The Fraser Valley Regional District (FVRD) is a regional district in British Columbia, Canada. The FVRD covers an area of 13,361.74 km² (5,159 sq mi). It was created by an amalgamation of the Fraser-Cheam Regional District and Central Fraser Valley Regional District and the portion of the Dewdney-Alouette Regional District from and including the District of Mission eastwards.
The FVRD incorporates roughly the eastern half of the Lower Mainland region of southwestern BC, and is bordered by Whatcom County, Washington to the south, the Greater Vancouver Regional District to the west, and the Okanagan-Similkameen Regional District to the east. The northern border with the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District falls just south of the towns of Skookumchuck Hot Springs and Lytton. It also includes unincorporated areas north of the City of Pitt Meadows which were formerly part of the Dewdney-Alouette Regional District but which were not transferred to the Greater Vancouver Regional District when it expanded to take in Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge.
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The FVRD has a total population of 257,031 people in 6 municipalities and 8 electoral areas. The following table breaks down each member municipality and electoral area according to population statistics from the 2006 Canadian census.
Area | Population |
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City of Abbotsford | 123,864 |
City of Chilliwack | 69,217 |
District of Mission | 34,505 |
District of Hope | 6,185 |
District of Kent | 4,738 |
Village of Harrison Hot Springs | 1,573 |
Electoral Area "A" | 478 |
Electoral Area "B" | 796 |
Electoral Area "C" | 952 |
Electoral Area "D" | 1,296 |
Electoral Area "E" | 3,481 |
Electoral Area "F" | 1,339 |
Electoral Area "G" | 1,914 |
Electoral Area "H" | 394 |
While the member municipalities provide for their own municipal services the FVRD acts as the local government for the electoral areas. As a local government or regional district it can provide such services as water piping, storm sewers, sanitary sewers, street lighting, waste management, fire protection, mosquito control, E911 service, emergency preparedness/recovery, cablevision, air quality monitoring, library funding, growth management, park maintenance, building inspections and bylaw enforcement, planning, development approvals etc. Each area does not necessarily receive all these services so each electoral area pays property taxes, through the provincial government, in accordance with the particular services they receive. The FVRD has opted to implement a regional growth strategy, as allowed by Section 25 of the BC Local Government Act.
The regional district is a federation of municipalities and electoral areas. Each municipality appoints councillors to the board of directors for the regional district in proportion to their relative population sizes and the electoral areas directly elect one director each.
Economically, the area has grown around resource extraction, specifically farming, logging and gravel mining. Much of the Fraser Valley's land base is located within the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR). Retirement and recreational services (like campgrounds, RV parks, boating, skiing etc.) have become increasingly important. However, most commercial and industrial activities are kept within the municipal boundaries and leaving the electoral areas for farming and rural residential uses.
The areas in a regional district that are not incorporated are called ‘electoral areas’.
Boston Bar and North Bend, with populations nearing 200 people each, are the two main small towns in this area. Other residents of this area live in small subdivisions (i.e. Canyon Alpine and Falls Creek) or Indian reserves which line the Fraser Canyon.
Communities in this area are connected by three highways (Highway #1, #3, #5) which radiate out of the District of Hope. The communities of Dogwood Valley, Emory Creek, and Choate are just north of Hope and have a combined population of about 133 people. Sunshine Valley is a community on BC Highway 3 southeast of Hope with 164 people and was originally a Japanese internment camp named Tashme. Other communities in this area include Laidlaw, west of Hope, and Spuzzum, north of Yale.
Communities in this area include Lake Errock with 368 people, Harrison Mills with 141 people, and the resort town of Hemlock Valley, with only 15 permanent residents but several hundred hotel guests and condo residents during the ski season). There are vacation homes on islands in Harrison Lake.
The population of this area lives in the unincorporated villages of Popkum and Bridal Falls. Combined they have a population of 972 people.
The Chilliwack River runs east-west through this area. Most of the population live in the small area between the mountains and the river, which is generally divided into three areas: Slesse Park, Baker Trails and Bell Acres.
Other residents of this area live on the north end of Cultus Lake, or in the Columbia Valley, south of Cultus Lake, bordering Washington state.
The population here lives exclusively in the southern, lowland portion of this electoral area between Hatzic Lake the southeast end of Stave Lake, as everything north of Stave Lake is inaccessible or uninhabitable. The inhabited area can be broken into two sections: Miracle Valley, including an area known as McConnell Creek, and Hatzic Prairie, which includes the farming town of Durieu.
This small but populous electoral area is just north of the Fraser River and contains mostly flat farm land. There are 149 people in the farming community of Deroche; the area includes also Dewdney, Nicomen Island, and the small lakeside resort Lake Errock, and 534 people on Hatzic Island, which lies in the midst of Hatzic Lake, an oxbow lake off the Hatzic Slough (an anabranch of the Fraser River), just east of the boundaries of the District of Mission. Most of the population lives in low-density rural areas or on Indian reserves.
This area consisted of the majority of Sumas Mountain. Electoral area H was dissolved in 2008, with privately owned lands within the area being annexed into Abbotsford, and crown lands being reassigned to Electoral Area "G".[1]
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