Table 2
Canadians' self-reported feelings of satisfaction with their personal safety from crime, by census metropolitan area, 2004 and 2009

Table 2
Canadians' self-reported feelings of satisfaction with their personal safety from crime, by census metropolitan area, 2004 and 2009
Census metropolitan areaNote 1 2004 2009
Very or somewhat satisfied Very or somewhat dissatisfied Very or somewhat satisfied Very or somewhat dissatisfied
percent
Kingston 94 F 98Note * F
Greater Sudbury 94 F 97 F
Moncton 98Note * F 97Note * F
Guelph 91 F 96Note * F
Oshawa 95 F 96Note * F
Saguenay 97 F 96 F
Saskatoon 92 8Note ENote ** 96Note * 4Note E
Kitchener–Cambridge–Waterloo 96 F 96 F
St. John's 98Note *** F 96Note * 4Note E
Ottawa–Gatineau 94 5Note E 95Note * 4Note E
London 96Note * 4Note E 95 5Note E
Québec 94 5Note E 95 4Note ENote *
Barrie 95 F 95 F
Windsor 94 F 94 F
Toronto 92Note * 7 94 5
Saint John 95 4Note E 93 6Note E
Hamilton 95 5Note E 93 6Note E
Calgary 96 4Note E 93 6Note E
St. Catharines–Niagara 97Note * F 93 F
Brantford 97 F 93 F
Peterborough 93 F 93 F
Regina 94 5Note E 92 7Note E
Victoria 99Note *** F 92 7Note E
Thunder Bay 95 F 92 F
Sherbrooke 95 F 92 F
Halifax 93 7 91 8
Montréal 94Note ** 6Note ** 90Note * 8Note *
Trois-Rivières 97 F 89 F
Edmonton 93Note ** 6Note ** 89Note * 10Note *
Abbotsford–Mission 95 F 89 10Note E
Winnipeg 92Note *** 7Note *** 88Note * 11Note *
Kelowna 92 F 88 F
Vancouver 90Note * 9Note *** 87Note * 12Note *
Total - Canada's provincesNote 94Note ** 5Note ** 93 6
E use with caution
F too unreliable to be published
reference category
* significantly different from reference category (p < 0.05)
** significantly different from 2009 only (p < 0.05)
*** significantly different from reference category and 2009 (p < 0.05)
1. A census metropolitan area (CMA) consists of one or more neighbouring municipalities situated around a major urban core. A CMA must have a total population of at least 100,000 of which 50,000 or more live in the urban core. To be included in the CMA, other adjacent municipalities must have a high degree of integration with the central urban area, as measured by commuting flows derived from census data.
Note: Data from Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut were collected using a different methodology and are therefore excluded. Responses of "don't know" and "not stated" are included in the total, but are not shown separately.
Source: Statistics Canada, General Social Survey, 2004 and 2009.
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