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Originally Posted by GeoNerd
I’m not sure where you are getting your information from, or if it’s just made up. But what you said is not even remotely true or accurate.
It is a widely accepted fact that Kitchener-Waterloo’s population explosion is directly related to the exodus of the unaffordable Toronto market.
While its university has gained notoriety in recent years, it’s still a minuscule tech market in comparison to Toronto, Ottawa, and other larger cities. Its ranks close to Quebec City on tech market rankings.
KW is a sleepy exurb, that relies on proximity to Toronto for services, entertainment, transportation, and growth. Growth that can be largely attributed to residents leaving the GTA in search of a more affordable lifestyle. That is a plain fact backed by real data.
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Perhaps we have different definitions of exurbs, but mine would not include a historically independent population centre of 600,000 with a significant manufacturing base, several major post-secondary institutions and all the amenities you would expect in a city of that size. Exactly what services do you think K-W residents rely on Toronto for? I've actually lived there - that's where I'm getting my information from. What are you basing your sweeping statements on?
At very least you would expect residents of an exurb to largely be commuters. In the case of Waterloo region, only 13.6% of people work outside of the region, and of those almost 40% just go to Guelph or Wellington County.
Less than 3% of total commuters go to the GTA. https://www.regionofwaterloo.ca/en/r...ing-ACCESS.pdf. Are you really claiming that those are the commuting patterns of an exurb that is fully dependent on Toronto?
Our definitions of "fact" are also different it appears. Or of what is "widely accepted". You provided a bunch of links that include anecdotal commentary on people moving from Toronto to K-W, but absolutely nothing that suggests that migration from Toronto is responsible for a "population explosion" in K-W. (Or that there was actually a population explosion at all.)
Here is a graph of historical population growth for the Kitchener CMA:
https://www.macrotrends.net/global-m...loo/population As you can see, population growth has been between 1 and 2% every year since 1992. There is no population explosion, and the growth rate has actually been relatively constant and slower than historical averages over the past two decades. As for where they come from, in 2022, one of the highest years on record, net migration from the GTA as a whole accounted for about 17% of K-W's population growth:
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tbl1...pid=1710014801 I don't know about you, but when 83% of the region's population growth comes from other sources, I don't largely attribute it to migration from the GTA.
If you think that the University of Waterloo has only gained notoriety in the tech sector in recent years, you really haven't been paying attention.