollars

This bar graph shows Statistics Canada's budgetary authorities and expenditures, in thousands of dollars, as of June 30, 2018 and 2019:

  • As at June 30, 2018
    • Net budgetary authorities: $478,419
    • Vote netting authority: $120,000
    • Total authority: $598,419
    • Net expenditures for the period ending June 30: $129,286
    • Year-to-date revenues spent from vote netting authority for the period ending June 30: $17,347
    • Total expenditures: $146,633
  • As at June 30, 2019
    • Net budgetary authorities: $502,199
    • Vote netting authority: $120,000
    • Total authority: $622,199
    • Net expenditures for the period ending June 30: $139,487
    • Year-to-date revenues spent from vote netting authority for the period ending June 30: $14,623
    • Total expenditures: $154,110

Chart 1 outlines the gross budgetary authorities, which represent the resources available for use for the year as of June 30.

Significant changes to authorities

Total authorities available for 2019–2020 have increased by $23.8 million, or 4.0%, from the previous year, from $598.4 million to $622.2 million (Chart 1). This net increase is mostly the result of the following:

  • An increase of $22.4 million for the 2021 Census of Population program and $8.4 million for the 2021 Census of Agriculture program for new cyclical funding received to cover planning and developmental activities;
  • An increase of $6.3 million for Workload Migration, an initiative approved in 2018–2019 which will migrate the information technology infrastructure to the cloud;
  • An increase of $3.2 million for the Survey of Financial Security and Annual Household Wealth Tables;
  • An increase of $3.0 million for the Renewing and Modernizing Statistics Canada initiative approved in 2018–2019 which will change the way the federal government collects, uses and shares data while ensuring the privacy of Canadians remains protected;
  • A decrease of $6.2 million for the 2016 Census of Population program and $2.2 million for the 2016 Census of Agriculture program due to the cyclical nature of funding that is winding down;
  • A decrease of $6.0 million for the finalisation of retro pay for collective agreements;
  • A decrease of $5.8 million for the Statistical Survey Operations pay equity settlement.

The variance is also explained by the reception of authorities at different quarters throughout the year.

In addition to the appropriations allocated to the agency through the Main Estimates, Statistics Canada also has vote net authority within Vote 1, which entitles the agency to spend revenues collected from other federal government departments, agencies, and external clients to provide statistical services. The vote netting authority is stable at $120 million when comparing the first quarter of fiscal years 2018–2019 and 2019–2020.

Significant changes to expenditures

Year-to-date net expenditures recorded to the end of the first quarter increased by $10.2 million, or 7.9% from the previous year, from $129.3 million to $139.5 million (see Table A: Variation in Departmental Expenditures by Standard Object).

Statistics Canada spent approximately 28% of its authorities by the end of the first quarter, compared with 27% in the same quarter of 2018–2019.

Table A: Variation in Departmental Expenditures by Standard Object (unaudited)
Table summary: This table displays the variance of departmental expenditures by standard object between fiscal 2017-2018 and 2018-2019. The variance is calculated for year to date expenditures as at the end of the first quarter. The row headers provide information by standard object. The column headers provide information in thousands of dollars and percentage variance for the year to date variation.
Departmental Expenditures Variation by Standard Object: Q1 year-to-date variation between fiscal year 2018–2019 and 2019–2020
$'000 %
Note: Explanations are provided for variances of more than $1 million.
(01) Personnel 7,819 6.0
(02) Transportation and communications 949 40.1
(03) Information 258 27.7
(04) Professional and special services 598 12.1
(05) Rentals 875 19.6
(06) Repair and maintenance -31 -24.2
(07) Utilities, materials and supplies -54 -28.7
(08) Acquisition of land, buildings and works -7 -100.0
(09) Acquisition of machinery and equipment -2,025 -71.8
(10) Transfer payments - -
(12) Other subsidies and payments -905 -76.9
Total gross budgetary expenditures 7,477 5.1
Less revenues netted against expenditures:
Revenues -2,724 -15.7
Total net budgetary expenditures 10,201 7.9

Personnel: The increase is mainly due to the ratification of collective agreements and an overall increase in the agency's activities.

Acquisition of machinery and equipment: The decrease is mainly due to a temporary variance related to an invoice for which the cost of the service request has been reduced later in the fiscal year.

Revenues: The decrease is primarily the result of timing differences in the receipt of funds for scheduled key deliverables.

The variance is also explained by timing differences of payments in this period compared to last fiscal year.

C) Risks and uncertainties

Statistics Canada is currently expending significant effort in modernizing its business processes and tools, in order to maintain its relevance and maximize the value it provides to Canadians. As a foundation piece for some of these efforts, the agency is working in collaboration with Shared Services Canada and Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, Office of the Chief Information Officer, to ensure the agency has access to adequate IT services and support to attain its modernization objectives and successfully transition its infrastructure to the cloud. Activities and related costs are projected based on various assumptions that can change, depending on the nature and degree of work required to accomplish the initiatives. Risks and uncertainties are being mitigated by the agency's strong financial planning management practices and business architecture.

D) Significant changes to operations, personnel and programs

There were no major changes to the departmental operations during this quarter. Minor changes in program activities with financial implications include:

  • The Census program is ramping down operations from the 2016 Census and is in a more advanced planning and testing phase for the 2021 Census. As such, expenditures for this program are increasing.
  • Budget 2018 announced funding for new initiatives. Expenditures related to these new initiatives will ramp up throughout the fiscal year.

Approval by senior officials

Approved by:

Anil Arora, Chief Statistician
Kathleen Mitchell, Acting Chief Financial Officer
Ottawa, Ontario
Signed on: August 21, 2019

Appendix

Statement of Authorities (unaudited)
Table summary: This table displays the departmental authorities for the fiscal years 2019–2020 and 2018–2019. The row headers provide information by type of authority, Vote 105 – Net operating expenditures, Statutory authority and Total Budgetary authorities. The column headers provide information in thousands of dollars for Total available for use for the year ending March 31; used during the quarter ended June 30; and year to date used at quarter-end.
  Fiscal year 2019–2020 Fiscal year 2018–2019
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2020Tablenote 1 Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2019 Year-to-date used at quarter-end Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2019Tablenote 1 Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2018 Year-to-date used at quarter-end
in thousands of dollars
Tablenote 1

Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament at quarter-end.

Return to tablenote 1 referrer

Vote 1 — Net operating expenditures 430,647 121,622 121,622 409,564 113,579 113,579
Statutory authority — Contribution to employee benefit plans 71,552 17,865 17,865 68,855 15,707 15,707
Total budgetary authorities 502,199 139,487 139,487 478,419 129,286 129,286
Departmental budgetary expenditures by Standard Object (unaudited)
Table summary: This table displays the departmental expenditures by standard object for the fiscal years 2019–2020 and 2018–2019. The row headers provide information by standard object for expenditures and revenues. The column headers provide information in thousands of dollars for planned expenditures for the year ending March 31; expended during the quarter ended June 30; and year to date used at quarter-end.
  Fiscal year 2019–2020 Fiscal year 2018–2019
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2020 Expended during the quarter ended June 30, 2019 Year-to-date used at quarter-end Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2019 Expended during the quarter ended June 30, 2018 Year-to-date used at quarter-end
in thousands of dollars
Expenditures:
(01) Personnel 540,787 137,419 137,419 512,332 129,600 129,600
(02) Transportation and communications 15,413 3,318 3,318 16,557 2,369 2,369
(03) Information 7,559 1,191 1,191 7,198 933 933
(04) Professional and special services 33,048 5,539 5,539 29,945 4,941 4,941
(05) Rentals 10,676 5,343 5,343 12,207 4,468 4,468
(06) Repair and maintenance 560 97 97 1,241 128 128
(07) Utilities, materials and supplies 1,845 134 134 2,589 188 188
(08) Acquisition of land, buildings and works 516 - - 172 7 7
(09) Acquisition of machinery and equipment 11,635 797 797 10,419 2,822 2,822
(10) Transfer payments 100 - - 100 - -
(12) Other subsidies and payments 60 272 272 5,659 1,177 1,177
Total gross budgetary expenditures 622,199 154,110 154,110 598,419 146,633 146,633
Less revenues netted against expenditures:
Revenues 120,000 14,623 14,623 120,000 17,347 17,347
Total revenues netted against expenditures 120,000 14,623 14,623 120,000 17,347 17,347
Total net budgetary expenditures 502,199 139,487 139,487 478,419 129,286 129,286

Retail Trade Survey (Monthly): CVs for Total sales by geography - June 2019

CVs for Total sales by geography - June 2019
Table summary
This table displays the results of Annual Retail Trade Survey: CVs for Total sales by geography - June 2019. The information is grouped by Geography (appearing as row headers), Month and Percent (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201906
Percent
Canada 0.6
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.4
Prince Edward Island 0.8
Nova Scotia 1.5
New Brunswick 1.7
Quebec 1.1
Ontario 1.3
Manitoba 1.1
Saskatchewan 1.6
Alberta 0.8
British Columbia 1.2
Yukon Territory 1.1
Northwest Territories 0.1
Nunavut 1.1

Canadian Vital Statistics Deaths Database (CVSD) linked to Discharge Abstract Database (DAD) National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS) and Ontario Mental Health Reporting System (OMHRS)

Canadian Vital Statistics Deaths Database (2008-2017) linked to Discharge Abstract Database (2004/05-2017/18), National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (2004/05-2017/18), and Ontario Mental Health Reporting System (2006/07-2017/18)

The objective of this project was to create a linked dataset that can be used to examine a national cohort (save Quebec) of persons who died (for any age group of interest) in relation to the characteristics and intensity of end-of-life care and to identify patient, disease and healthcare factors associated with variations in care intensity and location of death.

To achieve this objective, death records in the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database (CVSD) from 2008 to 2017 were linked to patient records in the Discharge Abstract Database (DAD) and the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS) from 2004/2005 to 2017/2018 and the Ontario Mental Health Reporting System (OMHRS) from 2006/2007 to 2017/2018. Statistics Canada does not have Quebec hospitalization data as part of its data holdings and thus hospitalizations that occurred in the province of Quebec are not included in the linked datasets. Statistics Canada also does not have death data for decedents in the Yukon Territories for death year 2017.

The Data

Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database

The Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database (CVSD) is a census of all deaths occurring in Canada each year. Deaths are reported by the provincial and territorial Vital Statistics Registries to Statistics Canada; the information provided includes demographic and cause of death information. Cause-of-death information is coded using the version of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) in effect at the time of death. Records eligible for record linkage were deaths that occurred from January 1, 2008 through December 31, 2017, excluding Yukon for 2017.

In addition to the variables from the CVSD, the file includes variables from the Postal Code Conversion File+ (PCCF+) for each linked record. The PCCF+ was generated using the CVSD variable DEA_Q150 (usual residence of the deceased: postal code).

Discharge Abstract Database

The Discharge Abstract Database (DAD) includes administrative, clinical and demographic information on hospital discharges (including in-hospital deaths, sign-outs and transfers) from all provinces and territories, except Quebec. Over time, the DAD has also been used to capture data on day surgery, long-term care, rehabilitation and other types of care. DAD data for fiscal years 2004/2005 to 2017/2018 were included in the linkage.

In the DAD, jurisdiction-specific instructions for collection of data elements evolve over time. Collection of each data element may be mandatory, mandatory if applicable, optional or not applicable. Collection requirements can vary by jurisdiction and by data year. Researchers will find the listings of DAD data elements under the heading “Data Elements” at the DAD Metadata website. The documents on the website include information on mandatory versus optional collection status for each data element by jurisdiction, which is key to understanding coverage of data elements in the DAD.

National Ambulatory Care Reporting System

The National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS) contains data for hospital-based and community-based ambulatory care including day surgery, outpatient and community-based clinics, and emergency departments. Client visit data are collected at time of service in participating facilities from several jurisdictions. NACRS data for fiscal years 2004/2005 to 2017/2018 were included in the linkage.

For details on the provincial data coverage, please refer to the Data Quality Documentation, available under the “Data Quality” section of the NACRS Metadata website.

In NACRS, jurisdiction-specific instructions for collection of data elements evolve over time. Similar to DAD, collection of each data element may be mandatory, mandatory if applicable, optional or not applicable. Collection requirements can vary by jurisdiction and by data year.

Researchers will find the listings of NACRS data elements under the “Data Elements” section of the NACRS Metadata website. The documents on the website include information on mandatory versus optional collection status for each data element by jurisdiction, which is key to understanding coverage of data elements in NACRS.

Ontario Mental Health Reporting System

The Ontario Mental Health Reporting System (OMHRS) contains data for all individuals receiving adult mental health services in Ontario, in addition to some individuals receiving services in youth inpatient beds and selected facilities in other provinces starting in fiscal year 2006/07. Information regarding mental and physical health, social supports and service use, care planning, outcome measurement, quality improvement, and case-mix funding applications are all part of the OMHRS. For this record linkage, the OMHRS files covering the fiscal years from 2006/07 to 2017/18 were linked to the CVSD. Researchers will find the listings of OMHRS data elements under the heading Data elements at the OMHRS Metadata website.

File structure, layout

A single cohort file was produced of all the individual CVSD records between 2008 through 2017, including those that linked and those that did not link to the DAD, NACRS or OMHRS. A random, unique identifier (variable name: STC_ID) was generated for each record on the CVSD. Each record with a valid postal code has additional information added from the PCCF+. Names and other personal identifiers have been removed from the file.

Separate output files were created for each year of the DAD and for each year of the NACRS. A single cumulative file was created for OMHRS. Only records that linked to the CVSD are included in these outcome files. Since the DAD, NACRS and OMHRS are transactional files, the STC_ID from the CVSD cohort file was included on all records to identify those individuals with multiple transactions within a dataset and across datasets. Merging the STC_ID across datasets (i.e. CVSD to DAD, NACRS and OMHRS) will allow the larger picture of health interventions for an individual to be analysed.

Researchers can choose to use the outcome files as event-based (each row of data represents a hospitalization) or person-based (each row of data represents an individual). In order to use a file as a person-based file, the researcher must transform the data to include all hospital information for one person as one record (one row on the data file).

Restrictions

The linked data should not be used to produce official mortality statistics. Official counts and rates of mortality are available on the Statistics Canada website or can be generated by requesting use of the Canadian Vital Statistics Death Database which is accessible through the RDC or by requesting a custom tabulation from Statistics Canada (statcan.hd-ds.statcan@statcan.gc.ca).

The linked data cannot be used to produce statistics related to institutions and any outputs at the institution level will be restricted as per the vetting rules.

Institution information can be used as a method to generate other information (e.g., the postal code of the institution can be used to determine distance to a care facility) but cannot be used as an outcome of interest.

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Quarterly survey of Financial Statements - Trust and Mortgage Companies (F9)

Reporting entity

1. Indicate which type of corporation this report covers.

  1. A single corporation
  2. Part of a corporation
  3. A consolidated family of corporations
  4. Other (specify)

2. Is the reporting entity part of a Canadian consolidation?

  1. Yes
  2. No

3. Does this reporting entity have investments in partnerships or joint ventures?

  1. Yes
  2. No

4. Indicate the accounting standard used to complete this questionnaire.

  1. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
  2. Accounting Standards for Private Enterprises (ASPE)
  3. United States Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (U.S. GAAP)
  4. Other (specify)

5. Indicate the currency used to complete this survey.

  1. Canadian dollars
  2. U.S. dollars

6. What are the start and end dates of this enterprise's reporting period for the quarter ending:

  • From: YYYY-MM-DD to YYYY-MM-DD

Assets

7. Report your assets

  1. Cash and deposits - Canadian currency
  2. Cash and deposits - foreign currency
  3. Items in transit (net)
  4. Accounts receivable
  5. Allowance for credit losses on receivables
  6. Finance leases and lease contracts
  7. Investments in and claims on parent, subsidiaries and affiliates - shares and equity
    1. In Canada
    2. Outside Canada
  8. Investments in and claims on parent, subsidiaries and affiliates - accumulated earnings
    1. In Canada
    2. Outside Canada
  9. Investments in and claims on parent, subsidiaries and affiliates - debt claims on affiliates
    1. In Canada
    2. Outside Canada
  10. Canadian investments in non-affiliates - debt securities issued by the Government of Canada
    1. Term-to-maturity of less than one year
    2. Term-to-maturity of one year or more
  11. Canadian investments in non-affiliates - debt securities issued by provincial and municipal governments
    1. Term-to-maturity of less than one year
    2. Term-to-maturity of one year or more
  12. Canadian investments in non-affiliates - debt securities issued by corporations, trusts or others
    1. Term-to-maturity of less than one year
    2. Term-to-maturity of one year or more
  13. Canadian investments in non-affiliates - corporate shares, fund or trust units and other equity
    1. Publicly traded
    2. Other equity
  14. Canadian investments in non-affiliates - other investments
  15. Foreign investments in non-affiliates - debt securities
    1. Term-to-maturity of less than one year
    2. Term-to-maturity of one year or more
  16. Foreign investments in non-affiliates - other investments
  17. Derivative assets
  18. Reverse repurchase agreements
  19. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates - secured by property in
    1. Residential - to individuals and unincorporated businesses
    2. Residential - to corporations
    3. Residential - to others
    4. Non-residential - to individuals and unincorporated businesses
    5. Non-residential - to corporations
    6. Non-residential - to others
  20. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates - secured by property outside Canada
  21. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates - accumulated allowance for credit losses
  22. Home equity lines of credit
  23. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates
    1. To individuals and unincorporated businesses - credit cards
    2. To individuals and unincorporated businesses - lines of credit
    3. To individuals and unincorporated businesses - other loans
    4. To corporations
    5. To others
  24. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates - accumulated allowance for credit losses
  25. Fixed assets
    1. Depreciable assets and land
    2. Investment properties
    3. Accumulated depreciation
  26. Customers' liability under acceptances
  27. Intangible assets
    1. Goodwill
    2. Other intangible assets
    3. Accumulated amortization
  28. Accrued pension asset
  29. Deferred income tax asset
  30. All other assets
  31. Other allowances for credit losses

Total Assets

Liabilities and equity

Liabilities

8. Report your liabilities

  1. Deposit liabilities - tax-sheltered deposits
    1. RRSP
    2. Other tax-sheltered deposits
  2. Deposit liabilities - deposits of individuals and unincorporated businesses
    1. Canadian currency
    2. Foreign currency
  3. Deposit liabilities - deposits of corporations resident in Canada
    1. Canadian currency
    2. Foreign currency
  4. Deposit liabilities - Deposits of non-resident
  5. Deposit liabilities - Other deposits
  6. Accounts payable
  7. Income taxes payable
  8. Amounts owing to affiliates
    1. In Canada
    2. Outside Canada
  9. Borrowing from non-affiliates - mortgage loans
    1. Residential
    2. Non-residential
  10. Borrowing from non-affiliates non-mortgage loans and overdrafts
    1. From lenders in Canada - banks
    2. From lenders in Canada - credit unions
    3. From lenders in Canada - other lenders in Canada
    4. From lenders outside Canada
  11. Borrowing from non-affiliates - debt securities
    1. Term-to-maturity of less than one year
    2. Term-to-maturity of one year or more
  12. Borrowing from non-affiliates - other borrowings
  13. Equity securities classified as liabilities
  14. Derivative liabilities
  15. Obligations related to repurchase agreements
  16. Accrued pension liability
  17. Non-pension post retirement benefits
  18. Peferred income tax liability
  19. Bankers' acceptances
  20. All other liabilities

Total Liabilities

Equity

9. Report your equity

  1. Share capital
    1. Preferred
    2. Common
  2. Contributed surplus
  3. Accumulated other comprehensive income
  4. Non-controlling interest
  5. Retained earnings
    1. Opening balance
    2. Net income (loss) for the current period
    3. Transfers from (to) share capital
    4. All other additions (deductions)
      • Specify all major items within other additions (deductions)
  6. Dividends declared
    1. Cash - preferred shares
    2. Cash - common shares
    3. Other dividends

Closing balance

Total equity

Total liability and total equity

Income statement

Total revenue

10. What period does this income statement cover?

  • From: YYYY-MM-DD to YYYY-MM-DD

11. Report your revenue.

  1. Commissions and fees
    1. From individuals and unincorporated businesses
    2. From others
  2. Interest revenue from Canadian sources
    1. Debt securities
    2. Debt claims on affiliates
    3. Mortgages
    4. Consumer loans
    5. Finance leases
    6. Other interest revenue
  3. Interest revenue from foreign sources
  4. Dividends
    1. From Canadian corporations
    2. From foreign corporations
  5. Rental revenue
  6. Gains and losses - fair value adjustments
    1. Realized
    2. Unrealized
  7. Gains and losses - foreign exchange
    1. Realized
    2. Unrealized
  8. All other revenues

Specify all major items within other revenues

Total revenue

Expenses

12. Report your expenses.

  1. Wages and salaries
  2. Employer portion of employee benefits
  3. Pension expense
    1. Current service cost
    2. Other pension expenses
  4. Stock options expense
  5. Indirect taxes
  6. Depreciation and amortization
    1. Depreciation
    2. Amortization - intangible assets
    3. Amortization - other
  7. Software and research development
  8. Impairments
    1. Credit losses on receivables
    2. Other impairments
  9. Expected credit Provisions for losses on lease contracts and loans
  10. Interest expense
    1. Deposits
    2. Debt securities
    3. Amounts owing to affiliates
    4. Mortgages
    5. Other interest expenses
  11. Dividends paid on equity securities classified as liabilities
  12. Charitable donations
  13. All other expenses

Specify all major items within other expenses

Total expenses

Income

13. Report your income

  1. Income (loss) before income taxes
  2. Current income tax expense
  3. Deferred income tax expense
  4. Income (loss) after income taxes
  5. Equity in unconsolidated affiliates
  6. Net income (loss)
    1. Attributable to non-controlling interest
    2. Attributable to equity shareholders
  7. Other comprehensive income
    1. Items that will not be reclassified to net earnings
    2. Items that may be reclassified subsequently to net earnings
    3. Reclassification of realized (gains) losses to net earnings
    4. Income taxes
  8. Comprehensive income
    1. Attributable to non-controlling interest
    2. Attributable to equity shareholders

Disclosure of selected accounts

14. Report other disclosures

  1. Equity method dividends
    1. Canadian dividends
    2. Foreign dividends
  2. Deposit liabilities (by type of account)
    1. Demand or savings deposits - chequing
    2. Demand or savings deposits - non-chequing
    3. Term deposits
    4. Total deposit liabilities (by type of account)
  3. Securitized assets - recognized
    1. Credit cards
    2. Mortgages
    3. Other assets
  4. Securitized assets - unrecognized
    1. Credit cards
    2. Mortgages
    3. Other assets
  5. Capitalized expenses for software, research and development

15. Allocate the changes to selected assets and liabilities.

  1. Investments in and claims on parent, subsidiaries and affiliates
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  2. Canadian and foreign investments in non-affiliates - debt securities
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  3. Canadian and foreign investments in non-affiliates - corporate shares, funds or trust units and other equity
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  4. Canadian and foreign investments in non-affiliates - other investments in non-affiliates
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  5. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  6. Home Equity lines of credit
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  7. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  8. Fixed assets - depreciable assets and land
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  9. Fixed assets - investment properties
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  10. Intangible assets
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  11. Other assets
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  12. Debt liability securities owing
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  13. Other liabilities
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses
  14. Derivatives (assets and liabilities)
    1. Initial balance
    2. Net (purchases-sales or issuances-repayments and other changes)
    3. Fair value adjustments and foreign exchange valuation ajustments
    4. Other adjustments
      • Closing balance
    5. Realized gains and losses

16. Distribute the selected balance sheet items by province

  1. Canadian investments in non-affiliates by province - debt securities issued by provincial and municipal governments for term-to-maturity of less than one year
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  2. Canadian investments in non-affiliates by province - debt securities issued by provincial and municipal governments for term-to-maturity of one year or more
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  3. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates by province — residential mortgages
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  4. Mortgage loans to non-affiliates by province - non-residential mortgages
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  5. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates to individuals and unincorporated businesses by province - credit cards
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  6. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates to individuals and unincorporated businesses by province - lines of credit
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  7. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates to individuals and unincorporated businesses by province - other loans
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  8. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates to corporations by province
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  9. Non-mortgage loans to non-affiliates to others by province
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  10. Deposit liabilities (by type of deposit) by province - tax-sheltered deposits
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  11. Deposit liabilities (by depositor) by province - other deposits of individuals
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  12. Deposit liabilities (by type of account) by province - demand or savings deposits in chequing
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  13. Deposit liabilities (by type of account) by province - demand or savings deposits in non-chequing
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada
  14. Deposit liabilities (by type of account) by province - term deposits
    1. Newfoundland and Labrador
    2. Prince Edward Island
    3. Nova Scotia
    4. New Brunswick
    5. Quebec
    6. Ontario
    7. Manitoba
    8. Saskatchewan
    9. Alberta
    10. British Columbia
    11. Yukon
    12. Northwest Territories
    13. Nunavut
    14. Outside Canada

Catalogue no. 37260001
Issue no. 2022001

Version 2.1

Data Exploration and Integration Lab (DEIL)
Centre for Special Business Projects (CSBP)

Release date: November 28, 2022

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

A first version of the database was realized with funding by Indigenous Services Canada (ISC) and Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada (CIRNAC). This updated version, with inclusion of Official Language Minority Schools, was realized with funding from Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS) and consultation from Canadian Heritage (PCH). Valuable feedback and comments were provided by these organizations and they are gratefully acknowledged.

1. Overview

For the purpose of exploring open data for official statistics and to support geospatial research across various domains, the Data Exploration and Integration Lab (DEIL) undertook a project to create an accessible and harmonized database of educational facilities released as open data by various levels of government within Canada.Footnote 1 This document details the process of collecting, compiling, and standardizing the individual datasets of educational facilities that were used to create an update to the second version of the Open Database of Educational Facilities (ODEF), which is made available under the Open Government Licence – Canada.

In its current version (version 2.1), the ODEF contains 18,982 individual records. For this update to the database, information on public Official Language Minority Schools (OLMS) was added to the existing ODEF version 2.0. An OLMS is defined as an English-speaking school in Quebec, or a French-speaking school outside of Quebec. 967 existing records were identified as an OLMS and 38 new records were added for version 2.1. As the OLMS data were collected more recently than the ODEF data, some facilities had addresses updated to reflect changes. Additionally, latitude and longitude coordinates of OLMS facilities were updated for the matched ODEF records with missing data. CMA information was added with a spatial join using the SF packageFootnote 2 in R for all records with available coordinate data to be consistent with the OLMS. The database is expected to be updated periodically as new open datasets become available. The ODEF is provided as a compressed comma separated values (CSV) file.

This dataset is one of several datasets created as part of the Linkable Open Data Environment (LODE). The LODE is an initiative that aims at enhancing the use and harmonization of open data from authoritative sources by providing a collection of datasets released under a single licence, as well as open-source code to link these datasets together. Access to the LODE datasets and code are available through the Statistics Canada website and can be found at The Linkable Open Data Environment.

2. Data sources

Multiple data sources were used to create the ODEF. The data providers, which include multiple levels of government, are provided in the Supplementary material as Table 1, including attribution to each data sources as per the licence requirements. Where applicable, licence versions are also shown. For further information on the individual licences, users should consult directly with the information provided on the open data portals of the various data providers. In addition to openly licensed databases, the ODEF also includes a set of publicly available listings of educational facilities for which permission to include was granted by the data providers.

With the inclusion of the OLMS variable for Version 2.1 of the ODEF, all sources for OLMS information are included in Table 2 in the Supplemental material. For each province and territory where multiple data sources on OLMS status were found, one primary data source was chosen that had the greatest number of records and useful attributes such as grade levels and address information.

In addition to the primary sources listed in Table 2, validation was done by comparing lists to the webpages of official minority language school boards. This led to the addition of a small number of facilities that had been missing from the original data sources. The supplementary sources used are listed in Table 3 in the Supplemental material.

3. Reference period

The supplementary material lists either the update frequency or the date each underlying dataset was last updated by the provider (when known), as well as the date each dataset used in the ODEF was downloaded or provided by the data owner. Data were gathered between August 2019 and March 2021 for the ODEF data, and from November 2021 to March 2022 for the OLMS status. Users are cautioned that the download date should not be used to indicate the reference period of the data. If specific information concerning the reference period of data is required, users should contact the appropriate data providers.

4. Target population

An education facility is a physical site at which the primary activity is imparting instruction to a body of students or participants. All education facilities in Canada are in scope for this dataset. These include all levels of education, private and public schools with no exclusions for funding arrangement, operator type, subject area, denomination, student type, location, etc.

As a result of this definition, the database covers facilities such as early childhood education, kindergarten, elementary, secondary, and post-secondary institutions, and specific vocational training centres (such as hairdressing schools). The database does not include virtual educational institutions.

For the OLMS status the target population is restricted to public K-12 official language minority schools. This may include both traditional schools and alternative schools if they are controlled by official language minority school boards or authorities.

Only minimal editing of the original datasets was performed. As work on the experimental ODEF progresses, definitions and thresholds will evolve. Users are reminded that unedited data can be obtained directly from the open data portals or from the various data providers.

5. Compilation methodology

The primary processing component for the database comprised reformatting the source data to CSV format and mapping the original dataset attributes to standard variable (column) names. A data dictionary of the variables used is provided in section 6. Data dictionary. To compile the data into a single database, the following was done:

  • Concatenated address data were parsed and separated into their corresponding components (e.g. unit, street number and name, city name, etc.) using libpostal, a natural language processing solution for address parsing.
  • Deduplication using literal and fuzzy string matching. This was done in a conservative manner to avoid false positives (for more details, see Data standardization).

The original data files and fields were converted to standard formats and fields using the custom software OpenTabulate. A limited number of entries were manually edited when it was clear that the parsing had not been done correctly. An example is addresses with hyphenated numbers such as "1035-55 street nw", which may have been interpreted as having a civic number of "1035-55" and a street name of "street nw", rather than a civic number of 1035, and a street name of "55 street nw". While effort was made to ensure that the data is correct, it is possible that the scripts used to process and parse the addresses may unintentionally cause other, undetected, errors. Should any such errors be reported, they will be corrected in future versions of the ODEF.

In general, the data included in the ODEF is what is available from the original sources without imputation. The exception to this is the geocoding of entries missing coordinates, and the imputation of CSD names and ISCED levels, discussed below.

In version 2 of the ODEF, the unique identifier has been changed from an integer to a hash computed from the facility name, address, and source id (if available) of the record.

Geocoding

Records that did not include geocoordinates from the source were geocoded using the ESRI ArcGIS Online (AGOL) geocoder and the OpenStreetMap Nominatim geocoder. The AGOL geocoder returns coordinates, as well as a score and a geocoding type. Only records with a score above 90 and with address type indicating the coordinates were either an address, subaddress, point of interest, or intersection were retained for the final database. Records that could not be geocoded to the level of precision described above were then passed to the Nominatim geocoder. Schools were searched for using school names, city, and province, and were kept if the returned school name was a close match to the original school name. The Geo_Source column indicates if the coordinates of a record were provided by the source or if they were geocoded.

Imputation of ISCED levels

The original data sources use a variety of standards, classifications and nomenclature to describe the education level or grade range. The ODEF uses the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) to provide a standard definition of an education level. This required the conversion of a facility's grade range or education level to a corresponding ISCED level.

ISCED levels were derived from the grade range indicated by the data provider if available. Otherwise, education level was converted to a grade range, which was then mapped to ISCED levels. Entries in the original data that did not contain education level information were not assigned to ISCED levels and so these fields are blank in the ODEF.

Table 1 shows the direct mapping of ISCED levels from grade ranges and Table 2 shows the grade ranges in an education level by province and territory. It should be noted that the definition of "kindergarten" (K) as an education level label varies by providers as some of these schools support early childhood education. To avoid false positives, facilities that indicate support for pre-elementary students, as described by an education level string (not a grade range string), were not assigned values for the ISCED010 column. For example, Early Childcare Services in Alberta includes Kindergarten and may also include services for younger children, but was only mapped to ISCED020. Despite some of these facilities supporting childhood education, the notion of pre-elementary appears to vary between data providers and schools. This is shown in Table 2 with the assignment of "pre-elementary" to kindergarten when converted to a grade range.

Table 1: Data dictionary variables and their corresponding ISCED levels
Variable Name ISCED level Grade range
Early childhood education ISCED010 010 Pre-K
Kindergarten ISCED020 020 K
Elementary ISCED1 1 1-6
Junior secondary ISCED2 2 7-9
Senior secondary ISCED3 3 10-12
Post-secondary ISCED4+ 4+ -
Table 2: Education level conversion definition to grade ranges based on the province/territory
Province / Territory Pre-elementary / kindergarten Elementary / primary Junior high / middle Senior high
Newfoundland and Labrador,
Prince Edward Island,
Nova Scotia,
Alberta,
Northwest Territories,
Nunavut
K 1-6 7-9 10-12
New Brunswick K 1-5 6-8 9-12
Quebec K 1-6 7-11
Ontario K 1-8 9-12
Manitoba K 1-4 5-8 9-12
Saskatchewan K 1-5 6-9 10-12
British Columbia,
Yukon
K 1-7 8-12

Imputation of census subdivision (CSD) names

Census subdivision (CSD)Footnote 3 names were derived from geographic coordinates, namely latitude and longitude. These are placed into the corresponding CSDs by linking the coordinate points to the CSD polygons through a spatial join operation using the Python package GeoPandas.Footnote 4

Institution type provided in source datasets

The provided institution type (e.g., public, private, etc.) was used as stated in the source data set without further reinterpretation, reassignment or mapping to a uniform classification. In comparison with the use of ISCED to standardize education levels, there is no known standard for institution type. When the data source did not have a type column but the data source itself was for a particular type (e.g., a file of public schools or a file of Private schools), then the facility type was set manually.

Data standardization

Due to the different standards adopted in the original data, steps taken to standardize the data were liable to produce errors. The key principles of the methodology used were the avoidance of false positives and of significant alterations to the data. The methodology and limitations of each technique are described below. Trivial cleaning techniques, such as removal of whitespace characters and punctuation removal, are omitted from discussion.

Address Parsing

The libpostal address parser, an open-source natural language processing solution to parsing addresses, was used to split concatenated address strings into strings corresponding to address variables, such as street name and street number. Occasionally, addresses were split incorrectly due to unconventional formatting of the original address. While effort was made to identify and correct these entries in the final database, some incorrectly parsed entries may have remained undetected. Exceptions are entries with street numbers of the form of two numbers separated by a hyphen or space. Entries of this form usually indicate that the address parser incorrectly parsed a numbered street name (e.g., "123 100 ave" is parsed into the street number "123 100" and the street name "ave", or else that a unit has not been identified correctly (as in "3-100 main st"). Numbers of this form are automatically separated, where the right most number is prepended to the street name if the street name is a variant of the word "street" or "avenue."

For OLMS entries where only a P.O. box address was provided, these addresses were removed and replaced with the civic addresses, which were found through manual web searches.

Finally, a limited number of entries that were not parsed correctly were identified by manual inspection and corrected.

Removal of duplicates

The removal of duplicates was done using the Record Linkage Toolkit package in Python, where Levenshtein and Cosine distances were computed on name and address fields for facilities within the same CSD. Record pairs with string similarity metrics above 0.9 were flagged for inspection and removed if they were determined to be duplicates.

For OLMS entries, record pairs were manually inspected to determine whether the matches indicated true or false duplicates. Using web searches to compare names and addresses between the matched pairs and in some cases, ground-truthing with mapping sites, most record pairs were identified as false duplicates. In addition, several pairs were identified as belonging to the same school but covering different grade ranges – these were indicated separately. In the end, only entries that seemed to be clear duplicates (very similar names, addresses, and equal grade information) were chosen for removal, or facilities with exact matches on names and address information.

6. Data dictionary

This data dictionary below describes the variables of the ODEF.

Variable – Record ID

Name
Index
Format
String
Source
Internally generated during data processing.
Description
Unique record ID automatically generated during data processing.

Variable – Source ID

Name
Source_ID
Format
String
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
The record's unique ID as in the original data source, if available.

Variable – Facility Name

Name
Facility_Name
Format
String
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
Institution name.

Variable – Facility Type

Name
Facility_Type
Format
String
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
Institution type (e.g. public, private, governmental, etc.).

Variable – Authority Name

Name
Authority_Name
Format
String
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
Authority name.

Variable – Early Childhood Education

Name
ISCED010
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports early childhood education students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Kindergarten

Name
ISCED020
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports kindergarten students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Elementary

Name
ISCED1
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports elementary school students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Junior Secondary

Name
ISCED2
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports lower secondary students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Senior Secondary

Name
ISCED3
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports upper secondary students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Post-Secondary

Name
ISCED4Plus
Format
Boolean
Source
Provided as is from original data or imputed from grade range data.
Description
Supports post-secondary students as defined by the ISCED level in Table 1.

Variable – Official Language Minority School Designation

Name
OLMS_Status
Format
Boolean
Source
Matched records to a database of public K-12 official language minority schools.
Description
An official language minority school is an Anglophone school in Québec or a Francophone school in other provinces and territories. A value of 1 indicates the record is an OLMS.

Location Variables

Variable – Full Address

Name
Full_Addr
Format
String
Source
A combination of address components or provided as is.
Description
Full address of facility.

Variable – Unit Number

Name
Unit
Format
String
Source
Parsed from a full address string or provided as is.
Description
Civic unit or suite number.

Variable – Street Number

Name
Street_No
Format
String
Source
Parsed from a full address string or provided as is.
Description
Civic street number.

Variable – Street Name

Name
Street_Name
Format
String
Source
Parsed from a full address string or provided as is.
Description
Civic street name.

Variable – City

Name
City
Format
String
Source
Parsed from a full address string or provided as is.
Description
Municipality name.

Variable – Province/Territory

Name
Prov_Terr
Format
String
Source
Converted to two letter codes (internationally approved) after parsing from a full address string, or provided as is, or indicated by providers.
Description
Province or territory name.

Variable – Postal Code

Name
Postal_Code
Format
String
Source
Parsed from a full address string or provided as is.
Description
Postal Code.

Variable – Province Unique Identifier

Name
PRUID
Format
Integer
Source
Converted from province code.
Description
Province unique identifier.

Variable – CSD Name

Name
CSDNAME
Format
String
Source
Imputed from geographic coordinates and city names using GeoSuite 2016.
Description
Census subdivision name.

Variable – CSD Unique Identifier

Name
CSDUID
Format
String
Source
Imputed from either geographic coordinates or CSD name using GeoSuite 2016.
Description
Census subdivision unique identifier.

Variable – Longitude

Name
Longitude
Format
Float
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
Longitude.

Variable – Latitude

Name
Latitude
Format
Float
Source
Provided as is from original data.
Description
Latitude.

Variable – Geocoding source

Name
Geo_Source
Format
String
Source
Created based on origins of geocoordinates.
Description
An indication of whether the latitude and longitude were provided in the original source, or if they were geocoded for the ODEF.

Variable – Data Provider

Name
Provider
Format
String
Source
Created based on origins of input dataset.
Description
Name of the entity that provided the dataset.

Variable – CMA Name

Name
CMANAME
Format
String
Source
Imputed from 2021 census boundary files based on spatial location.
Description
Census metropolitan area name.

Variable – CMA Unique Identifier

Name
CMAUID
Format
String
Source
Imputed from 2021 census boundary files based on spatial location.
Description
Census metropolitan area unique identifier.

7. Data accuracy

All education facility data in the ODEF were collected from government data sources, either from open data portals or otherwise public webpages. In general, other than the processing required to harmonize the different sources into one database, the underlying datasets were taken "as is."

A few exceptions apply to OLMS entries. Some entries that did not appear in the original data sources used were added after comparing them to the webpages of official language minority school boards. When schools were missing information such as address or school board, this was filled in through manual searches.

Imputation of ISCED levels is done conservatively to avoid false positives. Consequently, the percentages of ISCED levels with a non-empty value differ by level.

Natural language processing methods are used to do the parsing and separation of address strings into address variables, such as street number and postal code. The methods are reputable for performance and accuracy, but as with all statistical learning methods, they have limitations as well. Poor or unconventional formatting of addresses may result in incorrect parsing. At this stage, no further integration with other address sources was attempted; hence, although address records are generally expected to be correct, residual errors may be present in the current version of the database.

Finally, it should be noted that facility type, which discerns public, private, and other types of institutions, has different interpretations by province and data provider. For example, religious schools may be publicly funded in one jurisdiction but not in another.

8. Contact Us

The LODE open databases are modelled on ongoing improvement. To provide information on additions, updates, corrections or omissions, or for more information, please contact us at statcan.lode-ecdo.statcan@statcan.gc.ca. Please include the title of the open database in the subject line of the email.

Food Services and Drinking Places (Monthly): CVs for Total Sales by Geography - June 2018 to June 2019

CVs for Total Sales by Geography
Table summary
This table displays the results of CVs for Total Sales by Geography. The information is grouped by geography (appearing as row headers), Month, 201806, 201807, 201808, 201809, 201810, 201811, 2018012, 201901, 201902, 201903, 201904, 201905, and 201906 (appearing as column headers), calculated using percentage unit of measure (appearing as column headers).
Geography Month
201806 201807 201808 201809 201810 201811 201812 201901 201902 201903 201904 201905 201906
percentage
Canada 0.52 0.54 0.51 0.57 0.60 0.63 0.63 0.69 0.63 0.57 0.54 0.56 0.58
Newfoundland and Labrador 1.24 1.50 1.48 1.27 1.53 1.25 1.35 2.14 1.84 2.36 2.04 2.34 1.75
Prince Edward Island 1.24 4.50 5.89 6.16 5.03 4.16 3.46 3.11 2.65 3.37 3.12 0.57 1.46
Nova Scotia 3.64 3.66 2.04 2.20 2.76 4.16 2.49 2.42 3.49 3.37 2.42 2.95 2.71
New Brunswick 2.33 2.95 1.59 1.43 1.46 1.41 1.48 1.66 1.18 1.78 1.96 2.11 2.21
Quebec 1.10 1.10 1.00 1.21 1.20 1.33 1.17 1.21 1.14 1.01 1.26 1.08 1.48
Ontario 0.96 1.00 0.96 0.96 1.05 1.10 1.15 1.29 1.11 1.00 0.93 0.97 0.95
Manitoba 1.71 1.81 1.52 2.19 2.29 1.94 2.09 2.03 1.76 1.58 1.68 1.49 1.48
Saskatchewan 1.20 1.39 1.37 1.58 1.61 1.34 1.29 1.74 2.34 1.74 1.59 1.74 1.63
Alberta 0.88 1.04 1.03 1.89 1.79 1.73 1.72 2.01 1.80 1.81 1.25 1.47 1.30
British Columbia 1.33 1.43 1.41 1.42 1.48 1.60 1.64 1.66 1.68 1.49 1.52 1.59 1.63
Yukon Territory 4.85 4.31 3.06 3.67 4.59 4.39 4.18 3.78 3.69 3.65 3.09 3.37 4.49
Northwest Territories 1.32 1.23 0.88 0.66 0.89 0.97 0.89 0.85 0.73 1.03 0.80 1.01 0.88
Nunavut 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00

Wholesale Trade Survey (Monthly): CVs for Total sales by geography – June 2018 to June 2019

Monthly Wholesale Trade Survey - Table 1: CVs for Total sales by geography
Geography Month
201806 201807 201808 201809 201810 201811 201812 201901 201902 201903 201904 201905 201906
percentage
Canada 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.7 0.8 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6
Newfoundland and Labrador 0.5 0.5 0.3 0.2 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.4 0.5 0.1
Prince Edward Island 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nova Scotia 1.2 1.8 1.9 2.4 2.5 1.8 5.4 4.6 2.3 2.0 2.9 1.9 1.8
New Brunswick 2.0 2.0 4.9 3.0 2.4 3.3 1.3 1.1 0.8 1.1 1.0 1.4 1.5
Quebec 1.6 1.9 1.9 1.8 1.3 1.5 1.3 1.9 1.3 1.5 1.7 1.4 1.4
Ontario 0.9 0.9 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.8 1.1 1.3 0.9 0.8 0.9 1.0 0.9
Manitoba 0.9 1.0 1.1 0.9 2.1 1.4 2.0 1.2 0.6 0.9 0.9 3.4 0.7
Saskatchewan 0.4 0.7 0.6 0.4 0.8 0.5 0.9 0.6 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.7 0.4
Alberta 1.3 1.7 1.7 2.1 1.4 1.7 1.6 1.0 1.2 1.1 1.2 1.4 0.9
British Columbia 1.8 2.3 1.4 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.7 2.2 1.4 1.0 1.3 1.4 1.2
Yukon Territory 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Northwest Territories 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Nunavut 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0