Industrial Consumption of Energy Survey Guide

Manufacturing and Energy Division, Energy Section

I. Who should complete this questionnaire?

An engineer, a production manager, an operation manager or someone knowledgeable about the energy consumption and production process of this enterprise should complete this questionnaire.

II. Reporting instructions

Please report all quantities of energy commodities consumed from the 1st of January to the 31st of December, be they purchased or self-generated by the industrial establishment. Exclude energy used by contractors, common carriers and suppliers. Round all data to the nearest whole number. If you need assistance, please contact Statistics Canada at the telephone number indicated on your questionnaire.

III. Retention

Please keep a copy of the completed questionnaire with your secure records until March 31, 2014.

IV. Definitions

Type of energy use

Amount consumed as fuel: The quantity of the energy commodity used to power the production process of the plant, which includes heating and transportation at the establishment.

Amount consumed to produce steam for sale: The quantity of the energy commodity used in the production of steam that is delivered to another establishment, as per a sales contract or other understanding. Energy used in the production of steam that is then used internally in the production process is reported in the “amount consumed as fuel” column.

Amount consumed to produce electricity: The quantity of the energy commodity used to generate electricity either for the plant’s own use or for delivery to another establishment, as per a sales contract or other understanding.

Amount consumed for non-energy use: The quantity of the energy commodity used for other purposes than As Fuel in the plant production process or to Produce Electricity or Steam. Some examples of energy commodities used for non-energy use are:

  • Natural gas used as a reducing agent to produce direct reduced iron (DRI)
  • Petroleum coke used as feed to reduce lead oxide in lead production
  • Natural gas used as feed to produce hydrogen and ammonia
  • Anthracite used as feed (as a reducing agent) to produce ferrosilicon and silicon metal

Type of energy commodity

Please report your energy use according to the following commodity definitions.

Section 1

Electricity: A form of energy generated by friction, induction or chemical change that is caused by the presence and motion of elementary-charged particles. The electricity that is consumed can either be received by the establishment (purchased) or produced by the establishment (self-generated).

Natural gas: A mixture of hydrocarbons, comprised principally of methane (CH4), originating in the gaseous phase or in solution with crude oil in porous geologic formations beneath the earth’s surface.

Propane: A gaseous, straight-chained hydrocarbon. A colourless, paraffinic gas extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams, consisting of molecules composed of three atoms of carbon and eight atoms of hydrogen (C3H8). Used primarily in residential and commercial heating and cooling, as transportation fuel and petrochemical feedstock.

Middle distillates

Diesel: All grades of distillate fuel used for diesel engines, including those with low sulphur content (lower than 0.05%). Does not include diesel used for transportation off the plant site.

Light fuel oil: A light petroleum distillate used for power burners. Includes fuel oil no. 2, fuel oil no. 3, furnace fuel oil, gas oils, and light industrial fuel.

Kerosene and other middle distillates: Includes kerosene (a light petroleum distillate that is used in space heaters, cook stoves and water heaters and is suitable for use as a light source when burned in wick-fed lamps; also known as stove oil), fuel oil no. 1, and mineral lamp oil. Does not include gasoline used for transportation off the plant site.

Heavy fuel oil (Canadian/Foreign): All grades of residual type fuels including those with low sulphur content. Usually used for steam and electric power generation and diesel motors. Includes heavy fuel oil nos. 4, 5, 6 and bunker C.

Wood and wood waste: Wood and wood energy used as fuel, including round wood (cord wood), lignin, wood scraps from furniture and window frame manufacturing, wood chips, bark, sawdust, shavings, lumber rejects, forest residues, charcoal and pulp waste from the operation of pulp mills, sawmills and plywood mills.

Spent pulping liquor (Black liquor): A recycled by-product formed during the pulping of wood in the paper-making process. It is primarily made up of lignin and other wood constituents and chemicals that are by-products of the manufacture of chemical pulp. It is burned As Fuel or in a recovery boiler which produces steam which can be used to produce electricity.

Refuse: Solid or liquid waste materials used as a combustible energy source. This would include the burning of wastepaper, packing materials, garbage and other industrial, agricultural and urban refuse and is often used to generate electricity. Please specify type.

Steam: A gas resulting from the vaporization of a liquid or the sublimation of a solid, generated by condensing or non-condensing turbines. The steam that is consumed can either be produced by the establishment (self-generated) or received by the establishment (purchased).

Special note: the fuels used to generate steam within the establishment (self-generated) should be reported under “as fuel” for those fuels.  For example, if 100 cubic metres of heavy fuel oil was used to produce steam, it should be included under “as fuel” for heavy fuel oil.

Statistics Canada is currently reviewing the ICE questionnaire and changes may be made in the future that will allow respondents to report for fuels used “to produce steam” separately from the “as fuel” component.  To date, the self-generated steam values have not been made publicly available, they are used for internal analysis only.

Section 2

Coal: A readily combustible, black or brownish-black rock-like substance, whose composition, including inherent moisture, consists of more than 50% by weight and 70% by volume of carbonaceous material.  It is formed from plant remains that have been compacted, hardened, chemically altered and metamorphosed by heat and pressure over geologic time without access to air.

Bituminous coal (Canadian/Foreign): A dense, black coal, often with well-defined bands of bright and dull material with a moisture content usually less than 20 per cent. It has a higher heating value and higher volatile matter and ash content than sub-bituminous coal; the heating value of bituminous coal typically ranges from 23.3 to 30.2 terajoules per kilotonne. Used in making coke, in steam and electricity production, as well as in the production of steel. Metallurgical coal is typically bituminous coal.

Sub-bituminous coal (Canadian/Foreign): A black coal used primarily for thermal generation. It has a high moisture content, between 15 and 40 percent by weight. Its sulphur content is typically quite low; its ash content is also usually low but volatile matter is usually high and can exceed 40% of the weight. Heating value varies from 16.3 terajoules per kilotonne to slightly over 20.9 terajoules per kilotonne.

Lignite: Low-rank, brown coals which are distinctly brown and woody or claylike in appearance, and which contain relatively high moisture contents (between 30 and 70 percent of the fuel by weight). Used almost exclusively for electric power generation.

Anthracite: A hard, black, lustrous coal containing a high percentage of fixed carbon, a low percentage of volatile matter, little moisture content, low sulfur, low ash and a high heating value at or above 27.7 terajoules per kilotonne that burns with a nearly smokeless flame. Generally used in the production of steel.

Coal coke (Canadian/Foreign): A hard, porous product made from the carbonization (baking) of bituminous coal in ovens in substoichiometric atmosphere at high temperatures to the extent that the volatile matter of the coal is released and the coal passes through a “plastic stage” to become metallurgical coke. Often used as a fuel and a carbon input (reducing agent) in smelting iron ore in an integrated steel mill (blast furnace). Coke breeze and foundry coke are included in this category.

Coal by-products

Coal tar: Organic material separated from coke oven gas evolved during coking operations (a black and viscous liquid). This category includes pyridine, tar acids, naphthalene, creosote oil, and coal pitch.

Light coal oil: Condensable products (primarily benzene, toluene, xylene and solvent naphtha) obtained during distillation of the coke oven gas, following removal of the coal tar.

Coke oven gas: Obtained as a by-product of solid fuel carbonization and gasification operations carried out by coke producers and iron and steel plants.

Section 3

Petroleum coke (Canadian/Foreign): A final product, often called a “waste product”, of the petroleum refining process, which is the output of the refinery after all of the distillates and oils have been distilled from crude oil, leaving a product that has the appearance of coal. There are various types, e.g. “sponge”, “shot”, and “fluid” coke, which are differentiated according to size. Petroleum coke is a residue high in carbon content and low in hydrogen that is the final product of thermal decomposition in the condensation process in cracking. It is typically high in sulfur, low in volatile matter, low in ash and low in moisture. It may be sold as is or further purified by calcining for specialty uses, including anode production. It may also be burned as fuel in various processes, ranging from power plants to cement kilns. Heating value is typically around 40 terajoules per kilotonne.

Refinery fuel gas:  Any un-separated mixture of gases produced in refineries by distillation, cracking, reforming and other processes. The principal constituents are methane, ethane, ethylene, normal butane, butylenes, propane, propylene, etc. Also known as still gas. Still gas is used as a refinery fuel and a petrochemical feedstock.

Coke on catalyst (Catalyst coke):  In many catalytic operations (e.g. catalytic cracking), carbon is deposited on the catalyst, thus deactivating the catalyst.  The catalyst is reactivated by burning off the carbon, which is used as a fuel in the refining process.  The carbon or coke is not recoverable in a concentrated form.

Bitumen emulsion (Orimulsion): A thick oil and water emulsion. It is made by mixing bitumen with about 30% water and a small amount of surfactant. Behaves similarly to fuel oil and was developed for industrial use.

Ethane: A normally gaseous, straight-chain hydrocarbon. A colourless, paraffinic gas extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams, consisting of molecules composed of two atoms of carbon and six atoms of hydrogen (C2H6), used as petrochemical feedstock in production of chemicals and plastics and as a solvent in enhanced oil recovery process.

Butane: A normally gaseous hydrocarbon. A colourless, paraffinic gas extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams, consisting of molecules composed of four atoms of carbon and ten atoms of hydrogen (C4H10), used primarily for blending in high-octane gasoline, for residential and commercial heating, and in the manufacture of chemicals and synthetic rubber.

Naphtha: A feedstock destined primarily for the petrochemical industry (e.g. ethylene manufacture or aromatics production). Naphtha specialties comprise all finished products within the naphtha boiling range of 70-200°C that are used as paint thinners, cleaners or solvents.

By-product gas: A mixture of hydrocarbons and hydrogen produced from chemical processes such as ethane cracking.

Flared gas: Gas that is being burned as a means of disposal to the environment usually when it contains odorous or toxic components. Flared gas should be reported as non-energy use.

Section 4

Other - Any energy commodity consumed not otherwise identified on the questionnaire. Specify in the space provided along with the unit of measure.

Section 5

Reasons for changes in energy consumption

This section aims to reduce the necessity for further inquiries. Statistics Canada compares responses to this questionnaire with those from previous years. Please indicate the reason(s) that best describe significant changes in your energy consumption from the previous year along with an explanation.

Section 6

Steam sales

If an energy commodity is used to generate steam for sale, please report, in gigajoules, the amount sold to external clients.

V. Data-sharing Agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, who must keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon. The shared data will be limited to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician and returning it with the completed questionnaire. Please specify the organizations with which you do not want to share your data.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, as well as Natural Resources Canada, Environment Canada, National Energy Board, and the Alberta Department of Energy. For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Financial Information of Community Colleges and Vocational Schools

For the fiscal year ending in 2010

Tourism and Centre for Education Statistics Division

Collected under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, Chapter S19.

Confidential when completed.

(Le français est disponible)

Financial Year Ending: Day, Month, Year (2010)

Identification of the Institution

  • Name of institution
  • Address (number and street)
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal code
  • Check the appropriate boxes
    • Type
      • Public
      • Private
    • Governing Authority
      • Province or territory
      • Board

Identification of the reporting officer

  • Name of Title of Reporting Officer
  • Address (number and street)
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal code
  • E-mail address
  • Telephone number
  • Fax number
  • Signature of the Reporting Officer
  • Day, Month, Year

Does your institution offer courses at the elementary-secondary level, other than those academic upgrading courses such as Adult Basic Education which should be reported in this questionnaire?

  • Yes
  • No

If yes, please exclude revenues and expenditures relating to that level of education.

Instructions

  1. Please read the guidelines carefully.
  2. All amounts should be expressed in thousands of dollars ($'000).
  3. Indicate estimated amounts with an asterisk (*).
  4. Complete the questionnaire and return it using the self-addressed envelope or to the following:

    Section B-14
    Operations and Integration Division
    Jean Talon Building, 2nd Floor
    Statistics Canada
    Ottawa, Ontario
    K1A 0T6

Affiliated Institutions or Campusesincluded in this Report

Affiliated Institutions or Campuses Partially included in this Report

Affiliated Institutions or Campuses excluded from this Report

Authorization to release data

I hereby give permission to the Chief Statistician of Canada to authorize the release of data pertaining to the financial information at this institution from this survey. It is understood that permission may be rescinded at any time by telephoning the Tourism and Centre for Education Statistics Division at Statistics Canada and then confirming by letter.

  • Signature
  • Date

 

Schedule 1 – Operating, Sponsored Research and Capital Income
Types Funds
  Operating
($'000)
Sponsored Research
($'000)
Capital
($'000)
Total
($'000)
Government Grants and Contracts        
Federal*        
1. Human Resources Development Canada        
2. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)        
3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research        
4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada        
5. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council        
6. Other federal        
Provincial        
7. Regular Grants        
8. CFI Matching Fund        
9. Other        
10. Municipal        
Fees        
11. Postsecondary Programs        
12. Trade Vocational Programs        
13. Continuing Education Programs        
14. Other        
Bequests, Donations, Non-Government Grants        
15. Business Entreprises and Individuals        
16. Non-profit Organizations and Foundations        
17. Sub-total        
18. Investment Income        
19. Ancillary Enterprises (Gross)**        
20. Borrowings        
21. Miscellaneous        
22. Interfund Transfers        
23. Total Income        

 

Schedule 2A – Operating, Sponsored Research and Capital Expenditures by Function and by Type
Types of Expenditures Functions
  Operating Sponsored Research
($'000)
Capital
($'000)
Total
($'000)
  Instruction and non-sponsored research*
($'000)
Library
($'000)
General Administration
($'000)
Physical Plant
($'000)
Student Services
($'000)
Total Operating
($'000)
     
Salaries and Wages                  
1. Teachers                  
2. Other                  
3. Fringe Benefits                  
4. Library Acquisitions                  
5. Operational Supplies and Expenses                  
6. Utilities                  
7. Furniture and Equipment                  
8. Scholarships and Other Related Students Support                  
9. Fees and Contracted Services                  
10. Debt Services                  
11. Buildings                  
12. Land and Site Services                  
13. Miscellaneous                  
14. Transfers to / from                  
15. Ancillary Enterprises (Gross)**                  
16. Total Expenditures                  

 

Schedule 2B – Direct Instruction Expenditures by Program Cost Groups
Types of Expenditures Programs
  Postsecondary Programs Trade and Vocational Programs
($'000)
Continuing Education Programs
($'000)
Total*
($'000)
  University Transfer
($'000)
Career
($'000)
     
Salaries and Wages          
1. Teachers          
2. Other          
3. Fringe Benefits          
4. Operational Supplies and Expenses          
5. Furniture and Equipment          
6. Fees and Contracted Services          
7. Miscellaneous          
8. Transfers to / from          
9. Total Instruction Expenditures          

 

Supporting Schedule – Ancillary Enterprises
  Total Income Total Expenditures
  Operating
($'000)
Capital
($'000)
Operating
($'000)
Capital
($'000)
Bookstores        
Food Services        
Residences        
Parking        
Other        
Total*        

 

Observations and Comments
Description
(Fund, Function, Type of Income, Expenditure)
Comments
   
   
   
   
   
   

Financial Information of Community Colleges and Vocational SchoolsGuidelines

For the fiscal year ending in 2010

I. Introduction

The main objective of this survey is to obtain detailed revenue and expenditures data of each community college and vocational school in Canada. Coupled with what is already available for the university sector, this gathering of data will provide a complete picture of the financial statistics of postsecondary education as well as vocational training in Canada.

The following notes provide the principles, definitions and guidelines necessary for the completion of the data form. Since it is desirable to obtain figures as comparable as possible from one institution to another, each respondent is requested to:

  • provide accompanying notes of explanation with the submission for those figures which the respondent feels may not be comparable with those of other institutions; or alternatively, provide comments in the space at the end of the questionnaire;
  • provide comments on items which are excluded from the data form such as cases where provinces are making contributions to repay debt on behalf of an institution, or material gifts received as donated service along with their estimated market value;
  • estimate, whenever possible, income and expenditure figures which are not readily available in the form required from the financial records of the institution; all estimated amounts should be indicated with an asterisk (*).

II. Submission

The final deadline for the submission is as indicated in the covering letter. The completed question-naire(s) should be returned in the self-addressed envelope provided.

A copy of the institution’s Audited Financial Statements is also requested with your submission. If a copy is not available, please advise as to the date on which they will be forwarded.

III. Coverage

With the exception noted below, the survey covers all private and public non-degree granting institutions that offer educational programs at the postsecondary level and/or at the trade and vocational level (private institutions that only offer courses at the trade and vocational level however, are not covered by this survey). For statistical purposes, institutions are classified as follows:

  1. Community Colleges
    Included in this classification are the colleges of applied arts and technology (CAAT’s) in Ontario, general and vocational colleges (CEGEP’s) in Quebec, institutes of technology and any other institutions providing education in fields such as paramedical technologies, nursing, agriculture, forestry, nautical sciences, etc..  These institutions offer programs at the postsecondary level, and may offer trade-vocational level programs.

  2. Vocational Schools
    This classification includes District Vocational Schools in Newfoundland, Regional Vocational Schools in Nova Scotia, Community Colleges in Saskatchewan, Vocational Centres in Alberta, government training schools, vocational training centres and any other institution offering programs at the trade-vocational level only.

  3. Training in hospitals
    Included in this classification are educational centres located in hospitals, which offer educational or training programs, independently of the community college system, in nursing, nursing assistants, radio-therapy, radiography, medical technology, etc..

    To ensure full coverage, it is important that each reporting officer indicates on section 2 of the questionnaire the affiliated campuses included in and/or excluded from the submission.

IV. Confidentiality

The collected data will be published in aggregated form at the provincial level to preserve the confidentiality of the financial reporting of each institution.

V. Financial reporting form

The questionnaire is comprised of seven sections.

The first section contains four parts:

  • the institution’s financial year ending date;
  • identification of the institution; whether it is public or private and whether it is board or provincially governed;
  • identification of the reporting officer;
  • a few brief instructions on how to complete the questionnaire.

The second section contains a list of the affiliated campuses included in, and/or excluded from the report.

Schedule 1 contains the institution’s operating, sponsored research and capital income for the year surveyed.

Schedule 2A contains the operating, sponsored research and capital expenditures classified by type of expenditure and by function. The operating fund is divided into five functions: instruction and non-sponsored research, library, general administration, physical plant and student services.

Schedule 2B contains expenditures on instruction, classified by type of expenditure and by program cost groups. The cost groups are: university transfer programs, career programs, trade and vocational programs and continuing education programs.

The last section contains:

  • a supporting schedule for information on ancillary enterprises income and expenditures;
  • space for any additional comments or observations.

VI. Principles of reporting

1. Accrual Concept

For the purpose of this survey, the revenue and expenditure data should be reported on an accrual basis. That is, all revenues and expenditures should be reflected in the period in which they are considered to have been earned and incurred respectively.  Major adjustments such as retroactive salary and their related benefit costs should, for example, be reported on that basis.

2. Total Income and Expenditures

All income and expenditures of the institution are to be reported. In this regard particular attention should be paid to the following:

  • when an institution is provincially governed or consists of a branch of a department, all costs related to the operation, maintenance and administration of the institution are to be reported; the actual funds used to finance those expenditures should be shown as a provincial source of funds;
  • capital expenditures, as well as related revenues, being financed by a government Department or Ministry other than the one responsible for the institution must be included in this report; the reporting officer is responsible for obtaining and providing this information;
  • the figures reported should not include income or expenditures for the purpose of creating or eliminating an appropriation; however, any actual income or expenditure transaction recorded directly in reserve accounts should be included in the figures reported; this also applies to other assets and liability accounts; provisions for replacement of assets are considered to be transfers to reserve or appropriation accounts and should not be reported as expenses;
  • receipts and expenses relating to special purpose, trust and other funds of the institution should, as well, be included in the report.

3.  Ancillary Enterprises

An ancillary enterprise is an entity that exists to furnish goods and services to students, staff or others, and that charges a fee directly related to, although not necessarily equal to, the cost of the goods or services. To reflect properly the full cost of these enterprises, you should report their total gross revenues and total gross expenditures in the appropriate cells in the schedule 1 and 2A. In addition, a breakdown by type of ancillary enterprises (bookstores, food services, residences, parking) must be completed on the supporting schedule.

4. Reporting of Income

When reporting the sources of funds in the operating, sponsored research and capital income schedule, it is important to show the revenues under the headings that correspond to the immediate source of funds for the institution. For example, if an institution offers training courses for which Human Resources Development Canada (HRDC) purchases seats, then the amount of money paid by HRDC should be shown under “Federal” only if the money is received directly by the institution. If the money is received by a third party (provincial government) and then transferred to the institution, then the direct source of funds is the “Provincial Government”.

VII. Definitions

1. Program Cost Groups

This section defines the program cost groups to be used in the reporting of direct instruction expenditures under schedule 2B.

The criteria used to define the various program cost groups originates from those used in other surveys conducted by Statistics Canada and also from analysis of different educational systems across Canada. Note that these statistical definitions may not correspond identically to other existing definitions used by other organizations or governments.

a) Postsecondary Programs

This program cost group includes all direct expenditures incurred in providing instruction to students enrolled FULL-TIME or PART-TIME in postsecondary programs offered by Community Colleges (see section III).  These programs are of two kinds: university transfer programs and semi-professional career programs.

  • i) University transfer programs:  University transfer programs require secondary school completion to enter and provide a student with standing equivalent to the first or second year of a university degree program with which one can apply for admission to subsequent senior years at a degree granting institution.
  • ii) Career programs: These programs usually require high school graduation for admission and have a duration of at least one year.  More commonly these programs last two, three or four years. Career programs lead to a certificate or a diploma in technology, business, applied arts, nursing, agriculture, etc., and they prepare a student to enter a career directly upon completion of the program, at a level between that of the university trained professional and the skilled tradesperson.

b) Trade and Vocational Programs

This program cost group includes all direct expenditures incurred in providing instruction (or training) to students (or trainees) enrolled FULL-TIME in vocational programs at the trade level for credit towards a recognized standing of proficiency or certification. Also included are direct expenditures related to students enrolled in academic upgrading programs for entry into a vocational program. Such students normally attend regular day classes in provincial trade schools, trade or industrial divisions of community colleges, adult vocational centres and other similar schools. These programs or courses prepare the student (trainee) for an occupational role below the professional or semi-professional level. A period of less than one year is normally sufficient to complete courses at this level. For less complex occupations, a program may last only a matter of weeks. Completion of grade 9 or 10 is usually required for entrance to these courses.

Included are, for example, pre-employment programs, language, skill or academic upgrading programs, refresher courses, apprenticeship programs, training on the job or training in-industry programs associated with educational institution, nursing assistant, etc..

c) Continuing Education Programs

This program cost group includes all direct expenditures incurred in providing instruction to students enrolled PART-TIME in courses, mostly in the evening, offered under the auspices of subsidiary divisions of schools designated by various names such as Division of Continuing Education, Adult Education Division and so on. Excluded are activities which have no sustained instruction or educational purpose such as recreational activities, presentations in the performing arts, art exhibitions and displays, debates fairs, conferences or conventions of clubs or associations.

Included are, for example, courses such as pre-employment programs, language, skill or academic upgrading programs, refresher, professional development, general interest, etc., which are offered on a PART-TIME basis.

2.  Funds

a)   Operating

This fund accounts for the cost of credit and non-credit instruction, non-sponsored research, academic support services, administration, plant maintenance and other operating expenses of the institution financed by fees, grants and other operating income. This fund will normally include all revenues and expenses regarding materials, supplies or services that are consumed within the year and which the institution considers to be operating, within the functional operating areas referred to in Section 3 below.

b)   Sponsored Research

Sponsored Research is a restricted fund that accounts for income and expenditures for all sponsored research as well as Research and Development (R&D). For an activity to qualify as R&D, there must be an appreciable element of novelty. Income is to be reported following the funds flow approach.

Sponsored Research covers the following activities:

Basic Research is any experimental or theoretical work undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of the underlying foundation of phenomena and observed facts, without any particular application or use in view;

Applied Research is original investigation undertaken to acquire new knowledge, and directed primarily towards a specific practical objective;

Experimental development is systematic work drawing on existing knowledge gained from research and/or practical experience that is directed to producing new materials, products or devices, installing new processes, systems and services, or improving those already installed.

The following activities should not be counted as R&D:

  • all education and training of personnel;  however, research by postgraduate students should be counted;
  • scientific and technical information services  such as collecting, coding, recording, classifying, analyzing, disseminating, translating, and evaluating, except where conducted solely or primarily for R&D support;
  • routine testing of materials, components, products, processes, soils, etc.;
  • maintenance of national standards;
  • administrative and legal work connected with patents and licenses;
  • investigations of proposed engineering projects using existing techniques; however feasibility studies on research projects are part of R&D;
  • policy-related studies at the national, regional and local levels, as well as those of business enterprises in pursuit of economic activity;
  • routine software development, computer maintenance, quality assurance, routine data collection, and market research;
  • the many steps other than R&D necessary for the development and marketing of a manufactured product;
  • the raising, management, and distribution of R&D funds; and
  • routine investigation and normal application of specialized medical knowledge.

Sponsored Research accounts for the institution’s income paid in the form of a contract (legally enforceable arrangements under which the institution, or an individual within the institution, agrees to undertake a research project, using the institution’s facilities and/or personnel, for a sponsor that provide funds to meet all or part of the costs of the project) or a grant (unconditional payment for which service is not necessarily expected) from a source external to the institution.

Income sources include government, private industry and donors. Income may also include investment income, if the corresponding expenditures are reported in Sponsored Research.

Expenditures include activity funded from Sponsored Research income and exclude activity funded from the General Operating fund. It also includes the purchase of capital assets, if the corresponding income is reported as Sponsored Research.

Funds from the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), along with applicable matching funds, are to be reported as Sponsored Research income. The corresponding expenditures, including the purchase of capital assets, are to be reported as Sponsored Research expenditures.

c) Capital

This fund accounts for the institution’s capital income such as borrowings, direct capital grants, bequests, gifts, etc., used to finance capital expenditures on furniture and equipment, buildings, land and site services, major renovations and alterations. Expenditures for capital debt repayments by, or on behalf of, the institution, as well as capital debt repayments financed by a specific government grant, are to be excluded from the income figures reported on schedule 1 of the questionnaire as well as from the expenditures reported on schedule 2A.

Capital expenditures, as well as related revenues, being financed by a Government Department or Ministry other than the one responsible for the institution must be included in this report. The reporting officer should be responsible for obtaining and providing this information.

3. Functions

a) Instruction and non-sponsored research

This includes all direct costs related to credit and non-credit courses, summer courses, extention programs and all other academic functions related to instruction and non-sponsored research such as offices of academic department heads, audio-visual services, laboratories, etc..

b) Library

This includes all the operating costs of the main library as well as the campus libraries, if there are any.  All costs of library acquisitions from the Operating fund should be shown under this function.

c) General Administration

This includes costs for activities whose primary function is to provide administrative support for the operation of the institution. It includes the activities of the president’s office, vice president, registrar, finance, personnel, public relations, secretariats, etc.. It also includes expenditures on convocations, ceremonies, legal and audit fees, long distance phone calls, the internal portion of debt repayments and costs for computing facilities.

d) Physical Plant

This includes the costs related to physical facilities, such as physical plant offices, maintenance of buildings and grounds, fire insurance, telephone service, security, repairs and furnishing, renovations and alterations, mail delivery service.

e) Student Services

This includes costs for activities whose primary purpose is to assist students in their educational or employment pursuits and which are outside of, but supplemental to, the instruction of academic programs. It includes the costs of: counselling, placement, health services, athletics (not physical education), student accommodation services (not residences), student transportation services, bursaries, scholarships and prizes, student financial aid office, cultural activities, etc..

4. Types of Income

a) Government Grants and Contracts

Lines 1 to 10 include grants from, and contracts with, federal government departments and agencies, provincial government departments and agencies, and municipal governments.

Government grants provide financial support to institutions and the grants may or may not be restricted.

Government contracts provide financial support to institutions under certain stipulations and conditions, including the provision of a deliverable product, such as a piece of equipment, a service or a report. A contract normally includes provisions for institutions to recover certain indirect or overhead costs, with the contract specifying or documenting the basis for the calculation of the recoverable costs.

Federal

Lines 1 to 6 include all research grants, research contracts, grants and contributions from the Government of Canada and its departments and agencies. Income received from the four major federal government agencies is reported on lines 1 to 5 as applicable.

The line items under “Federal” are as follows:

Line 1: Human Resources Development Canada (HRDC)
Line 2: Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
Line 3: Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
CFI income is reported under the Sponsored Research fund.
Line 4: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Line 5: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
Line 6: Other federal
Income from all other federal government departments and agencies is reported on this line.

Provincial

Lines 7 to 9 include income from provincial government departments and agencies, including Provincial CFI matching grants, Provincial CFI matching income (line 8) from the Ministry responsible for the institution is reported under the Sponsored Research fund.

In the case of a provincially administered institution, direct provincial funding are to be included here.

Municipal

Examples of income to be reported on this line include grants from urban transit, communication and parking authorities.

b) Fees

This includes all mandatory student fees for credit and non-credit courses (with the exception of residence fees, parking fees and other similar fees which should be reported under ‘ancillary enterprises - gross’) paid by, or on behalf of all FULL-TIME and PART-TIME students.

All other fees charged to students such as laboratory fees, transcript, late registration, application, athletic fees, etc., are to be reported under the heading ‘other’.

Normally, whenever revenues from fees are reported in schedule 1 under specific program(s), related expenditures should be reported for the corresponding program(s) in schedule 2B.

Note: those fees which are “flow through”, such as student activity fees collected for the students’ council, etc., are not to be reported as college revenue.

c) Bequests, Donations, Non-Government Grants

This includes receipts from business, industry, foundations, individuals and religious organizations, as well as the value of services donated by various organizations.

d) Investment Income

This includes income from all investments such as dividends, bonds, mortgages, short-term notes and bank interest. Realized gains (or losses) should also be included if they are treated as income in the operating and/or capital funds.

e) Ancillary Enterprises (gross)

This includes total revenues from all ancillary enterprises such as residence or parking fees, and sales of services and products from bookstores, food services (dining hall, cafeterias and vending machines), publishing, laundry services, etc..

It should also be noted that the reporting officer is asked to report, on the supporting schedule, a breakdown of total income for the institution’s ancillary enterprises.

f) Borrowings

This includes only those borrowings which are used to finance expenditures when repayment is to be made by the institution. Note that borrowings should be reported on an accrual basis.

g) Miscellaneous

This includes net income from rentals (other than ancillary enterprises), library fines and fines for other similar charges, and any income not reported elsewhere.

h) Interfund Transfers

When income from one fund is used to finance expenditures in another fund, report the amount as an interfund transfer.  Total interfund transfers must net to zero.

5. Types of Expenditures

a) Salaries and Wages

Salaries and wages (excluding fringe benefits) as well as payments for leave of absence, shown under the appropriate functions and programs, are to be broken down into the following two categories:

  • (i) Teachers
    Included in this category are salaries and wages paid to full-time and part-time teaching staff.

  • (ii) Other
    This category includes all salaries not reported in part (i) above.  Specifically, it includes salaries and wages paid to tutors, monitors, demonstrators, markers, laboratory technicians, maintenance personnel, office staff, research and teaching assistants, etc..

b) Fringe Benefits

This includes the institution’s contribution (in respect of all salaries and wages) to pensions, group life insurance, workmen’s compensation, unemployment insurance, Canada pension, salary contribution insurance, long term disability insurance and other similar benefits. Also include staff development costs paid for by the institution.

c) Library Acquisitions

This includes all purchases of books, periodicals, microfilms and other reference material for the library.  Costs of binding may also be included if normally considered part of the acquisition costs.

d) Operational Supplies and Expenses

This includes all expenditures for supplies which are normally consumed in the fiscal year, including postage, teaching supplies, photocopying, publications, long distance telephone charges, repair materials, all supplies to operate laboratories, etc..

e) Utilities

This includes all expenditures for fuel, electricity, water, gas, telephone equipment rental, etc..

f) Furniture and Equipment

This includes all expenses for furniture and equipment, such as laboratory equipment (other than consumables), administrative equipment and furnishings, copying and duplicating equipment, computing equipment maintenance equipment, etc.. Rental and maintenance costs as well as other related operating expenses should be shown under the appropriate operational function.  Costs for replacing or acquiring new furniture and equipment should be reported under the capital fund.

g) Scholarships and Other Related Students Support

This includes all payments to students including scholarships, bursaries, prizes, fee remissions, gifts, etc..

h) Fees and Contracted Services

This includes all expenses for services contracted to external agencies (except for renovations, alterations and major repairs). Examples would be cleaning contracts, security services, snow removal, etc.. Also included are fees paid to legal counsellors (including retainers for negotiations of collective contracts), auditors’ fees, consultant’s fees, etc..

i) Debt Services

This includes all payments made to service debts of the institution such as bank interest, mortgage or debenture interest payments, and related charges. Principal payments on loans, mortgages, debentures or repayable grants should be excluded.

j) Buildings

This includes all capital expenditures which are normally considered part of construction costs, except for furniture and equipment as well as land and site services which are to be reported under their respective item. Costs for space rental, building insurances, taxes, minor renovations and alterations on buildings, and all other related operating expenses should be shown under the Physical Plant operational function. Depreciation is not to be included as an expenditure.

k) Land and Site Services

This includes capital expenditures on acquisitions of and improvements to land such as landscaping, sewers, tunnels, roads, etc.. Capitalized professional fees and planning costs related to this category are also to be included. Rental, maintenance and insurance costs as well as other related operating expenses for this item should be shown under the Physical Plant operational function.

l) Miscellaneous

This is to be used when the institution has an operating or capital expenditure not classified in the other categories.

m) Transfers To/From

This item is used for internal transfers of costs  between funds or functions whenever it is not feasible to directly adjust the appropriate expenditure items.

The total internal transfers of costs should net to zero.

n) Ancillary Enterprises (gross)

Includes all gross expenditures incurred in the operating of ancillary enterprises (see section 4 (e) above).

It should be noted that the reporting officer is asked to report, on the supporting schedule, a breakdown of total expenditures for the institution’s ancillary enterprises.

VIII. Supporting schedule

Additional information is to be provided in this section for the total revenue and expenditures of institutional ancillary enterprises (bookstores, residences, food services and parking).

IX. Suggestions

Statistics Canada would welcome any suggestions made to improve this survey.

Quarterly Survey of Telecommunications

3rd Quarter 2010

Business Special Surveys and Technology Statistics Division

This report covers the period from: month 2010 to month 2010

Confidential when completed

Respondent company

  • Legal Name
  • Operating Name
  • Contact Person
  • Job Title
  • Street
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal Code
  • Telephone
  • Fax
  • E-mail
  • Website

Correct as required

  • Legal Name
  • Operating or Trade Name (if different from legal name)
  • Contact person responsible for this survey (please print clearly)
  • Job Title
  • Street
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal Code
  • Telephone
  • Fax
  • E-mail
  • Website

Information for Respondents

Survey Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data for the statistical measurement and analysis of the telecommunications industry. These data will be aggregated to produce national estimates of activity by industry. Those estimates are used by government, the private sector, international telecommunications organizations, academics, analysts, and the general public to better understand this sector's role in the social and economic fabric of Canada.

Authority

This quarterly survey is conducted under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada 1985, Chapter S19. Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under this Act.

Confidentiality

The Statistics Act protects the confidentiality of information collected by Statistics Canada.  Your answers are confidential.  Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.  The confidentiality provisions of the Statistics Act are not affected by either the Access to Information Act or any other legislation. Therefore, for example, the Canada Revenue Agency cannot access identifiable survey records from Statistics Canada.  Information from this survey will be used for statistical purposes only and will be published in aggregate form only.

Data Sharing Agreements

To reduce response burden and to ensure more uniform statistics, Statistics Canada has entered into a data sharing agreement under section 12 of the Statistics Act to share information from all respondents with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).

Subsection 12(2) of the Statistics Act provides that where a respondent gives notice in writing to the Chief Statistician that the respondent objects to the sharing of the information by Statistics Canada, the information not be shared with the department or corporation unless the department or corporation is authorized by law to require the respondent to provide the information.

The CRTC is authorized by law to require the respondent to provide the information under section 37 of the Telecommunications Act. Information provided to the CRTC will be treated in accordance with the requirements of section 39 of the Telecommunications Act.

Planned Record Linkage

To enhance the data from this survey, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources..

Return Procedures

Please return the completed questionnaire(s) within 30 days of receipt by facsimile to (613) 951-9920. If you anticipate difficulty in making this deadline, please inform Statistics Canada of your expected filing date.

Reporting Instructions

Please complete all questions that pertain to your operations.

To reduce the chances of call-backs to verify data, please record "N/A" for those items that are not relevant to your company.

Detailed instructions and definitions of terms used in the questionnaire are found in the Reporting Guide.

Assistance

If you require assistance, please contact:
Jo Anne Lambert
Telephone: (613) 951-6673
Facsimile: (613) 951-9920
E-mail: joanne.lambert@statcan.gc.ca

Heather Berrea
Telephone: (613) 951-8613
Facsimile: (613) 951-9920
E-mail: heather.berrea@statcan.gc.ca

Thank you for your co-operation

Revenues (in thousands for the quarter)

1. Telecommunications operating revenues

  1. Local and access  (include basic local service, optional local features, contribution, equipment, and other local and access)
  2. Long distance (include settlement)
  3. Data
  4. Private line
  5. Internet
  6. Mobile and paging
    • Retail
    • Wholesale
  7. Broadcast distribution (basic and non-basic programming)
  8. Other operating revenues
  • Total operating revenues

Network and subscribers (in thousands at quarter end)

2. Number of fixed network lines by market (Voice-grade equivalents) - Access dependent and independent

  1. Residential
  2. Business
  3. Wholesale
  4. Lines for internal use
  • Total PSTN lines

3. Number of mobile and paging subscriptions

  1. Retail (Residential and business)
  2. Wholesale     
  • Total mobile and paging subscriptions

4. Number of Internet subscriptions

  1. Dial-up
  2. High speed - Cable modem
  3. High speed - Digital subscriber line (DSL)
  4. High speed - Other
  • Total number of Internet subscriptions

5. Number of multi-channel video services subscriptions

  1. By phone line
  2. By cable
  3. By satellite
  4. Other
  • Total multi-channel video services subscriptions

Volume (in thousands at quarter end)

6. Long distance minutes - Fixed               

  1. Retail
    • July
    • August
    • September
    • Total
  2. Wholesale
    • July
    • August
    • September
    • Total
  • Total long distance minutes
    • July
    • August
    • September
    • Total

Note: Please include Domestic, US, and International long distance minutes.

7. Number of short messaging service (SMS)

  1. To mobile devices
  2. From mobile devices
  • Total number of short messaging service (SMS)

8. Mobile voice minutes 

  1. Toll minutes (Long distance)
  2. Non-toll minutes (Basic voice)
  • Total mobile voice minutes

Capital expenditures (in thousands for the quarter)      

9. Capital expenditures

Remarks

Certification

Please print the name of the person responsible for this return:

Signature:

I certify that the information provided in this report is complete and correct to the best of my knowledge.

  • Phone no.
  • Position
  • Date

Quarterly Survey of Telecommunications

2nd Quarter 2010

Business Special Surveys and Technology Statistics Division

This report covers the period from: month 2010 to month 2010

Confidential when completed

Respondent company

  • Legal Name
  • Operating Name
  • Contact Person
  • Job Title
  • Street
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal Code
  • Telephone
  • Fax
  • E-mail
  • Website

Correct as required

  • Legal Name
  • Operating or Trade Name (if different from legal name)
  • Contact person responsible for this survey (please print clearly)
  • Job Title
  • Street
  • City
  • Province
  • Postal Code
  • Telephone
  • Fax
  • E-mail
  • Website

Information for Respondents

Survey Purpose

This survey collects financial and operating data for the statistical measurement and analysis of the telecommunications industry. These data will be aggregated to produce national estimates of activity by industry. Those estimates are used by government, the private sector, international telecommunications organizations, academics, analysts, and the general public to better understand this sector's role in the social and economic fabric of Canada.

Authority

This quarterly survey is conducted under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada 1985, Chapter S19. Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under this Act.

Confidentiality

The Statistics Act protects the confidentiality of information collected by Statistics Canada.  Your answers are confidential.  Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.  The confidentiality provisions of the Statistics Act are not affected by either the Access to Information Act or any other legislation. Therefore, for example, the Canada Revenue Agency cannot access identifiable survey records from Statistics Canada.  Information from this survey will be used for statistical purposes only and will be published in aggregate form only.

Data Sharing Agreements

To reduce response burden and to ensure more uniform statistics, Statistics Canada has entered into a data sharing agreement under section 12 of the Statistics Act to share information from all respondents with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).

Subsection 12(2) of the Statistics Act provides that where a respondent gives notice in writing to the Chief Statistician that the respondent objects to the sharing of the information by Statistics Canada, the information not be shared with the department or corporation unless the department or corporation is authorized by law to require the respondent to provide the information.

The CRTC is authorized by law to require the respondent to provide the information under section 37 of the Telecommunications Act. Information provided to the CRTC will be treated in accordance with the requirements of section 39 of the Telecommunications Act.

Planned Record Linkage

To enhance the data from this survey, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources..

Return Procedures

Please return the completed questionnaire(s) within 30 days of receipt by facsimile to (613) 951-9920. If you anticipate difficulty in making this deadline, please inform Statistics Canada of your expected filing date.

Reporting Instructions

Please complete all questions that pertain to your operations.

To reduce the chances of call-backs to verify data, please record "N/A" for those items that are not relevant to your company.

Detailed instructions and definitions of terms used in the questionnaire are found in the Reporting Guide.

Assistance

If you require assistance, please contact:
Jo Anne Lambert
Telephone: (613) 951-6673
Facsimile: (613) 951-9920
E-mail: joanne.lambert@statcan.gc.ca

Heather Berrea
Telephone: (613) 951-8613
Facsimile: (613) 951-9920
E-mail: heather.berrea@statcan.gc.ca

Thank you for your co-operation

Revenues (in thousands for the quarter)

1. Telecommunications operating revenues

  1. Local and access  (include basic local service, optional local features, contribution, equipment, and other local and access)
  2. Long distance (include settlement)
  3. Data
  4. Private line
  5. Internet
  6. Mobile and paging
    • Retail
    • Wholesale
  7. Broadcast distribution (basic and non-basic programming)
  8. Other operating revenues
  • Total operating revenues

Network and subscribers (in thousands at quarter end)

2. Number of fixed network lines by market (Voice-grade equivalents) - Access dependent and independent

  1. Residential
  2. Business
  3. Wholesale
  4. Lines for internal use
  • Total PSTN lines

3. Number of mobile and paging subscriptions

  1. Retail (Residential and business)
  2. Wholesale     
  • Total mobile and paging subscriptions

4. Number of Internet subscriptions

  1. Dial-up
  2. High speed - Cable modem
  3. High speed - Digital subscriber line (DSL)
  4. High speed - Other
  • Total number of Internet subscriptions

5. Number of multi-channel video services subscriptions

  1. By phone line
  2. By cable
  3. By satellite
  4. Other
  • Total multi-channel video services subscriptions

Volume (in thousands at quarter end)

6. Long distance minutes - Fixed               

  1. Retail
    • April
    • May
    • June
    • Total
  2. Wholesale
    • April
    • May
    • June
    • Total
  • Total long distance minutes
    • April
    • May
    • June
    • Total

Note: Please include Domestic, US, and International long distance minutes.

7. Number of short messaging service (SMS)

  1. To mobile devices
  2. From mobile devices
  • Total number of short messaging service (SMS)

8. Mobile voice minutes 

  1. Toll minutes (Long distance)
  2. Non-toll minutes (Basic voice)
  • Total mobile voice minutes

Capital expenditures (in thousands for the quarter)      

9. Capital expenditures

Remarks

Certification

Please print the name of the person responsible for this return:

Signature:

I certify that the information provided in this report is complete and correct to the best of my knowledge.

  • Phone no.
  • Position
  • Date

Quarterly Survey of TelecommunicationsReporting Guide

Business Special Surveys and Technology Statistics Division

This reporting guide provides some background information on the survey and definitions for the data items it collects. It is meant to help you understand the survey context and help you complete the survey. Every attempt was made to make the guide as clear as possible but only you can tell us if it is. Please do not hesitate to contact us should you have any questions about the survey, or suggestions on how to make the reporting guide more useful. Contact information is provided on the cover page of the questionnaire.

Who completes the survey?
Is the survey mandatory?
Do all questions apply to my organization?
How is the information used?
Concepts and definitions
Operating revenues
Network and subscribers
Volume
Capital Expenditures

Who completes the survey?

The Quarterly Survey of Telecommunications (QTS) is sent to the largest providers of telecommunication services in Canada. For the purpose of this survey, an organization is considered a telecommunication services provider if it is classified in industry group 517 (Telecommunications) of the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

QTS has been conducted since 1999, but two significant changes are introduced for the 2006 reference year:

  • Cable operators are now part of the survey universe. This change reflects the growing importance of these enterprises in traditional telecommunication markets and a change in the definition of the telecommunication industry in the North American Industry Classification System
  • The concepts and questions are aligned on those of the annual data collection on telecommunication markets conducted by the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). This will allow for a better integration of annual and sub-annual statistics for this sector and will hopefully facilitate your task of completing the survey

Is the survey mandatory?

The survey is conducted under the authority of the Statistics Act and is mandatory, as are most surveys of businesses. Please refer to the cover page of the questionnaire for more detailed information, including information on the confidentiality and data sharing provisions of the Act.

We appreciate your contribution. Canada owes the success of its statistical system to a long-standing partnership between Statistics Canada, the citizens of Canada, its businesses, governments and other institutions. Accurate and timely statistical information could not be produced without their continued cooperation and goodwill.

Do all questions apply to my organization?

The QTS includes a total of fifty questions on four topics: revenues by type of service provided (13 questions), subscribers by type of service/network connection (11 questions), volume of usage by type of service (18 questions), and capital expenditures (1 question).

Although it is not common at this time, organizations that are active in all telecommunication services markets need to answer all questions.  However more and more organizations deliver a wide variety of services, sometimes through more than one operating division. If that is the case and it is not clear which part of your organization is targeted by the survey, please contact us for clarification.

As a general rule, our intent is to be consistent with the CRTC annual data collection, including the way in which entities are defined. That being said, in the event that reporting on the same basis on a quarterly and annual basis is difficult for your organization, we are open to a different reporting arrangement. That includes divisional or consolidated reporting.

How is the information used?

The main uses are:

  • The data are aggregated to produce national estimates of activity generated by the telecommunication services industry. They become part of the system of national accounts, the accounting system used to measure the amount of activity and wealth generated by the Canadian economy. 
  • The aggregated data are used to inform Canadians of developments in this industry. Short articles are published on-line in the Daily, the vehicle with which Statistics Canada provides highlights from its various surveys and studies to the media and Canadians at large.  
  • The aggregated data are used by industry and policy analysts to monitor developments in telecommunication markets.

Concepts and definitions

For the most part, the concepts and definitions for the quarterly survey of telecommunications are the same as those used for the annual telecommunications data collection by the CRTC. Where the definitions are identical, reference is made in this guide to the relevant CRTC form from the 2009 data collection.

The following conventions apply in the case of financial (revenue) variables:

  • Reporting should be in accord with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) as set out in the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (C.I.C.A.) Handbook. Please report all accounts on an accrual basis.
  • Revenue reported should exclude taxes collected for government (e.g., GST, HST) and should be net of discounts, promotional offers and rebates.
  • The Other operating revenue category excludes the following: interest and dividends, gains on the sale of capital assets, unrealized gains as a result of asset revaluation, gains on the translation of foreign currency and any other extraordinary revenue.

Operating revenues

  1. Local and access
  2. Long distance
  3. Data
  4. Private line
  5. Internet
  6. Mobile and paging
  7. Broadcast distribution
  8. Other operating revenues

1. Telecommunications operating revenues

  1. Local and access -
    Revenues from the provision of unlimited access to make wireline calls within a free-calling area.  This category also includes revenues from the provision of related retail and wholesale services such as optional features, service charges, inside wiring, terminal equipment rental, switching and aggregation, local interconnection, co-location, transit and bill-and-keep trunk settlement, unbundled network components well as revenues received from the contribution regime. Both access dependent and access independent services are covered by this category [CRTC form 101, line 3, "Total Canadian" column].
  2. Long distance -
    Revenues for carrying outgoing or incoming calls between local calling areas. This category includes flat or measured outbound or inbound services (e.g., 1-800, 877, etc.), operator handled calls (e.g., collect calls), overseas calling, card or coin long distance payphone telephony, long distance directory assistance and settlement. [CRTC form 101, line 4, "Total Canadian" column].
  3. Data -
    Provision of data protocol (X.25, ATM, Frame Relay, Ethernet, IP-VPN) and related services such as network management and equipment sales to end-users (individual, commercial and institutional customers), and other telecommunication service providers – [CRTC form 101, line 5, "Total Canadian" column].
  4. Private line -
    Provision to end users and other telecommunication service providers of a dedicated terrestrial or satellite network segment on which no control or signalling is performed. [CRTC form 101, line 6, "Total Canadian" column].
  5. Internet -
    Provision of Internet access and non-access services (such as modem rental, e-mail accounts and web hosting), to residential customers and commercial and institutional end users and the provision of transport services to commercial and institutional end users as well as other Internet services providers. [CRTC form 101, line 7, "Total Canadian" column]
  6. Mobile and paging -
    The provision of telecommunications services via wireless access facilities to end users and other telecommunication service providers. This category is the total of Wireless – Retail and Wireless – Wholesale. [CRTC form 101, line 8, "Total Canadian" column].
    • Retail -
      The provision of telecommunications services via wireless access facilities to end users (individuals, commercial and institutional customers). Wireless services include mobile telephone, mobile data messaging (text, photos, audio and video), mobile Internet access and paging services [CRTC form 271, line 21, "Retail" column)]. This category also includes roaming, mobile interconnection and equipment sales. The provision of telecommunications services via wireless access facilities to other telecommunication service providers is classified to Mobile and paging– Wholesale.
    • Wholesale -
      The provision of telecommunications services via wireless access facilities to other telecommunication service providers. [CRTC form 271, line 21, "Wholesale" column]. This category also includes equipment sales.
  7. Broadcast distribution (basic and non-basic programming) -
    The provision of analog and digital video and audio entertainment services (in service tiers, à la carte, pay-per-view or on-demand) to residential customers’ homes and commercial and institutional customers’ place of business [CRTC form 101, line 9, "Total Canadian" column].The provision of audio and video entertainment services to mobile communications devices is classified to Mobile and paging – Retail.
  8. Other operating revenues -
    Include all other revenues not falling into the above categories earned as part of your organization’s core operating activities. Please exclude the following revenues: interest and dividends, gains on the sale of capital assets, unrealized gains as a result of asset revaluation, gains on the translation of foreign currency and any other extraordinary revenue.

Network and subscribers

a. Fixed network lines by market – Access dependent and independent
b. Number of mobile and paging subscriptions
c. Number of Internet subscriptions
d. Multi-channel video services subscriptions

2. Fixed network lines by market – Access dependent and independent

A network segment between two fixed nodes connecting customer equipment or premise and your equipment OR a network segment that provides an on-site interface for connecting customer equipment or customer premise equipment to your equipment. Please report owned lines, leased lines and re-billed lines in voice grade equivalents.

  1. Residential -
    A network segment connecting a residential customer’s equipment or premise with your equipment. [CRTC form 212, line 3, "Total" column].
  2. Business -
    A network segment connecting a retail business customer’s equipment or premise to your equipment OR that provides an on-site interface for connecting customer equipment or customer premise equipment to your equipment. [CRTC form 212, line 11, "Total" column].
  3. Wholesale -
    A network segment provided to another telecommunication service provider for resale or for its own use. [CRTC form 212, line 20, "Total" column].
  4. Lines for internal use (OTS) -
    Active lines connected to the PSTN used by your organization and for which you do not receive payments. [CRTC form 212, line 22, "Total" column].

3. Number of mobile and paging subscriptions

The number of separate phone numbers with service billed to the customer for usage.  Note that this is different than the number of accounts since an account can include many subscribers.

  1. Retail (Residential and business) -
    The number of mobile and paging subscribers who are billed directly by your company. Include the number of internal mobile and paging subscribers whose service is paid for by your company. [CRTC form 271, line 24 plus line 25, "Retail" column].
  2. Wholesale -
    The number of mobile and paging subscribers of a service provider that resells your services. [CRTC form 271, line 24 plus line 25, "Wholesale" column].
  3. Total mobile and paging subscriptions -
    The total number of retail and wholesale subscribers [CRTC form 271, line 24 plus line 25, "Total" column].

4. Number of Internet subscriptions

An IP connection to an end-user which allows the end-user to exchange applications traffic with Internet hosts and other end-users. 

  1. Dial-up -
    An IP connection using a dialed PSTN connection to initiate and effect a switched communications link with another computer terminal. [CRTC form 253, line 1, "Total" column].
  2. High speed – Cable modem -
    An IP connection using a cable modem termination system (CMTS) to initiate and affect a dedicated communications link with another computer terminal. [CRTC form 253, line 2, "Total" column].
  3. High speed – Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) -
    An IP connection using a digital subscriber line technology to initiate and affect a dedicated communications link with another computer terminal. Includes ADSL (Asymmetric DSL), and VDSL (Very high data rate DSL). [CRTC form 253, line 3, "Total" column].
  4. High speed – Other -
    An IP connection using an access technology not described above. Examples would include; ISDN, fibre, fixed wireless, WiFi (802.11). [CRTC form 253, Sum of lines 4 to 8, "Total" column].
  5. Total number of Internet subscribers  -
    The total number of Internet subscribers serviced by your company. [CRTC form 253, line 10, "Total" column].

5. Multi-channel video services subscriptions

Video services subscribers -

The number of households, institutions and businesses that subscribe to basic video services billed directly by your company. Include individual apartments where the service is included in the rent.  Count each institutional subscriber only once, regardless of the number of individual users, (i.e., hospitals, hotels, nursing homes, other institutional or commercial ventures).

  1. By phone line -
    The number of subscribers to video services who receive their service by phone line (DSL, ADSL or VDSL).
  2. By cable -
    The number of subscribers to video services who receive their service via co-axial cable.
  3. By satellite -
    The number of subscribers to video services who receive their service via satellite.
  4. Other -
    The number of subscribers to video services who receive their service through means not listed above. Please indicate the technology.
  5. Total multi-channel video services subscribers -
    The total for all types listed above.

Volume

6. Long distance minutes – Fixed

The elapsed period of time in minutes a respondent’s switch, circuits, lines or groups of lines are in use for any call, for which the customer is billed (wholesale or retail).  This includes calls which terminate outside the local calling area and are billed to the customer, as well as those calls which are received by the customer from outside the local calling area and are billed to the customer (toll-free calls).  Domestic and international (USA and Overseas) long-distance calls are also included in this value.  For resellers this is the actual conversation time their customers used for calls and messages.  Long distance connections are sometimes called toll calls or trunk calls [CRTC form 221, line 12, "Retail", "Wholesale", and "Total columns].

7. Short Messaging Service (SMS)

A wireless messaging service that permits the transmission of a short text message from and/or to a digital mobile telephone or terminal, regardless of whether the transmission originates and terminates on a mobile telephone, originates on a mobile telephone and terminates on a computer, or originates on a computer and terminates on a telephone.

  1. To mobile devices -
    The number of messages which terminate on the mobile devices of your customers regardless of point of origin for transmission. [CRTC form 277, line 3, "To mobile devices" column].
  2. From mobile devices -
    The number of messages originating on the mobile devices of your customers, regardless of destination of message. [CRTC form 277, line 3, "From mobile devices" column].

8. Mobile voice minutes

Minutes of air time used, whether the subscriber pays a flat, fixed or measured rate (in thousands of conversation minutes). If billing increments or pulses are used to measure customer usage (the discrete time intervals telecommunication service providers use to bill customers), please convert to conversation minutes and report the traffic accordingly

Do not include minutes paid or available through service plans, but not used.

Do not report official telephone activity – unbilled telecommunications usage by telecom service providers for their internal communications or systems operations.

  1. Toll minutes (Long distance) -
    The number of long distance minutes used, that is, where the connection originates outside the mobile device local calling area and/or which terminates outside the mobile device local calling area. One and only one minute of long distance communication is counted for each billed minute during which that connection is active, even where the call involves two long distance segments [CRTC form 273, line 2, "Total" column].
  2. Non-toll minutes (Basic voice) -
    The number of local minutes used, that is, where the connection originates and terminates inside the mobile device local calling area [CRTC form 273, line 1, "Total" column].

Capital Expenditures

9. Capital Expenditures

The cost of procuring, constructing, and installing new durable plant and machinery and equipment, whether for replacement of worn or obsolete assets, as additions to existing assets, or for lease or rent to others [CRTC form 104, line 23, "Total" column].

Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MRTS) Data Quality Statement

Objectives, uses and users
Concepts, variables and classifications
Coverage and frames
Sampling
Questionnaire design
Response and nonresponse
Data collection and capture operations
Editing
Imputation
Estimation
Revisions and seasonal adjustment
Data quality evaluation
Disclosure control

1. Objectives, uses and users

1.1. Objective

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MRTS) provides information on the performance of the retail trade sector on a monthly basis, and when combined with other statistics, represents an important indicator of the state of the Canadian economy.

1.2. Uses

The estimates provide a measure of the health and performance of the retail trade sector. Information collected is used to estimate level and monthly trend for retail sales. At the end of each year, the estimates provide a preliminary look at annual retail sales and performance.

1.3. Users

A variety of organizations, sector associations, and levels of government make use of the information. Retailers rely on the survey results to compare their performance against similar types of businesses, as well as for marketing purposes. Retail associations are able to monitor industry performance and promote their retail industries. Investors can monitor industry growth, which can result in better access to investment capital by retailers. Governments are able to understand the role of retailers in the economy, which aids in the development of policies and tax incentives. As an important industry in the Canadian economy, governments are able to better determine the overall health of the economy through the use of the estimates in the calculation of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

2. Concepts, variables and classifications

2.1. Concepts

The retail trade sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in retailing merchandise, generally without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise.

The retailing process is the final step in the distribution of merchandise; retailers are therefore organized to sell merchandise in small quantities to the general public. This sector comprises two main types of retailers, that is, store and non-store retailers. The MRTS covers only store retailers. Their main characteristics are described below. Store retailers operate fixed point-of-sale locations, located and designed to attract a high volume of walk-in customers. In general, retail stores have extensive displays of merchandise and use mass-media advertising to attract customers. They typically sell merchandise to the general public for personal or household consumption, but some also serve business and institutional clients. These include establishments such as office supplies stores, computer and software stores, gasoline stations, building material dealers, plumbing supplies stores and electrical supplies stores.

In addition to selling merchandise, some types of store retailers are also engaged in the provision of after-sales services, such as repair and installation. For example, new automobile dealers, electronic and appliance stores and musical instrument and supplies stores often provide repair services, while floor covering stores and window treatment stores often provide installation services. As a general rule, establishments engaged in retailing merchandise and providing after sales services are classified in this sector. Catalogue sales showrooms, gasoline service stations, and mobile home dealers are treated as store retailers.

2.2. Variables

Sales are defined as the sales of all goods purchased for resale, net of returns and discounts. This includes commission revenue and fees earned from selling goods and services on account of others, such as selling lottery tickets, bus tickets, and phone cards. It also includes parts and labour revenue from repair and maintenance; revenue from rental and leasing of goods and equipment; revenues from services, including food services; sales of goods manufactured as a secondary activity; and the proprietor’s withdrawals, at retail, of goods for personal use. Other revenue from rental of real estate, placement fees, operating subsidies, grants, royalties and franchise fees are excluded.

Trading Location is the physical location(s) in which business activity is conducted in each province and territory, and for which sales are credited or recognized in the financial records of the company. For retailers, this would normally be a store.

Constant Dollars: The value of retail trade is measured in two ways; including the effects of price change on sales and net of the effects of price change. The first measure is referred to as retail trade in current dollars and the latter as retail trade in constant dollars. The method of calculating the current dollar estimate is to aggregate the weighted value of sales for all retail outlets. The method of calculating the constant dollar estimate is to first adjust the sales values to a base year, using the Consumer Price Index, and then sum up the resulting values.

2.3. Classification

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey is based on the definition of retail trade under the NAICS (North American Industry Classification System). NAICS is the agreed upon common framework for the production of comparable statistics by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. The agreement defines the boundaries of twenty sectors. NAICS is based on a production-oriented, or supply based conceptual framework in that establishments are groups into industries according to similarity in production processes used to produce goods and services.

Estimates appear for 21 industries based on special aggregations of the 2007 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industries. The 21 industries are further aggregated to 11 sub-sectors.

Geographically, sales estimates are produced for Canada and each province and territory.

3. Coverage and frames

Statistics Canada’s Business Register ( BR) provides the frame for the Monthly Retail Trade Survey. The BR is a structured list of businesses engaged in the production of goods and services in Canada. It is a centrally maintained database containing detailed descriptions of most business entities operating within Canada. The BR includes all incorporated businesses, with or without employees. For unincorporated businesses, the BR includes all employers with businesses, and businesses with no employees with annual sales that have a Goods and Services Tax (GST) or annual revenue that declares individual taxes.  annual sales greater than $30,000 that have a Goods and Services Tax (GST) account (the BR does not include unincorporated businesses with no employees and with annual sales less than $30,000).

The businesses on the BR are represented by a hierarchical structure with four levels, with the statistical enterprise at the top, followed by the statistical company, the statistical establishment and the statistical location. An enterprise can be linked to one or more statistical companies, a statistical company can be linked to one or more statistical establishments, and a statistical establishment to one or more statistical locations.

The target population for the MRTS consists of all statistical establishments on the BR that are classified to the retail sector using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) (approximately 200,000 establishments). The NAICS code range for the retail sector is 441100 to 453999. A statistical establishment is the production entity or the smallest grouping of production entities which: produces a homogeneous set of goods or services; does not cross provincial boundaries; and provides data on the value of output, together with the cost of principal intermediate inputs used, along with the cost and quantity of labour used to produce the output. The production entity is the physical unit where the business operations are carried out. It must have a civic address and dedicated labour.

The exclusions to the target population are ancillary establishments (producers of services in support of the activity of producing goods and services for the market of more than one establishment within the enterprise, and serves as a cost centre or a discretionary expense centre for which data on all its costs including labour and depreciation can be reported by the business), future establishments, establishments with a missing or a zero gross business income (GBI) value on the BR and establishments in the following non-covered NAICS:

  • 4541 (electronic shopping and mail-order houses)
  • 4542 (vending machine operators)
  • 45431 (fuel dealers)
  • 45439 (other direct selling establishments)

4. Sampling

The MRTS sample consists of 10,000 groups of establishments (clusters) classified to the Retail Trade sector selected from the Statistics Canada Business Register. A cluster of establishments is defined as all establishments belonging to a statistical enterprise that are in the same industrial group and geographical region. The MRTS uses a stratified design with simple random sample selection in each stratum. The stratification is done by industry groups (the mainly, but not only four digit level NAICS), and the geographical regions consisting of the provinces and territories, as well as three provincial sub-regions. We further stratify the population by size.

The size measure is created using a combination of independent survey data and three administrative variables: the annual profiled revenue, the GST sales expressed on an annual basis, and the declared tax revenue (T1 or T2). The size strata consist of one take-all (census), at most, two take-some (partially sampled) strata, and one take-none (non-sampled) stratum. Take-none strata serve to reduce respondent burden by excluding the smaller businesses from the surveyed population. These businesses should represent at most ten percent of total sales. Instead of sending questionnaires to these businesses, the estimates are produced through the use of administrative data.

The sample was allocated optimally in order to reach target coefficients of variation at the national, provincial/territorial, industrial, and industrial groups by province/territory levels. The sample was also inflated to compensate for dead, non-responding, and misclassified units.

MRTS is a repeated survey with maximisation of monthly sample overlap. The sample is kept month after month, and every month new units are added (births) to the sample.  MRTS births, i.e., new clusters of establishment(s), are identified every month via the BR’s latest universe. They are stratified according to the same criteria as the initial population. A sample of these births is selected according to the sampling fraction of the stratum to which they belong and is added to the monthly sample. Deaths occur on a monthly basis. A death can be a cluster of establishment(s) that have ceased their activities (out-of-business) or whose major activities are no longer in retail trade (out-of-scope). The status of these businesses is updated on the BR using administrative sources and survey feedback, including feedback from the MRTS. Methods to treat dead units and misclassified units are part of the sample and population update procedures.

5. Questionnaire design

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey incorporates the following sub-surveys:

Monthly Retail Trade Survey - R8

Monthly Retail Trade Survey (with inventories) – R8

Survey of Sales and Inventories of Alcoholic Beverages

The questionnaires collect monthly data on retail sales and the number of trading locations by province or territory and inventories of goods owned and intended for resale from a sample of retailers. The items on the questionnaires have remained unchanged for several years. For the 2004 redesign, the general questionnaires were subject to cosmetic changes only. The questionnaire for Sales and Inventories of Alcoholic Beverages underwent more extensive changes. The modifications were discussed with stakeholders and the respondents were given an opportunity to comment before the new questionnaire was finalized. If further changes are needed to any of the questionnaires, proposed changes would go through a review committee and a field test with respondents and data users to ensure its relevancy.

6. Response and nonresponse

6.1. Response and non-response

Despite the best efforts of survey managers and operations staff to maximize response in the MRTS, some non-response will occur. For statistical establishments to be classified as responding, the degree of partial response (where an accurate response is obtained for only some of the questions asked a respondent) must meet a minimum threshold level below which the response would be rejected and considered a unit nonresponse.  In such an instance, the business is classified as not having responded at all.

Non-response has two effects on data: first it introduces bias in estimates when nonrespondents differ from respondents in the characteristics measured; and second, it contributes to an increase in the sampling variance of estimates because the effective sample size is reduced from that originally sought.

The degree to which efforts are made to get a response from a non-respondent is based on budget and time constraints, its impact on the overall quality and the risk of nonresponse bias.

The main method to reduce the impact of non-response at sampling is to inflate the sample size through the use of over-sampling rates that have been determined from similar surveys.

Besides the methods to reduce the impact of non-response at sampling and collection, the non-responses to the survey that do occur are treated through imputation. In order to measure the amount of non-response that occurs each month, various response rates are calculated. For a given reference month, the estimation process is run at least twice (a preliminary and a revised run). Between each run, respondent data can be identified as unusable and imputed values can be corrected through respondent data. As a consequence, response rates are computed following each run of the estimation process.

For the MRTS, two types of rates are calculated (un-weighted and weighted). In order to assess the efficiency of the collection process, un-weighted response rates are calculated. Weighted rates, using the estimation weight and the value for the variable of interest, assess the quality of estimation. Within each of these types of rates, there are distinct rates for units that are surveyed and for units that are only modeled from administrative data that has been extracted from GST files.

To get a better picture of the success of the collection process, two un-weighted rates called the ‘collection results rate’ and the ‘extraction results rate’ are computed. They are computed by dividing the number of respondents by the number of units that we tried to contact or tried to receive extracted data for them. Non-monthly reporters (respondents with special reporting arrangements where they do not report every month but for whom actual data is available in subsequent revisions) are excluded from both the numerator and denominator for the months where no contact is performed.

In summary, the various response rates are calculated as follows:

Weighted rates:

Survey Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status i / Sum of survey weighted sales

where i = units that have either reported data that will be used in estimation or are converted refusals, or have reported data that has not yet been resolved for estimation.

Admin Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status ii / Sum of administrative weighted sales

where ii = units that have data that was extracted from administrative files and are usable for estimation.

Total Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status i or response status ii / Sum of all weighted sales

Un-weighted rates:

Survey Response rate (collection) =
Number of questionnaires with response status iii/ Number of questionnaires with response status iv

where iii = units that have either reported data (unresolved, used or not used for estimation) or are converted refusals.

where iv = all of the above plus units that have refused to respond, units that were not contacted and other types of non-respondent units.

Admin Response rate (extraction) =
Number of questionnaires with response status vi/ Number of questionnaires with response status vii

where vi = in-scope units that have data (either usable or non-usable) that was extracted from administrative files

where vii = all of the above plus units that have refused to report to the administrative data source, units that were not contacted and other types of non-respondent units.

(% of questionnaire collected over all in-scope questionnaires)

Collection Results Rate =
Number of questionnaires with response status iii / Number of questionnaires with response status viii

where iii = same as iii defined above

where viii = same as iv except for the exclusion of units that were contacted because their response is unavailable for a particular month since they are non-monthly reporters.

Extraction Results Rate =
Number of questionnaires with response status ix / Number of questionnaires with response status vii

where ix = same as vi with the addition of extracted units that have been imputed or were out of scope

where vii = same as vii defined above

(% of questionnaires collected over all questionnaire in-scope we tried to collect)

All the above weighted and un-weighted rates are provided at the industrial group, geography and size group level or for any combination of these levels.

Use of Administrative Data

Managing response burden is an ongoing challenge for Statistics Canada. In an attempt to alleviate response burden and survey costs, especially for smaller businesses, the MRTS has reduced the number of simple establishments in the sample that are surveyed directly and instead derives sales data for these establishments from Goods and Service Tax (GST) files using a statistical model. The model accounts for differences between sales and revenue (reported for GST purposes) as well as for the time lag between the survey reference period and the reference period of the GST file.

For more information on the methodology used for modeling sales from administrative data sources, refer to ‘Monthly Retail Trade Survey: Use of Administrative Data’ under ‘Documentation’ of the IMDB.

Table 1 contains the weighted response rates for all industry groups as well as for total retail trade for each province and territory. For more detailed weighted response rates, please contact the Marketing and Dissemination Section at (613) 951-3549, toll free: 1-877-421-3067 or by e-mail at retailinfo@statcan.

6.2. Methods used to reduce non-response at collection

Significant effort is spent trying to minimize non-response during collection. Methods used, among others, are interviewer techniques such as probing and persuasion, repeated re-scheduling and call-backs to obtain the information, and procedures dealing with how to handle non-compliant (refusal) respondents.

If data are unavailable at the time of collection, a respondent's best estimates are also accepted, and are subsequently revised once the actual data become available.

To minimize total non-response for all variables, partial responses are accepted. In addition, questionnaires are customized for the collection of certain variables, such as inventory, so that collection is timed for those months when the data are available.

Finally, to build trust and rapport between the interviewers and respondents, cases are generally assigned to the same interviewer each month. This action establishes a personal relationship between interviewer and respondent, and builds respondent trust.

7. Data collection and capture operations

Collection of the data is performed by Statistics Canada’s Regional Offices.

Table 1: Weighted response rates by NAICS, for all provinces/territories: September 2011
  Weighted Response Rates
Total Survey Administrative
NAICS - Canada
Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers 94.2 95 63.1
Automobile Dealers 96.1 96.5 50.2
New Car Dealers1 97.4 97.4  
Used Car Dealers 77.1 81.6 50.2
Other Motor Vehicle Dealers 77.5 76.5 83
Automotive Parts, Accessories and Tire Stores 83.1 87.7 50.3
Furniture and Home Furnishings Stores 84.1 89.9 23.6
Furniture Stores 89 91.3 29.5
Home Furnishings Stores 75.1 86.8 21.3
Electronics and Appliance Stores 91 91.6 78.3
Building Material and Garden Equipment Dealers 86.9 92.3 48.9
Food and Beverage Stores 86.6 93.4 11.8
Grocery Stores 87 94.7 9.1
Grocery (except Convenience) Stores 89.5 96.9 8.2
Convenience Stores 57 64.9 14.7
Specialty Food Stores 67.2 77.1 30
Beer, Wine and Liquor Stores 89.3 91.7 14.8
Health and Personal Care Stores 90.6 92.4 70.8
Gasoline Stations 86.3 89 50.3
Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores 86.9 88.5 44.8
Clothing Stores 86.8 88.4 44.9
Shoe Stores 90.6 91.9 22
Jewellery, Luggage and Leather Goods Stores 82.5 84.8 52.3
Sporting Goods, Hobby, Book and Music Stores 86.5 92 40.8
General Merchandise Stores 98.8 99.3 32.2
Department Stores 100 100  
Other general merchadise stores 97.6 98.6 32.2
Miscellaneous Store Retailers 81.6 87.5 22.3
Total 90 93.3 38.3
Regions
Newfoundland and Labrador 84.9 86.5 23.4
Prince Edward Island 90.3 91.4 20.3
Nova Scotia 93.6 96.5 37.5
New Brunswick 88.2 91.8 46.4
Québec 88.4 93.6 27.1
Ontario 92 95.1 39.8
Manitoba 87.1 88 53.2
Saskatchewan 87.8 89.9 49.2
Alberta 89.1 91.4 51.5
British Columbia 90.3 93.1 40.4
Yukon Territory 87.9 87.9  
Northwest Territories 88.5 88.5  
Nunavut 72.6 72.6  
1. There are no administrative records used in new car dealers

Weighted Response Rates

Respondents are sent a questionnaire or are contacted by telephone to obtain their sales and inventory values, as well as to confirm the opening or closing of business trading locations. Collection of the data begins approximately 7 working days after the end of the reference month and continues for the duration of that month.

New entrants to the survey are introduced to the survey via an introductory letter that informs the respondent that a representative of Statistics Canada will be calling. This call is to introduce the respondent to the survey, confirm the respondent's business activity, establish and begin data collection, as well as to answer any questions that the respondent may have.

8. Editing

Data editing is the application of checks to detect missing, invalid or inconsistent entries or to point to data records that are potentially in error. In the survey process for the MRTS, data editing is done at two different time periods.

First of all, editing is done during data collection. Once data are collected via the telephone, or via the receipt of completed mail-in questionnaires, the data are captured using customized data capture applications. All data are subjected to data editing. Edits during data collection are referred to as field edits and generally consist of validity and some simple consistency edits. They are used to detect mistakes made during the interview by the respondent or the interviewer and to identify missing information during collection in order to reduce the need for follow-up later on. Another purpose of the field edits is to clean up responses. In the MRTS, the current month’s responses are edited against the respondent’s previous month’s responses and/or the previous year’s responses for the current month. Field edits are also used to identify problems with data collection procedures and the design of the questionnaire, as well as the need for more interviewer training.

Follow-up with respondents occurs to validate potential erroneous data following any failed preliminary edit check of the data. Once validated, the collected data is regularly transmitted to the head office in Ottawa.

Secondly, editing known as statistical editing is also done after data collection and this is more empirical in nature. Statistical editing is run prior to imputation in order to identify the data that will be used as a basis to impute non-respondents. Large outliers that could disrupt a monthly trend are excluded from trend calculations by the statistical edits. It should be noted that adjustments are not made at this stage to correct the reported outliers.

The first step in the statistical editing is to identify which responses will be subjected to the statistical edit rules. Reported data for the current reference month will go through various edit checks.

The first set of edit checks is based on the Hidiriglou-Berthelot method whereby a ratio of the respondent’s current month data over historical (last month, same month last year) or auxiliary data is analyzed. When the respondent’s ratio differs significantly from ratios of respondents who are similar in terms of industry and/or geography group, the response is deemed an outlier.

The second set of edits consists of an edit known as the share of market edit. With this method, one is able to edit all respondents, even those where historical and auxiliary data is unavailable. The method relies on current month data only. Therefore, within a group of respondents, that are similar in terms of industrial group and/or geography, if the weighted contribution of a respondent to the group’s total is too large, it will be flagged as an outlier.

For edit checks based on the Hidiriglou-Berthelot method, data that are flagged as an outlier will not be included in the imputation models (those based on ratios). Also, data that are flagged as outliers in the share of market edit will not be included in the imputation models where means and medians are calculated to impute for responses that have no historical responses.

In conjunction with the statistical editing after data collection of reported data, there is also error detection done on the extracted GST data. Modeled data based on the GST are also subject to an extensive series of processing steps which thoroughly verify each record that is the basis for the model as well as the record being modeled. Edits are performed at a more aggregate level (industry by geography level) to detect records which deviate from the expected range, either by exhibiting large month-to-month change, or differing significantly from the remaining units. All data which fail these edits are subject to manual inspection and possible corrective action.

9. Imputation

Imputation in the MRTS is the process used to assign replacement values for missing data. This is done by assigning values when they are missing on the record being edited to ensure that estimates are of high quality and that a plausible, internal consistency is created. Due to concerns of response burden, cost and timeliness, it is generally impossible to do all follow-ups with the respondents in order to resolve missing responses. Since it is desirable to produce a complete and consistent microdata file, imputation is used to handle the remaining missing cases.

In the MRTS, imputation is based on historical data or administrative data (GST sales). The appropriate method is selected according to a strategy that is based on whether historical data is available, auxiliary data is available and/or which reference month is being processed.

There are three types of historical imputation methods. The first type is a general trend that uses one historical data source (previous month, data from next month or data from same month previous year). The second type is a regression model where data from previous month and same month previous year are used simultaneously. The third type uses the historical data as a direct replacement value for a non-respondent. Depending upon the particular reference month, there is an order of preference that exists so that top quality imputation can result. The historical imputation method that was labelled as the third type above is always the last option in the order for each reference month.

The imputation methods using administrative data are automatically selected when historical information is unavailable for a non-respondent. The administrative data source (annual GST sales) is the basis of these methods. The annual GST sales are used for two types of methods. One is a general trend that will be used for simple structure, e.g. enterprises with only one establishment, and a second type is called median-average that is used for units with a more complex structure.

10. Estimation

Estimation is a process that approximates unknown population parameters using only part of the population that is included in a sample. Inferences about these unknown parameters are then made, using the sample data and associated survey design. This stage uses Statistics Canada's Generalized Estimation System (GES).

For retail sales, the population is divided into a survey portion (take-all and take-some strata) and a non-survey portion (take-none stratum). From the sample that is drawn from the survey portion, an estimate for the population is determined through the use of a Horvitz-Thompson estimator where responses for sales are weighted by using the inverses of the inclusion probabilities of the sampled units. Such weights (called sampling weights) can be interpreted as the number of times that each sampled unit should be replicated to represent the entire population. The calculated weighted sales values are summed by domain, to produce the total sales estimates by each industrial group / geographic area combination. A domain is defined as the most recent classification values available from the BR for the unit and the survey reference period. These domains may differ from the original sampling strata because units may have changed size, industry or location. Changes in classification are reflected immediately in the estimates and do not accumulate over time. For the non-survey portion, the sales are estimated with statistical models using monthly GST sales.

For more information on the methodology for modeling sales from administrative data sources which also contributes to the estimates of the survey portion, refer to ‘Monthly Retail Survey: Use of Administrative Data’ under ‘Documentation’ of the IMDB.

The measure of precision used for the MRTS to evaluate the quality of a population parameter estimate and to obtain valid inferences is the variance. The variance from the survey portion is derived directly from a stratified simple random sample without replacement.

Sample estimates may differ from the expected value of the estimates. However, since the estimate is based on a probability sample, the variability of the sample estimate with respect to its expected value can be measured. The variance of an estimate is a measure of the precision of the sample estimate and is defined as the average, over all possible samples, of the squared difference of the estimate from its expected value.

11. Revisions and seasonal adjustment

Revisions in the raw data are required to correct known non-sampling errors. These normally include replacing imputed data with reported data, corrections to previously reported data, and estimates for new births that were not known at the time of the original estimates. Raw data are revised, on a monthly basis, for the month immediately prior to the current reference month being published. That is, when data for December are being published for the first time, there will also be revisions, if necessary, to the raw data for November. In addition, revisions are made once a year, with the initial release of the February data, for all months in the previous year. The purpose is to correct any significant problems that have been found that apply for an extended period. The actual period of revision depends on the nature of the problem identified, but rarely exceeds three years. Time series contain the elements essential to the description, explanation and forecasting of the behaviour of an economic phenomenon: "They are statistical records of the evolution of economic processes through time."1 Economic time series such as the Monthly Retail Trade Survey can be broken down into five main components: the trend-cycle, seasonality, the trading-day effect, the Easter holiday effect and the irregular component.

The trend represents the long-term change in the series, whereas the cycle represents a smooth, quasi-periodical movement about the trend, showing a succession of growth and decline phases (e.g., the business cycle). These two components—the trend and the cycle—are estimated together, and the trend-cycle reflects the fundamental evolution of the series. The other components reflect short-term transient movements.

The seasonal component represents sub-annual, monthly or quarterly fluctuations that recur more or less regularly from one year to the next. Seasonal variations are caused by the direct and indirect effects of the climatic seasons and institutional factors (attributable to social conventions or administrative rules; e.g., Christmas).

The trading-day component originates from the fact that the relative importance of the days varies systematically within the week and that the number of each day of the week in a given month varies from year to year. This effect is present when activity varies with the day of the week. For instance, Sunday is typically less active than the other days, and the number of Sundays, Mondays, etc., in a given month changes from year to year.

The Easter holiday effect is the variation due to the shift of part of April’s activity to March when Easter falls in March rather than April.

Lastly, the irregular component includes all other more or less erratic fluctuations not taken into account in the preceding components. It is a residual that includes errors of measurement on the 1. A Note on the Seasonal adjustment of Economic Time Series», Canadian Statistical Review, August 1974.  A variable itself as well as unusual events (e.g., strikes, drought, floods, major power blackout or other unexpected events causing variations in respondents’ activities).

Thus, the latter four components—seasonal, irregular, trading-day and Easter holiday effect—all conceal the fundamental trend-cycle component of the series. Seasonal adjustment (correction of seasonal variation) consists in removing the seasonal, trading-day and Easter holiday effect components from the series, and it thus helps reveal the trend-cycle. While seasonal adjustment permits a better understanding of the underlying trend-cycle of a series, the seasonally adjusted series still contains an irregular component. Slight month-to-month variations in the seasonally adjusted series may be simple irregular movements. To get a better idea of the underlying trend, users should examine several months of the seasonally adjusted series.

Since April 2008, Monthly Retail Trade Survey data are seasonally adjusted using the X-12- ARIMA2 software. The technique that is used essentially consists of first correcting the initial series for all sorts of undesirable effects, such as the trading-day and the Easter holiday effects, by a module called regARIMA. These effects are estimated using regression models with ARIMA errors (auto-regressive integrated moving average models). The series can also be extrapolated for at least one year by using the model. Subsequently, the raw series—pre-adjusted and extrapolated if applicable— is seasonally adjusted by the X-11 method.

The X-11 method is used for analysing monthly and quarterly series. It is based on an iterative principle applied in estimating the different components, with estimation being done at each stage using adequate moving averages3. The moving averages used to estimate the main components—the trend and seasonality—are primarily smoothing tools designed to eliminate an undesirable component from the series. Since moving averages react poorly to the presence of atypical values, the X-11 method includes a tool for detecting and correcting atypical points. This tool is used to clean up the series during the seasonal adjustment. Outlying data points can also be detected and corrected in advance, within the regARIMA module.

Lastly, the annual totals of the seasonally adjusted series are forced to the annual totals of the original series.

Unfortunately, seasonal adjustment removes the sub-annual additivity of a system of series; small discrepancies can be observed between the sum of seasonally adjusted series and the direct seasonal adjustment of their total. To insure or restore additivity in a system of series, a reconciliation process is applied or indirect seasonal adjustment is used, i.e. the seasonal adjustment of a total is derived by the summation of the individually seasonally adjusted series.

12. Data quality evaluation

The methodology of this survey has been designed to control errors and to reduce their potential effects on estimates. However, the survey results remain subject to errors, of which sampling error is only one component of the total survey error. Sampling error results when observations are made only on a sample and not on the entire population. All other errors arising from the various phases of a survey are referred to as nonsampling errors. For example, these types of errors can occur when a respondent provides incorrect information or does not answer certain questions; when a unit in the target population is omitted or covered more than once; when GST data for records being modeled for a particular month are not representative of the actual record for various reasons; when a unit that is out of scope for the survey is included by mistake or when errors occur in data processing, such as coding or capture errors.

Prior to publication, combined survey results are analyzed for comparability; in general, this includes a detailed review of individual responses (especially for large businesses), general economic conditions and historical trends.

A common measure of data quality for surveys is the coefficient of variation (CV). The coefficient of variation, defined as the standard error divided by the sample estimate, is a measure of precision in relative terms. Since the coefficient of variation is calculated from responses of individual units, it also measures some non-sampling errors.

The formula used to calculate coefficients of variation (CV) as percentages is:

CV (X) = S(X) * 100% / X
where X denotes the estimate and S(X) denotes the standard error of X.

Confidence intervals can be constructed around the estimates using the estimate and the CV. Thus, for our sample, it is possible to state with a given level of confidence that the expected value will fall within the confidence interval constructed around the estimate. For example, if an estimate of $12,000,000 has a CV of 2%, the standard error will be $240,000 (the estimate multiplied by the CV). It can be stated with 68% confidence that the expected values will fall within the interval whose length equals the standard deviation about the estimate, i.e. between $11,760,000 and $12,240,000.

Alternatively, it can be stated with 95% confidence that the expected value will fall within the interval whose length equals two standard deviations about the estimate, i.e. between $11,520,000 and $12,480,000.

Finally, due to the small contribution of the non-survey portion to the total estimates, bias in the non-survey portion has a negligible impact on the CVs. Therefore, the CV from the survey portion is used for the total estimate that is the summation of estimates from the surveyed and non-surveyed portions.

13. Disclosure control

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any data which would divulge information obtained under the Statistics Act that relates to any identifiable person, business or organization without the prior knowledge or the consent in writing of that person, business or organization. Various confidentiality rules are applied to all data that are released or published to prevent the publication or disclosure of any information deemed confidential. If necessary, data are suppressed to prevent direct or residual disclosure of identifiable data.

Confidentiality analysis includes the detection of possible "direct disclosure", which occurs when the value in a tabulation cell is composed of a few respondents or when the cell is dominated by a few companies.

 

Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) – Annual component

Complement to the user guide Public Use Microdata Files 2010 and 2009–2010

November 2011

1.0 One year and two year files
2.0 Questionnaire
3.0 Conversion of CCHS 2010 and 2009–2010 Master Files to Public Use Microdata Files (PUMF)
4.0 Content
5.0 Health Region Groupings

The following document is a complement to the 2010 and 2009–2010 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) Microdata User Guide. It presents the approach used to transform the 2010 and 2009–2010 Master files into Public Use Microdata Files (PUMF), how the content differs between the two PUMFs, and lists which health regions have been grouped.

1.0 One year and two year files

In addition to the two year PUMF, which has been produced since the survey’s first cycle (Cycle 1.1 – 2000–2001), a one year PUMF has also been introduced for 2010. The new annual PUMF covers a 12 month collection period and was produced with the same approach used for the two year file. While the one year file has a sample size half the size of the two year file, it has additional modules not available in the two year file (see section 4).

2.0 Questionnaire

The 2010 questionnaire serves as reference for both data files, 2010 and 2009–2010.

3.0 Conversion of CCHS 2010 and 2009–2010 Master Files to Public Use Microdata Files (PUMF)

The approach for creating a PUMF is intended to balance the requirements for maintaining respondent confidentiality by minimising disclosure risks, while providing the most useful data to users at the health region level. The following paragraphs outline some of the procedures applied to convert the CCHS master file into a PUMF.

Health regions: Health regions fall under provincial jurisdiction. As mentioned in Section 5.2 of the User Guide, there are 117 health regions across Canada. Thus, the master data file provides representative information for 117 HRs.

Some health regions have population sizes that were considered to be too small to appear individually in the PUMFs. These health regions were grouped with other(s) for the purpose of publication. The approach for keeping or collapsing health region geography in the PUMF entails applying a minimum population size for the given geography – 70, 0000 inhabitants. This resulted in:

  1. collapsing 30 HRs in 14 health region groupings in all provinces except Quebec, Nova Scotia, Alberta, and British Columbia;
  2. grouping the three territories into a single entity, which resulted in the suppression of many optional content modules for the territories;
  3. one Quebec HR (Nord-du-Québec) being excluded from the PUMF due to its small population size and its demographic characteristics that did not lend itself well to being collapsed with other HRs;
  4. all sample design variables being excluded.

After the grouping of some HR’s, the CCHS PUMFs are comprised of 98 HRs/HR groupings across the country. The list of HR’s before and after collapsing is shown in section 5 of this document.

Optional content suppression: Due to the grouping of some HRs, optional content that was not common to each health region within the grouping would have been suppressed. Since 2005, the regions and provinces have opted to coordinate the optional content selected in order to ensure a uniform selection of optional modules provincially; therefore this suppression was not necessary for any provinces. However, because the three territories were grouped, optional content was suppressed in the territories in cases where only one or two of the territories selected the content.

The 2009–2010 master and PUMF files only contain optional content data for modules that were asked in both years, which applies to the vast majority of optional content data. Since the 2010 Master and PUMF file only cover one year, it explains why certain modules are part of the one year files but not the two year files.

Disclosure control: As mentioned earlier, the 2010 and 2009–2010 PUMFs are designed to preserve the analytical value of data as much as possible while ensuring the potential for identifying individual respondents is minimal.

Several controls were implemented in creating the two PUMF files. Restriction methods such as removing direct identifiers (e.g., sample ID, name, telephone number), reducing, recoding, and/or suppressing detail based on small frequencies given specific socio-demographic characteristics were used. Examples of variables from the master files that were not included in the PUMFs due to a high risk of disclosure (either because the variable is a risk on its own or is so in combination with other variables) include: attempted suicide in the past 12 months, has skin cancer, and whether the respondent is presently pregnant.

In addition, some response categories were deemed to be at possible risk of disclosure and were regrouped so as to be included on the PUMF. Examples include: body part affected by most serious injury, number of times consulting health professionals, number of years since stopping smoking, and main source of household income. With these regroupings in place, the 2010 and 2009–2010 PUMFs contain both fewer variables and are less detailed compared with the corresponding master files, while still preserving the analytical value of the data.

Age of respondent: Respondents’ age is provided as age grouping in the CCHS PUMFs. Most of these groupings are found in 5-year age bands, from age 20-24 to age 75-79, with all respondents aged 80 and over comprising a single group. Prior to the CCHS 2005 PUMF, youth age groups included those aged 12-14 and 15-19. Beginning with the CCHS 2005 PUMF, the older youth age group has been split between those aged 15-17 and those aged 18-19. As a result, these groupings have three important benefits:

  1. BMI data can be presented for those aged 12-17;
  2. data for those aged 18-19 is no longer automatically suppressed for variables that were only asked to those aged 18 and over;
  3. users can still compare youth data from previous PUMFs by grouping the 15-17 year olds with the 18-19 year olds to create the age group 15-19.

Although information on some variables were collected for people of a specific age bracket, some data for certain ages still had to be suppressed to ensure confidentiality. For example, labour force data were collected for respondents aged 15 to 75. Because there is an age group 75-79 on the PUMF, publishing labour force data for 75-year olds would reveal their exact age by default. Therefore, labour force data (LBS) and physical activities – facilities at work (PAF) are only available on the PUMFs for respondents aged 15-74. Similar suppression was done for education (EDU) data of 12-14 year olds and maternal experience (MEX, MXS, and MXA) data for 50-year old women.

Special suppression was done for the three modules on maternal experiences (MEX, MXS, and MXA), data for women aged 15-19 because there was concern for a high risk of disclosure for women in this age group. As such, though MEX, MXS, and MXA data on the master file are shown for all women aged 15 to 55, the PUMFs only present data for women aged 20 to 49.

4.0 Content

The CCHS content can be divided into two categories, optional content and common content modules.

Optional content
As mentioned in section 3, the main difference between the 2010 and 2009–2010 PUMFs’ optional content is that the two year file requires a module to have been asked in for both years by a PUMF health region in order to be loaded to the file.

Common content
As mentioned in section 4.1 of the User Guide, common content modules include questions asked of all respondents. This common content is divided into three components: the annual, one year, and two-year common content. What differs between the 2010 and 2009–2010 PUMFs is the one year common content.

The 2010 one year common content is comprised of seven modules. All modules, with the exception of the Neurological conditions module (characterised by high risk of disclosure), are included in the 2010 PUMF.

One year common content 2010 only: Health Care Utilization and Economic Burden

  • Contacts with health professionals (CHP)
  • Unmet health care needs (UCN)
  • Neurological conditions (NEU)
  • H1N1 Immunization (H1N)
  • Loss of Productivity (LOP)
  • Fibromyalgia (CC3)
  • Chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple chemical sensitivities (CC4)
 

Out of the remaining six modules (CHP, UCN, H1N, LOP, CC3, CC4) none are in the 2009–2010 PUMF except for the Contact with health professionals (CHP). This module is in both PUMFs since it was part of the one year 2010 common content and was also common content in 2009 due to the fact it was previously part of the Health Care Utilization (HCU) annual common content module.

5.0 Health Region Groupings

The 2010 and 2009–2010 Master files 117 health regions have been grouped into 98 health regions for the PUMFs. Theses groupings are detailed below. The PUMF health regions (variable GEODPMF) are similar to what was produced for previous CCHS years. Users can refer to the Derived Variables documentation to learn which groupings have changed since the 2007–2008 PUMF was published.

Standard table symbols

Health regions
Health regions for dissemination, before PUMF Health regions for PUMF
Newfoundland Newfoundland
1011 Eastern Regional Integrated Health Authority 10911 Eastern Regional Integrated Health Authority
1012 Central Regional Integrated Health Authority 10912 Central Regional Integrated Health Authority
1013 Western Regional Integrated Health Authority 10913 Western Region/Labrador-Grenfell Regional Integrated Health Authority
1014 Labrador-Grenfell Regional Integrated Health Authority
Prince Edward Island Prince Edward Island
1101 Kings County 11901 Prince Edward Island
1102 Queens County
1103 Prince County
Nova Scotia Nova Scotia
1201 Zone 1 (DHA 1 and 2) 12901 Zone 1 (DHA 1 and 2)
1202 Zone 2 (DHA 3) 12902 Zone 2 (DHA 3)
1203 Zone 3 (DHA 4 and 5) 12903 Zone 3 (DHA 4 and 5)
1204 Zone 4 (DHA 6 and 7) 12904 Zone 4 (DHA 6 and 7)
1205 Zone 5 (DHA 8) 12905 Zone 5 (DHA 8)
1206 Zone 6 (DHA 9) 12906 Zone 6 (DHA 9)
New Brunswick New Brunswick
1301 Zone 1 13901 Zone 1
1302 Zone 2 13902 Zone 2
1303 Zone 3 13903 Zone 3
1304 Zone 4 13904 Zones 4 and 5
1305 Zone 5
1306 Zone 6 13906 Zones 6 and 7
1307 Zone 7
Quebec Quebec
2401 Région du Bas-Saint-Laurent 24901 Région du Bas-Saint-Laurent
2402 Région du Saguenay - Lac-Saint-Jean 24902 Région du Saguenay - Lac-Saint-Jean
2403 Région de Québec 24903 Région de Québec
2404 Région de la Mauricie et du Centre-du-Québec 24904 Région de la Mauricie et du Centre-du-Québec
2405 Région de l’Estrie 24905 Région de l’Estrie
2406 Région de Montréal 24906 Région de Montréal
2407 Région de l’Outaouais 24907 Région de l’Outaouais
2408 Région de l’Abitibi-Témiscamingue 24908 Région de l’Abitibi-Témiscamingue
2409 Région de la Côte-Nord 24909 Région de la Côte-Nord
2410 Région du Nord-du-Québec
2411 Région de la Gaspésie – Îles-de-la-Madeleine 24911 Région de la Gaspésie – Îles-de-la-Madeleine
2412 Région de la Chaudière – Appalaches 24912 Région de la Chaudière – Appalaches
2413 Région de Laval 24913 Région de Laval
2414 Région de Lanaudière 24914 Région de Lanaudière
2415 Région des Laurentides 24915 Région des Laurentides
2416 Région de la Montérégie 24916 Région de la Montérégie
Ontario Ontario
3526 Algoma 35926 Algoma
3527 Brant 35927 Brant
3530 Durham 35930 Durham
3531 Elgin – St. Thomas 35931 Elgin – St. Thomas
3533 Grey Bruce 35933 Grey Bruce
3534 Haldimand-Norfolk 35934 Haldimand-Norfolk
3535 Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge 35935 Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge
3536 Halton 35936 Halton
3537 Hamilton 35937 Hamilton
3538 Hastings and Prince Edward Counties 35938 Hastings and Prince Edward
3539 Huron 35939 Huron/Perth
3554 Perth
3540 Chatham-Kent 35940 Chatham-Kent
3541 Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington 35941 Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox and Addington
3542 Lambton 35942 Lambton
3543 Leeds, Grenville and Lanark 35943 Leeds, Grenville and Lanark
3544 Middlesex-London 35944 Middlesex-London
3546 Niagara 35946 Niagara
3547 North Bay Parry Sound 35947 North Bay Parry Sound/Timiskaming
3563 Timiskaming
3549 Northwestern 35949 Northwestern
3551 Ottawa 35951 Ottawa
3552 Oxford 35952 Oxford
3553 Peel 35953 Peel
3555 Peterborough 35955 Peterborough
3556 Porcupine 35956 Porcupine
3557 Renfrew 35957 Renfrew
3558 Eastern Ontario 35958 Eastern Ontario
3560 Simcoe Muskoka 35960 Simcoe Muskoka
3561 Sudbury 35961 Sudbury
3562 Thunder Bay 35962 Thunder Bay
3565 Waterloo 35965 Waterloo
3566 Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph 35966 Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph
3568 Windsor-Essex 35968 Windsor-Essex
3570 York 35970 York
3595 City of Toronto 35995 City of Toronto
Manitoba Manitoba
4610 Winnipeg RHA 46910 Winnipeg RHA
4615 Brandon RHA 46915 Brandon/Assiniboine RHA
4645 Assiniboine RHA
4620 North Eastman RHA 46920 North and South Eastman RHA
4625 South Eastman RHA
4630 Interlake RHA 46931 Interlake/Parkland RHA
4660 Parkland RHA
4640 Central RHA 46940 Central RHA
4670 NOR-MAN RHA 46970 NOR-MAN/Burntwood-Churchill
4685 Burntwood RHA/Churchill RHA
Saskatchewan Saskatchewan
4701 Sun Country RHA 47901 Sun Country/Five Hills/Cypress
4702 Five Hills RHA
4703 Cypress RHA
4704 Regina Qu’Appelle RHA 47904 Regina Qu’Appelle RHA
4705 Sunrise RHA 47905 Sunrise/Kelsey Trail
4708 Kelsey trail RHA
4706 Saskatoon RHA 47906 Saskatoon RHA
4707 Heartland RHA 47907 Heartland/Prairie North
4710 Prairie North RHA
4709 Prince Albert Parkland RHA 47909 Prince Albert Parkland/Mamawetan-Keewatin Yatthé-Athabaska
4714 Mamawetan Churchill River RHA/
Keewatin Yatthé RHA/Athabaska Health Authority
Alberta Alberta
4831 South Zone 48931 South Zone
4832 Calgary Zone 48932 Calgary Zone
4833 Central Zone 48933 Central Zone
4834 Edmonton Zone 48934 Edmonton Zone
4835 North Zone 48935 North Zone
British Columbia British Columbia
5911 East Kootenay 59911 East Kootenay
5912 Kootenay-Boundary 59912 Kootenay-Boundary
5913 Okanagan 59913 Okanagan
5914 Thompson/Cariboo 59914 Thompson/Cariboo
5921 Fraser East 59921 Fraser East
5922 Fraser North 59922 Fraser North
5923 Fraser South 59923 Fraser South
5931 Richmond 59931 Richmond
5932 Vancouver 59932 Vancouver
5933 North Shore/Coast Garibaldi 59933 North Shore/Coast Garibaldi
5941 South Vancouver Island 59941 South Vancouver Island
5942 Central Vancouver Island 59942 Central Vancouver Island
5943 North Vancouver Island 59943 North Vancouver Island
5951 Northwest 59951 Northwest
5952 Northern Interior 59952 Northern Interior
5953 Northeast 59953 Northeast
Territories Territories
6001 Yukon Territory 60901 Yukon Territory/Northwest Territories/Nunavut
6101 Northwest Territories
6201 Nunavut

Unified Enterprise Survey - Annual

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2012 Survey of Service Industries. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Your answers are confidential.

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.

Statistics Canada will use information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Help Line: 1-800-972-9692

Table of contents

B - Main business activity
C - Reporting period information
D - Revenue
E - Expenses
F - Industry characteristics
G - Personnel
H - Sales by type of client
I - Sales by client location
J - International transactions
K - Provincial/territorial distribution
General information
Survey purpose
Data-sharing agreements
Record linkages

B - Main business activity

1. Please describe the nature of your business.

To ensure that you have received the appropriate questionnaire, you are asked to describe the nature of your business. The description should briefly state the main activities of your business unit.

2. Please check the one main activity which most accurately represents your main source of revenue.

Below is a description of each main activity.

Theatre (except musical) company (include festival with in-house company)

These establishments are primarily engaged in producing live presentations that involve the performances of actors and actresses. Theatre companies that operate their own facilities, primarily for the staging of their own productions, are included.

Include:

  • theatre companies;
  • community theatres;
  • improvisational theatres;
  • repertory or stock theatrical companies;
  • summer theatres;
  • puppet theatres;
  • amateur theatrical companies;
  • comedy troupes.

Exclude:

  • freelance producers and performing artists (e.g., actors, writers);
  • cinemas;
  • producers of corporate events;
  • drama schools;
  • arts organizations;
  • establishments primarily engaged in organizing and promoting, but not producing, performing arts productions (e.g., theatre festival promoters with or without facilities; and performing arts centres that promote events);
  • establishments primarily engaged in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises and that also present live entertainment (e.g., comedy clubs).

Dinner theatre

Establishments, known as dinner theatres, engaged in producing live theatrical entertainment and in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises, are included.

Exclude:

  • freelance musicians and vocalists;
  • freelance producers and performing artists (e.g., actors, writers);
  • establishments primarily engaged in organizing and promoting, but not producing, performing arts productions (e.g., theatre festival promoters with or without facilities; and performing arts centres that promote events);
  • establishments primarily engaged in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises and that also present live entertainment, such as comedy clubs (except dinner theatres).

Dance company

These establishments are primarily engaged in producing live presentations. Dance companies that operate their own facilities, primarily for the staging of their own production, are included.

Include:

  • ballet companies;
  • contemporary dance companies;
  • dance companies;
  • folk dance companies;
  • jazz dance companies.

Exclude:

  • freelance producers and dancers;
  • dance studios and schools;
  • dance instruction;
  • establishments primarily engaged in organizing and promoting, but not producing, dance productions;
  • establishments primarily engaged in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises and that also present live dance entertainment (e.g., exotic dance clubs).

Musical group or artist

These establishments are primarily engaged in producing live presentations that involve the performances of musicians and/or vocalists. Establishments in this industry may consist of groups or individual artists.

Include:

  • chamber and symphony orchestras;
  • country music groups;
  • jazz music groups;
  • pop and rock music groups;
  • independent musicians and vocalists.

Exclude:

  • agents and managers for musical groups and artists;
  • independent composers;
  • freelance producers;
  • integrated record companies;
  • sound recording studios;
  • establishments primarily engaged in producing theatrical, musical and opera productions;
  • establishments primarily engaged in organizing and promoting, but not producing, concerts and other musical performances (e.g., music festival promoters without facilities);
  • establishments primarily engaged in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises and also presenting live musical entertainment (e.g., nightclubs).

Other performing arts company

These establishments are not classified to any other industry and are primarily engaged in producing live performing arts presentations.

Include:

  • multidisciplinary companies (the term multidisciplinary encompasses forms of expression that use several artistic disciplines and where practice, language and works lie outside recognized artistic forms);
  • travelling show carnivals;
  • circuses;
  • ice skating companies;
  • magic shows.

Exclude:

  • musical groups and independent musicians and vocalists;
  • freelance producers and independent performing artists (e.g., magicians, independent);
  • carnival ride concession operators;
  • performing arts centres, promoting events;
  • establishments primarily engaged in producing musicals, plays, operas, and puppet and mime shows (see definition for Theatre (except musical) company, above);
  • establishments primarily engaged in producing dance performances;
  • establishments primarily engaged in organizing and promoting, but not producing, ice shows, circuses and other live performing arts presentations;
  • establishments primarily engaged in providing food and beverages for consumption on the premises and also presenting live entertainment (e.g., comedy clubs).

Organizational structure

3. Is this establishment a not-for-profit organization? (yes – no)

Not-for-profit organization

An organization usually formed for social, philanthropic or similar purpose in which there is normally no transferable ownership interest. The organization files a non-profit organization information return. It does not carry on business with a view to distribution or use of any profit or the pecuniary gain of the parties involved.

If none of the above activities describes your main source of revenue, please call 1 -800-972-9692 for further instructions.

C - Reporting period information

Please report information for your fiscal year (normal business year) ending between April 1, 2012 and March 31, 2013. Please indicate the reporting period covered by this questionnaire.

A detailed breakdown may be requested in other sections.

1. Sales of goods and services (e.g., rental and leasing income, commissions, fees, admissions, services revenue) Report net of returns and allowances.

Sales of goods and services are defined as amounts derived from the sale of goods and services (cash or credit), falling within a business’s ordinary activities. Sales should be reported net of trade discount, value added tax and other taxes based on sales.

Include:

  • sales from Canadian locations (domestic and export sales);
  • transfers to other business units or a head office of your firm.

Exclude:

  • transfers into inventory and consignment sales;
  • federal, provincial and territorial sales taxes and excise duties and taxes;
  • intercompany sales in consolidated financial statements.

2. Grants, subsidies, donations and fundraising

Please report contributions received during the reporting period.

Include:

  • non-repayable grants, contributions and subsidies from all levels of government;
  • revenue from private sector (corporate and individual) sponsorships, donations and fundraising.

3. Royalties, rights, licensing and franchise fees

A royalty is defined as a payment received by the holder of a copyright, trademark or patent.

Please include revenue received from the sale or use of all intellectual property rights of copyrighted musical, literary, artistic or dramatic works, sound recordings or the broadcasting of communication signals.

4. Investment income (dividends and interest)

Investment income is defined as the portion of a company’s income derived from its investments, including dividends and interest on stocks and bonds.

Include interest from:

  • foreign sources;
  • bonds and debentures;
  • mortgage loans;
  • G.I.C. interest;
  • loan interest;
  • securities interest and deposits with bank interest.

Exclude:

  • equity income from investments in subsidiaries or affiliates; these amounts should be reported in section E, at question 25.

5. Other revenue (please specify)

Include:

  • amounts not included in questions 1 to 4 above.

6. Total revenue

The sum of questions 1 to 5.

E - Expenses

1. Salaries and wages of employees who have been issued a T4 statement

Please report all salaries and wages (including taxable allowances and employment commissions as defined on the T4 – Statement of Remuneration Paid) before deductions for this reporting period.

Include:

  • vacation pay;
  • bonuses (including profit sharing);
  • employee commissions;
  • taxable allowances (e.g., room and board, vehicle allowances, gifts such as airline tickets for holidays);
  • severance pay.

Exclude:

  • all payments and expenses associated with casual labour and outside contract workers; please report these amounts in this section, at question 5.

2. Employer portion of employee benefits

Include contributions to:

  • health plans;
  • insurance plans;
  • employment insurance;
  • pension plans;
  • workers’ compensation;
  • contributions to any other employee benefits such as child care and supplementary unemployment benefit (SUB) plans;
  • contributions to provincial and territorial health and education payroll taxes.

3. Commissions paid to non-employees

Please report commission payments to outside workers without a T4 – Statement of Remuneration Paid.

Include:

  • commission payments to independent real estate agents and brokers.

4. Professional and business services fees

Include:

  • legal;
  • accounting and auditing;
  • consulting;
  • education and training;
  • architect;
  • appraisal;
  • management and administration.

5. Subcontract expenses (include contract labour, contract work and custom work)

Subcontract expense refers to the purchasing of services from outside of the company rather than providing them in-house.

Include:

  • hired casual labour and outside contract workers.

6. Charges for services provided by your head office

Include:

  • parent company reimbursement expenses and interdivisional expenses.

7. Cost of goods sold, if applicable (purchases plus opening inventory minus closing inventory)

Report cost of purchased goods that were resold during the reporting period. If applicable, report cost of goods and material used in manufacturing of sold products.

Include:

  • goods purchased for resale: purchases during the period (including freight-in) plus opening inventory less closing inventory;
  • materials used in manufacturing of products sold: report only the material component of cost of finished manufactured goods that were sold during the reporting period.

Exclude:

  • direct and indirect labour costs (salaries, wages, benefits, and commissions);
  • overhead and all other costs normally charged to cost of goods sold, such as depreciation, energy costs, utilities, sub-contracts, royalties, transportation, warehousing, insurance, rental and leasing; these expenses should be reported elsewhere in the detailed categories provided.

8. Office supplies

Include:

  • office stationery and supplies, paper and other supplies for photocopiers, printers and fax machines;
  • diskettes and computer upgrade expenses;
  • data processing.

Exclude:

  • postage and courier;
  • telephone, Internet and other telecommunications expenses (please report this amount in this section, at question 14).

9. Rental and leasing (include rental of premises, equipment, motor vehicles, etc.)

Include:

  • lease rental expenses, real estate rental expenses, condominium fees and equipment rental expenses;
  • motor vehicle rental and leasing expenses;
  • rental and leasing of computer and peripheral expenses;
  • studio lighting and scaffolding, and other machinery and equipment expenses;
  • fuel and other utility costs covered in your rental and leasing contracts.

10. Repair and maintenance (e.g., property, equipment, vehicles)

Include expenses for the repair and maintenance of:

  • buildings and structures;
  • vehicles (including vehicle fuel);
  • machinery and equipment;
  • security equipment;
  • costs related to materials, parts and external labour associated with these expenses.

Also include janitorial and cleaning services and garbage removal.

11. Insurance (include professional liability, motor vehicles, etc.)

Include:

  • professional and other liability insurance;
  • motor vehicle and property insurance;
  • executive life insurance;
  • bonding, business interruption insurance and fire insurance.

Insurance recovery income should be deducted from insurance expenses.

12. Advertising, marketing and promotions (report charitable donations at question 22)

Include:

  • newspaper advertising and media expenses;
  • catalogues, presentations and displays;
  • meeting and convention expenses;
  • tickets for theatre, concerts and sporting events for business promotion;
  • fundraising expenses.

13. Travel, meals and entertainment

Include:

  • passenger transportation, accommodation and meals while travelling;
  • other travel allowances as well as meal, entertainment and hospitality purchases for clients.

14. Utilities and telecommunications expenses (include gas, heating, hydro, water, telephone and Internet expenses)

Include:

  • diesel, fuel wood, natural gas, oil and propane;
  • sewage.

Exclude:

  • energy expenses covered in your rental and leasing contracts;
  • vehicle fuel.

15. Property and business taxes, licences and permits

Include:

  • property taxes paid directly and property transfer taxes;
  • vehicle licence fees;
  • beverage taxes and business taxes;
  • trade licence fees;
  • membership fees and professional licence fees.

16. Royalties, rights, licensing and franchise fees

Include:

  • amounts paid to holders of patents, copyrights, performing rights and trademarks;
  • gross overriding royalty expenses and direct royalty costs;
  • resident and non-resident royalty expenses;
  • franchise fees.

17. Delivery, warehousing, postage and courier

Include:

  • amounts paid for courier, custom fees, delivery and installation;
  • distribution, ferry charges and cartage;
  • freight and duty, shipping, warehousing and storage.

18. Financial service fees

Include:

  • explicit service charges for financial services;
  • credit and debit card commissions and charges;
  • collection expenses and transfer fees;
  • registrar and transfer agent fees;
  • security and exchange commission fees;
  • other financial service fees.

Exclude:

  • interest expenses.

19. Interest expenses

Please report the cost of servicing your company’s debt.

Include interest on:

  • short-term and long-term debt;
  • capital leases;
  • bonds and debentures and mortgages.

20. Amortization and depreciation of tangible and intangible assets

Include:

  • direct cost depreciation of tangible assets and amortization of leasehold improvements;
  • amortization of intangible assets (e.g., amortization of goodwill, deferred charges, organizational costs, and research and development costs).

21. Bad debts

A bad debt is the portion of receivables deemed uncollectible, typically from accounts receivable or loans.

Include:

  • allowance for bad debts.

Bad debt recoveries are to be netted from bad debt expenses.

22. All other expenses (please specify)

Include:

  • amounts not included in questions 1 to 21;
  • charitable and political expenses;
  • research and development expenses;
  • recruiting expenses.

23. Total expenses

The sum of questions 1 to 22.

24. Corporate taxes, if applicable

Include:

  • federal, provincial and territorial current income taxes and federal, provincial and territorial provision for deferred income taxes.

25. Gains (losses) and other items

Include:

  • realized gains/losses on disposal of assets and realized gains/losses on sale of investments;
  • foreign exchange gains/losses, subsidiary/affiliate share of income/losses and other division
    income/losses;
  • joint venture income/losses and partnership income/losses;
  • unrealized gains/losses, extraordinary items, legal settlements, and other unusual items;
  • write-offs.

26. Net profit/loss after tax and other items

Total revenue less Total expenses minus Corporate taxes plus Gains (losses) and other items.

F - Industry characteristics

Sales

2. Single ticket sales

Include:

  • gift certificates

Expense items

30. Sales, wages, and benefits and contract fees

Includes:

  • honoraria (i.e., payments or fees rendered in recognition of professional services)

34. Touring costs

Salaries and benefits for all of the people on the road (e.g., performers, technical crew, company manager, drivers).

Includes:

  • fees;
  • transportation of personnel and equipment;
  • accommodations;
  • meals;
  • per diems.

Live performances and attendees

Live performance

The live performance of one or a group of works.

Attendees

Includes:

  • paid and unpaid attendance;
  • live audiences;
  • performances that were both broadcast and also had a live audience.

Excludes:

  • any information about performances given solely to a broadcast audience.

Home

36. Main season

Productions throughout the company’s regular season.

37. Performances for young audiences

Includes:

  • all non-adult performances (i.e., the audience will be mixed, but the performance is geared to non‑adults).

38. Other performances (e.g., run-outs and guarantees)

Run-outs refer to live performances which might be beyond the normal home area but which do not require the payment of per diems.

Guarantees are performances where payment to the performing company is paid regardless of attendance at the performance. For most touring engagements, the sponsoring organization guarantees a fixed fee, known as a “guarantee”, for the performance. For these fixed fee engagements, the presenter determines ticket prices, promotes the engagement and sells tickets. Even if sales do not cover the total cost of the fee agreed upon, the presenter is still responsible for full payment.

Touring

Live performances outside your normal home area and which require the payment of per diems.Reporting guide: Performing Arts 5-3600-224.3 Page 8

G - Personnel

To fully measure the contribution of all human capital in this industry, we require information on the number of partners and proprietors as well as the number and classification of workers.

1. Number of partners and proprietors, non-salaried (if salaried, report at question 2 below)

For unincorporated businesses, please report the number of partners and proprietors for whom earnings will be the net income of the partnership or proprietorship.

2. Paid employees

a) Average number of paid employees during the reporting period

To calculate the average number employed, add the number of employees in the last pay period of each month of the reporting period and divide this sum by the number of months (usually 12).

Exclude:

  • partners and proprietors, non-salaried reported at question 1 above.

b) Percentage of paid employees (from question 2a) who worked full time

Full-time employment consists of persons who usually work 30 hours or more per week. Please specify the percentage of paid employees who have been working full time by rounding the percentage to the nearest whole number.

3. Number of contract workers for whom you did not issue a T4, such as freelancers and casual workers (estimates are acceptable)

Contract workers are not employees, but workers contracted to perform a specific task or project in your organization for a specific duration, such as self-employed persons, freelancers and casual workers. These workers are not issued a T4 information slip. Please report the number of contract workers employed by your organization during the fiscal year.

H - Sales by type of client

This section is designed to measure which sector of the economy purchases your services.

Please provide a percentage breakdown of your sales by type of client.

Please ensure that the sum of percentages reported in this section equals 100%.

1. Clients in Canada

a) Businesses

Percentage of sales sold to the business sector should be reported here.

Include:

  • sales to Crown corporations.

b) Individuals and households

Please report the percentage of sales to individuals and households who do not represent the business or government sector.

c) Governments, not-for-profit organizations and public institutions (e.g., hospitals, schools)

Percentage of sales to federal, provincial, territorial and municipal governments should be reported here.

Include:

  • sales to hospitals, schools, universities and public utilities.

2. Clients outside Canada

Please report the share of total sales to customers or clients located outside Canada including foreign businesses, foreign individuals, foreign institutions and/or governments.

Include:

  • sales to foreign subsidiaries and affiliates.

I - Sales by client location

Please provide a percentage breakdown of your total sales by client location (first point of sale).

Please ensure that the sum of percentages reported in this section equals 100%.

The percentage in question 14 must equal question 2 in section H.

J - International transactions

This section is intended to measure the value of international transactions on goods, services, and royalties and licences fees. It covers imported services and goods purchased outside Canada as well as the value of exported services and goods to clients/customers outside Canada. Please report also royalties, rights, licensing and franchise fees paid to and/or received from outside Canada. Services cover a variety of industrial, professional, trade and business services. 5-3600-224.3 Page 9 Reporting guide: Performing Arts

K - Provincial/territorial distribution

This section is intended to collect information on the locations operated by your business during the reporting period.

Please report the number of business units or locations operating in Canada during the reporting period. Business unit is defined as the lowest level of the firm for which accounting records are maintained for such details as revenue, expenses and employment.

Please report data for the provinces or territories in which you have business units and indicate if you are reporting in Canadian dollars or percentages.

General information

Survey purpose

Statistics Canada conducts this survey to obtain detailed and accurate data on this industry, which is recognised as being an important contributor to the Canadian economy. Your responses are critically important to produce reliable statistics used by businesses, non-profit organizations and all levels of government to make informed decisions in many areas.

The information from this survey can be used by your business to benchmark your performance against an industry standard, to plan marketing strategies or to prepare business plans for investors. Governments use the data to develop national and regional economic policies and to develop programs to promote domestic and international competitiveness. The data are also used by trade associations, business analysts and investors to study the economic performance and characteristics of your industry.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician and returning it with the completed questionnaire. Please specify the organizations with which you do not want to share your data.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.

For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Record linkages

To enhance the data from this survey, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Please note that Statistics Canada does not share any individual survey information with the Canada Revenue Agency.

Please visit our website at www.statcan.gc.ca/survey-enquete/index-eng.htm  or call us at 1-800-972-9692 for more information about these data-sharing agreements.

Thank you!