Metro Vancouver

Metro Vancouver
—  Regional District  —
Greater Vancouver Regional District
A view from Arbutus Ridge, Vancouver

Logo
Motto: Creating A Sustainable Region
Location of Metro Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada
Coordinates:
Country  Canada
Province  British Columbia
Regional district
Location of head office Burnaby
Established 1967
Government[1]
 • Board Metro Vancouver Board of Directors
 • Chair Lois Jackson
Area[2]
 • Total 2,877.36 km2 (1,111 sq mi)
Elevation 60 m (197 ft)
Population (2006)[2]
 • Total 2,116,581
 • Density 735.6/km2 (1,905.2/sq mi)
  Canadian CD rank: 2nd
Time zone PST (UTC-8)
Website Metro Vancouver

Municipalities of Metro Vancouver

Metro Vancouver is the brand name[3] of the board of the inter-municipal administrative body known as the Greater Vancouver Regional District (GVRD), a regional district in British Columbia, Canada. "Greater Vancouver Regional District" is the official name of the regional district and remains in common use.

The Metro Vancouver board governs the affairs of the Greater Vancouver Regional District, which is charged with certain aspects of governance for the metropolitan area surrounding and including the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The Greater Vancouver Regional District was incorporated on June 29, 1967. Greater Vancouver as a region and name emerged when the newly born City of Vancouver expanded to become larger than the older New Westminster. The territory under Metro Vancouver's authority is essentially synonymous with what is usually meant by the colloquial term "Greater Vancouver", although wilderness and outlying rural regions within the regional district are not generally meant when the term "Greater Vancouver" is used. Statistics Canada defines the Vancouver CMA (Census Metropolitan Area) as having perfectly coterminal boundaries with the Greater Vancouver Regional District. Although the region's principal city is Vancouver, its administrative offices are located in the City of Burnaby.

Despite the typical equation of the regional district with the metropolitan area and the geographical region, the many Indian Reserves in the Greater Vancouver region as well as the University Endowment Lands (UEL) are not part of the representation in the regional district (the UEL is in GVRD Electoral Area 'A', but has its own system of government and is outside the regional district's authority). Other political geographic regions parallel to the regional district are the Lower Mainland region of the Ministry of Environment, the Chilliwack Forest District, the New Westminster Land District, and the Fraser Health Authority. Schools are not subject to municipal or regional district governance and are administered via the school districts system.

The Greater Vancouver Regional District was established in 1967,[4] following the creation of Greater Vancouver Sewerage and Drainage District (GVSDD) in 1914 and Greater Vancouver Water District (GVWD) in 1926. In 2007, the GVRD board unanimously supported a proposal to the provincial government to change its official name to Metro Vancouver.[5] While the new name took effect in September 2007, the Province declined to amend the Greater Vancouver Regional District's letters patent to change the name to "Metro Vancouver".[6] The name of the physical area governed by the organization remains the Greater Vancouver Regional District.

Contents

Municipalities

Thirteen of the province's thirty most populous municipalities are located in Metro Vancouver.[7] The official land area of the district is 2,877.36 square kilometres (1,111 sq mi). It is the most densely populated regional district in British Columbia.

The Regional District comprises the governments of 21 incorporated municipalities and one unincorporated area. The 21 municipalities are:

Municipality Type Population Year
Anmore village 1,992 2007
Belcarra village 701 2007
Bowen Island island municipality 3,551 2007
Burnaby city 216,336 2007
Coquitlam city 120,512 2007
Delta district municipality 101,668 2007
Langley city 25,134 2007
Langley district municipality 100,049 2007
Lions Bay village 1,394 2007
Maple Ridge district municipality 73,248 2007
New Westminster city 62,607 2007
North Vancouver city 47,463 2007
North Vancouver district municipality 86,954 2007
Pitt Meadows city 16,757 2007
Port Coquitlam city 55,735 2007
Port Moody city 30,004 2007
Richmond city 186,628 2007
Surrey city 394,976 2007
Vancouver city 578,041 2007
West Vancouver district municipality 44,097 2007
White Rock city 19,839 2007
Electoral Area A unincorporated area 19,252 2007
Greater Vancouver Regional District regional district 2,249,725 2007

Abbotsford is a member for parks purposes only.

Greater Vancouver Regional District Electoral Area A comprises all unincorporated land within the Regional District boundaries, and includes the University of British Columbia, the University Endowment Lands, and residential areas and isolated dwellings on Howe Sound between Lions Bay and Horseshoe Bay, on Indian Arm to the north of Deep Cove and Belcarra/Anmore, and on the west side of Pitt Lake to the north of Port Coquitlam. Passage Island and Barnston Island in the Fraser River and are classified as Regional District Remainders.[8]

There are also seventeen Indian reserves within the geographical area that are not subject to governance by the municipalities or the Regional District; they have a combined population of 7,550 (2006).

The cities of Abbotsford and Chilliwack and the district of Mission, located to the east, although often linked to Vancouver in promotions and tourism, are part of a separate regional district, the Fraser Valley Regional District, though part of the same region, the Lower Mainland. See Greater Vancouver for the larger geographic region meant by that term ("Metro Vancouver" refers only to the government of the regional district, and the regional district is not exactly coterminous with the region as such).

Administrative role

The principal function of Metro Vancouver is to administer resources and services which are common across the metropolitan area. These include community planning, water, sewage, drainage, housing, transportation, air quality, and parks.

There are three legal entities that operate under the name Metro Vancouver: the Greater Vancouver Water District (GVWD); the Greater Vancouver Sewerage and Drainage District (GVS&DD); and the Greater Vancouver Regional District (GVRD). The Metro Vancouver Housing Corporation is wholly owned by the Greater Vancouver Regional District.

Greater Vancouver Regional Parks oversees the development and maintenance of nineteen regional parks, as well as various nature reserves and greenways. (The regional parks are distinct from municipal parks in that they are typically more "wild" and represent unique geographical zones within the region, such as bogs and mature rainforests.)

Although the Greater Vancouver Water District comprises a system that covers more than 2,600 km², all the water for the district comes from three sources: the Capilano reservoir, the Seymour reservoir, and the Coquitlam reservoir. Metro Vancouver controls the Cleveland Dam on the Capilano reservoir, which supplies 40 percent of the district's water.[9]

One initiative of the Greater Vancouver Sewerage and Drainage District was the Ashcroft Manor Ranch Mega-Landfill Proposal in Ashcroft, British Columbia, in the Thompson Country of the British Columbia Interior, as there is no more room in the Lower Mainland for Metro Vancouver's garbage. A similar project nearby adjacent to the town of Cache Creek, British Columbia has almost reached capacity. Environmental concerns about the area's sensitive shrub-steppe climate and ecology are strong, while Highland Valley Copper, near Logan Lake, has offered the use of its mine-pit instead. Other GVSDD landfill locations serving the regional district in the past have been in the Fraser Mills area, between the Trans-Canada Highway and the Fraser, and at Port Mann, beneath the south foot of the [[Port Mann Bridge.

Demographics

According to the 2001 census, 1,986,965 people lived in the metropolitan area, about half of the population of British Columbia. The 2006 census reported the population at 2,116,581, a 6.5 percent increase since the last census.[10]

In 2006, Metro Vancouver had a population of 2,116,581 living in 870,992 dwellings. The regional district has a land area of 2,877.36 km2 (1,110.95 sq mi) and a population density of 735.6 /km2 (1,905 /sq mi).[2]

Metro Vancouver has a large ethnic minority population. The 2006 census showed that nearly 41.7% of the population were of visible minority origin, the largest visible minority group being Chinese, followed by South Asians. Other prominent groups include Filipinos, Koreans, Japanese, Southeast Asian, West Asian, and Latin Americans.[11] British Columbia is Canada's most ethnically diverse province.[12]

See also

Notes

External links