I received my census in the mail on May 4th. My neighbour got their Census on the same day and asked if I would do it online for them. I did and it was the short form. Easy Peasy! Then I did mine. I got the long form once again! 70 questions! What sex were you at birth? What sex are you now? Then the questions got more difficult. I enjoyed reading the "how many people live in your house" and all the choices! I wonder if some of the people who have visitors that don't leave when their visa has expired answer honestly.
When I got to "how much do you spend a year on electricity", my phone rang. It was my daughter who was commuting home from work. I told her what I was doing but I needed to do some calculations. I said "I'll sign off now and finish later". Then it asked for a password. My daughter has a fabulous sense of humour. I can't share a password, not only because it's not the smartest thing to do, but this one was not appropriate to put on my blog. It was really funny and I don't know why I didn't think of it! I submitted my census the day it was mailed to me.
We had lunch with friends yesterday who don't own a conputer. They called the Census Help Line and asked for a paper questionaire to be mailed. It hasn't arrived yet. When he watched the news he saw if you didn't file by May 12th, you could face a fine. He hopes they don't fine him.
My cousin Gordon and his wife are on a 14 day Alaska cruise. They left May 3rd and don't get back until this weekend. I hope he doesn't get a fine.
I love reading Twitter when people complain about giving the government their information.
| Dee Lundy didn't post the inside of the form. I bet it was interesting. |
I asked AI for a reason to fill out your census and got this:
Filling out the Canadian census matters for very concrete, practical reasons — and the benefits come right back to you, your neighbourhood, and your province.
π§ 1. It directly shapes services you rely on
Census data is the backbone for planning health care, education, public transit, housing, and infrastructure. Statistics Canada officials emphasize that everything from hospital capacity to school construction to road planning depends on accurate population data.
Transit planners, for example, use census commuting data — including what time people leave for work — to design routes and reduce congestion.
π³️ 2. It determines political representation
Population counts from the census decide the boundaries of federal and provincial ridings. Without accurate numbers, representation becomes uneven.
π° 3. It affects how billions in funding are allocated
Federal, provincial, and municipal governments use census data to distribute transfer payments and target funding where it’s actually needed. Under‑counted communities receive less money.
π‘ 4. It helps communities plan for growth
Everything from neighbourhood demographics to housing needs comes from census data. Even families looking to buy a home rely on census profiles to understand a community.
π§π€π§ 5. It’s the only complete portrait of Canada
Statistics Canada calls the census “the only source of data for the entire country.” If people don’t fill it out, the portrait is incomplete — like missing family members in a photo.
π 6. It’s mandatory
Participation is required under the Statistics Act, and households that refuse can face fines of up to $500. All residents — citizens, permanent residents, refugee claimants, and even temporary workers or students — must complete it.
π 7. It takes very little time
Short form: ~6 minutes
Long form: ~30 minutes (randomly assigned) - if that's true why have I received it for the last three census?


