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Calgary 36.1 2.2 122.2 75.3 Oil and Gas 8 190 Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce: Toronto 20.2 3.9 486.0 36.8 Banking 9 229 Suncor Energy: Calgary 29.7 2.5 65.6 52.6 Oil and Gas 10 273 Sun Life Financial: Toronto 23.4 2.0 196.0 24.5 Insurance 11 341 Bell Canada: Montreal 18.1 2.3 41.8 40.9 Telecommunication: 12 342 Canadian Natural Resources ...
Alberta's Top Employers Alberta Calgary Herald & Edmonton Journal: February 3, 2016 2005 Saskatchewan's Top Employers Saskatchewan Leader-Post & The StarPhoenix: February 3, 2016 2005 Manitoba's Top Employers Manitoba Winnipeg Free Press: November 25, 2015 2006 Greater Toronto's Top Employers Greater Toronto Area: The Globe and Mail (Metro ed.)
Calgary: 1974 [20] Sports retail, part of Canadian Tire: P A Fido Solutions: Telecommunications Mobile telecommunications Montreal: 1996 Cellular provider P A Finning: Industrials Commercial vehicles & trucks Edmonton: 1933 Heavy equipment distributor P A First Air: Consumer services Airlines Kanata: 1946 Charter airline P A First Majestic ...
The top public sector employers in 2006 were the Calgary Zone of the Alberta Health Services (22,000), the City of Calgary (12,296) and the Calgary Board of Education (8,000). [209] Public sector employers rounding out the top five were the University of Calgary and the Calgary Roman Catholic Separate School Division.
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The Calgary-Edmonton Corridor is the most urbanized region in the province and one of the densest in Canada. Measured from north to south, the region covers a distance of roughly 400 kilometres (250 mi). In 2001, the population of the Calgary-Edmonton Corridor was 2.15 million (72% of Alberta's population). [51]
Alberta's largest and smallest cities are Calgary and Wetaskiwin, with populations of 1,306,784 and 12,594, respectively. [2] Beaumont became Alberta's 19th city on January 1, 2019. [3] 157 elected city officials (19 mayors and 138 councillors) provide city governance throughout the province. [4]
Through the 1970s, while a number of Canadian cities suffered population losses, the three Canadian Prairies cities on the Top 10 list – Calgary, Edmonton and Winnipeg – saw significant growth: the two Alberta cities primarily through consistent net migration, with Winnipeg primarily boosted by amalgamation of its surrounding municipalities ...