Canada-wide data
2023 Surveys
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The latest park data from our surveys of 35 municipalities and over 2000 residents of Canadian cities.

Vision & Systems

Municipal leaders and city residents alike recognize that parks intersect with some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

Beyond their traditional role as places of leisure, parks are now understood as essential to public health, climate resilience, and community connection.

However, a vision for parks in addressing social equity lags behind, with issues like anti-racism, houselessness, and green gentrification receiving less focus. This is true although 83% of cities noted that there has been increased dialogue about systemic inequities in their parks department since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

This gap in vision mirrors a gap in skillsets, as parks staff were less likely to feel equipped with adequate knowledge and tools to engage with these same topics. It is also reflected in intragovernmental collaboration patterns, with parks departments working more closely with departments that manage physical infrastructure (e.g. planning, engineering) than those focused on social issues (e.g. anti-racism/equity office, Indigenous affairs).

Strong vision for parks supporting health, climate, connection

We asked: To what extent do you see a role for the parks sector in addressing the following issues?

City staff need greater support to address inequities

We asked: Of these issues, which do you currently feel equipped with the knowledge/tools to address through your work in parks?

Human-nature connections
80%
Community connection/belonging
77%
Active transportation
77%
Biodiversity protection
74%
Mental and physical health and well-being
74%
Universal accessibility
69%
Climate change
60%
Truth & Reconciliation
51%
(Anti-)racism
31%
Houselessness
26%
Green gentrification
23%

Collaboration focused on built infrastructure

We asked: Please indicate the extent to which your parks department has collaborated with the following departments or divisions within your municipal and/or provincial governments in the past year.

Collaboration may be informal (e.g. seeking input from staff in another division on a park project) or formal (e.g. an interdepartmental working group).

City residents continue to report well-being boost

We asked: In the past year, parks have had a positive impact on my…

Mental health
88%
Physical health
86%
Connection to nature
86%
Social connection/well being
74%
Connection to neighbourhood/community
75%

Parks seen as more than leisure spaces

We asked: In thinking about the different benefits parks provide, how would you rate each of the following elements on their importance in cities?

  • Providing space for leisure and recreation
  • Allowing people to meet basic needs (i.e. washrooms, places to sit, grow food in community gardens, etc.)
  • Enhancing biodiversity and climate resilience
  • Supporting community cohesion and social connection
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Don’t see your city on the list?
Thirty-five cities participated in this year's report and we hope more will join us next year.
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