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GREATER SUDBURY

(Redirected from Greater Sudbury, Ontario)

'Greater Sudbury' (2006 census population 157,857) is a city in Northern Ontario, Canada. Greater Sudbury was created in 2001 by amalgamating the cities and towns of the former Regional Municipality of Sudbury, along with several previously unincorporated geographic townships.
It is the largest city in Northern Ontario in population, and the 24th largest metropolitan area in Canada. In land area, it is now the largest city in Ontario, the seventh largest municipality in Canada, and the largest municipality in English Canada legally designated as a city.
Greater Sudbury is one of only five cities in Ontario — the others are Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton and Kawartha Lakes — which constitute their own independent census divisions, and are not part of any district, county or regional municipality.
It is also the only city in Ontario which has two official names — its name in French is 'Grand-Sudbury'. Unlike designations such as Greater Toronto or Greater Montreal, the name "Greater Sudbury" refers to a single city, not a conurbation of independent municipalities. However, the name 'Sudbury', without its official modifiers, is still the more common name for the city in everyday usage.
The city's Census Metropolitan Area consists of the city proper and the First Nations reserves of Whitefish Lake and Wanapitei, and had a population of 158,258 in the 2006 census. Informally, some residents of the area may also consider the metropolitan area to include the towns of Markstay-Warren, St.-Charles and French River, a region commonly known as Sudbury East.

Contents
History
Government
Communities
Geography
Seismic activity
Demographics
Transportation
Education
Culture
Franco-Ontarians
Visitor attractions
Science and technology
Retail
Arts and theatre
Music
LGBT community
Sudbury in art and literature
Health care
Emergency services
Sports
Climate
Notable People
Media
Sister cities
References
External links
Weather information

History


Originally named Sainte-Anne-des-Pins ("St. Anne of the Pines"), the community started as a small lumber camp in McKim township. During construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1883, blasting and excavation revealed high concentrations of nickel-copper ore at Murray Mine on the edge of the Sudbury Basin.
Earlier, in 1856, provincial land surveyor Albert Salter had located magnetic abnormalities in the area that were strongly suggestive of mineral deposits, although his discovery aroused little attention because the area was remote and inaccessible at that time. However, the railway construction made mineral prospecting in the area more economically feasible, and thus the community, renamed Sudbury in honour of the CPR commissioner's wife's hometown in England, grew rapidly as a mining town. Sudbury was incorporated as a town in 1893, and as a city in 1930. The town's first mayor was Stephen Fournier.
Through the decades that followed, Sudbury's economy went through boom and bust cycles as world demand for nickel rose and fell. Demand was high during the First World War, when Sudbury-mined nickel was used extensively in the manufacture of artillery in Sheffield, England. It bottomed out when the war ended, rose again in the mid-1920s, then fell as the Great Depression hit, and rose again during the Second World War. The Frood Mine alone accounted for 40 per cent of all the nickel used in Allied artillery production during the war. After the end of that war, however, Sudbury was in a good position to supply nickel to the United States government when it decided to stockpile non-Soviet supplies during the Cold War.
In 1940, Sudbury became the first city in Canada to install parking meters.
In the 1950s and 60s, Sudbury was beset by extensive labour unrest, as Inco and Falconbridge employees not only fought their companies for the right to unionize, but also fought amongst themselves as to what union would represent them.
Banner welcoming wartime hardrock miners, c. October 5, 1942
Both the Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers and the United Steelworkers of America had support among Sudbury miners, and there were often riots in the streets as the rival factions confronted each other. Ultimately, the two unions settled into an uneasy truce, with Mine Mill winning the right to unionize Falconbridge, and the Steelworkers winning the right to unionize Inco.
In February 1956, the Mine Mill held its Canadian convention, which was particularly notable for being the first non-U.S. concert given by Paul Robeson after the United States government instituted its travel ban against him. The same year, the city approved a natural gas contract with Northern Ontario Natural Gas — the city's mayor at the time, Leo Landreville, was later forced to resign from the Supreme Court of Ontario bench after allegations that he had received stock favours in exchange for the contract.
On August 20, 1970, a tornado struck the city and its suburbs, killing six people and remaining the eighth deadliest tornado in Canadian history.
In 1973, the city and its suburban communities were reorganized into the Regional Municipality of Sudbury.
Labour issues would continue to be Sudbury's dominant economic challenge. In 1978, Inco workers embarked on a strike over production and employment cutbacks, which lasted for nine full months. As Inco was by this time Sudbury's largest employer, the strike decimated Sudbury's economy. When the strike finally ended in 1979, the city's government recognized the urgent need to diversify the city's economy. Through an aggressive strategy, the city tried to attract new employers and industries through the 1980s and 1990s. Today mining remains an important industry, but Sudbury also derives economic strength as a centre of commerce, government, tourism and science and technology research. Although Inco remains the city's largest single ''employer'', the mining industry is no longer the city's largest ''sector'' of employment.
The city's economic growth has also been hindered at times by taxation issues: because of federal corporate taxation rules pertaining to natural resources companies, Sudbury's ability to directly levy municipal taxes on Inco and Falconbridge is severely curtailed, compared to most cities whose major employers operate in other industries. As a result, unlike most cities, fully 75 per cent of Greater Sudbury's tax base comes from residential property taxes. [1] Prior to the creation of the Regional Municipality of Sudbury in 1973, the city could not in fact levy ''any'' taxes against the mining companies at all, a fact which sometimes left the city without a sufficient tax base to adequately maintain or improve municipal services. Concurrently with the creation of the Regional Municipality, the city was given the power to levy property taxes on the companies' surface operations, but not on underground facilities. This change improved the city's tax base somewhat, but the ongoing discrepancy has still been cited as a factor in municipal politics as recently as the 2006 municipal election.
The former regional municipality was amalgamated in 2001 into the single-tier city of Greater Sudbury. In 2006, there was renewed debate on the municipal amalgamation. The former town of Rayside-Balfour, and many of its residents, are unhappy with their position in the city, and lobbied for a deamalgamation referendum during the 2006 municipal election. City council refused to endorse such a referendum, although even with the council's endorsement a vote would still have to be approved by the provincial Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing. In 2006, then-Mayor David Courtemanche appointed former MPP Floyd Laughren to chair an advisory committee to review and make recommendations to improve the quality of city services to the outlying communities. Laughren submitted his final report on January 10, 2007, making 34 recommendations for improvements in the city's municipal ward structure, communications, transportation, recreation and transit services.
Also in 2006, both of the city's major mining companies, Inco and Falconbridge, were taken over by new owners: Inco was acquired by the Brazilian company CVRD, while Falconbridge was purchased by the Swiss company Xstrata. Xstrata donated the historic Edison Building, the onetime head office of Falconbridge, to the city in 2007 to serve as the new home of the municipal archives.

Government


Prior to 1973, Sudbury comprised portions of the geographic townships of Neelon and McKim.
In 1973, provincially-mandated restructuring of municipal government organized the city of Sudbury and surrounding towns into the Regional Municipality of Sudbury, which consisted of seven municipalities. The population figures cited next to each are for 1996, the last Canadian census before the amalgamated city came into effect:

★ City of 'Sudbury' (92,059)

★ Town (city after 1997) of Valley East (23,537)

★ Town of Rayside-Balfour (16,050)

★ Town of Nickel Centre (13,017)

★ Town of Walden (10,292)

★ Town of Onaping Falls (5,277)

★ Town of Capreol (3,817)
Municipal responsibilities were distributed between the council of the Regional Municipality and the councils of the individual towns and cities. The region covered 2,607 square kilometres.
In 1979, Sudbury became the first city in Canada to install a TTY line in the mayor's office to help improve service to deaf citizens. The city also implemented a new 3-1-1 service in 2007.
The five towns and two cities of the region, as well as several unorganized townships, were amalgamated by provincial order on January 1, 2001 to become the city of Greater Sudbury. The city is headed by a council and mayor. The main municipal office is at Tom Davies Square, named for a former chair of the Regional Municipality of Sudbury. Citizen service offices, which provide an access point for public services such as license applications, are also located in some of the suburban communities, often in the libraries or former town halls of the pre-amalgamation municipalities.
The current mayor of Greater Sudbury is John Rodriguez, who defeated David Courtemanche in the 2006 municipal election.
The city is represented federally by Members of Parliament Diane Marleau in the Sudbury riding, and Ray Bonin in Nickel Belt. Their counterparts in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario are Rick Bartolucci in Sudbury and Shelley Martel in Nickel Belt.
The provincial Ministry of Northern Development and Mines has its head office in the city.

Communities


The name ''Greater Sudbury'' is almost exclusively a political designation. In common usage, the city is still generally referred to as ''Sudbury''. The usage "Greater City of Sudbury" (rather than "City of Greater Sudbury") is also heard on occasion, but is technically incorrect.
Outside of the region, the name "Sudbury" is still commonly understood to refer only to the ''former'' city of Sudbury, with the outlying communities often believed to remain distinct from the city itself. Some of the outlying communities, for example, still retain their own distinct postal and telephone exchange codes — as of 2006, these services have still not been fully integrated into a single citywide system.
In local usage, however, the name "Sudbury" is more ambiguous. It may refer either to the city as a whole or exclusively to the urban core of old Sudbury, but is at the same time rarely if ever used as a geographic disambiguator. For instance, a resident of Chelmsford would not tell their neighbour they were going shopping "in Sudbury", but rather "downtown" or "in Minnow Lake" or "in New Sudbury".
See List of communities in Greater Sudbury.

Geography


The ore deposits in Sudbury are part of a large geological structure known as the Sudbury Basin, believed to be the remnants of a 1.85-billion year old meteorite impact crater. Sudbury ore contains profitable amounts of many elements, especially transition metals, including platinum. It also contains an unusually high concentration of sulfur. When nickel-copper ore is smelted, this sulfur is released into the environment, where it is toxic to vegetation. Carried aloft, it combines with atmospheric water to form sulfuric acid. This contaminates atmospheric water, resulting in a phenomenon known as acid rain.
The Inco Superstack dominates the Sudbury skyline.

As a result, Sudbury was widely, although not entirely accurately, known for many years as a wasteland. In parts of the city, vegetation was devastated, both by acid rain and by logging to provide fuel for early smelting techniques, as well as wood for the reconstruction of Chicago after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The resulting erosion exposed bedrock, which was charred in most places to a pitted, dark black appearance. There was not a complete lack of vegetation in the region, however. Paper birch and wild blueberry are notable examples of plants which thrived in the acidic soils, and even during the worst years of the city's environmental damage, not all parts of the city were equally affected.
During the Apollo manned lunar exploration program, NASA astronauts trained in Sudbury to become familiar with shatter cones, a rare rock formation connected with meteorite impacts. However, the popular misconception that they were visiting Sudbury because it purportedly resembled the lifeless surface of the moon dogged the city for years.
In the late 1970s, private, public, and commercial interests combined to establish an unprecedented "regreening" effort. Lime was spread over the charred soil of the Sudbury region by hand and by aircraft. Seeds of wild grasses and other vegetation were also spread. In twenty years, over three million trees were planted. The city's Nickel District Conservation Authority also operates a large conservation area, the Lake Laurentian Conservation Area, in the city's south end. The ecology of the Sudbury region has recovered dramatically, due both to the regreening program and improved mining practices. In 1992, Sudbury was one of twelve world cities given the Local Government Honours Award at the United Nations Earth Summit to honour the city's community-based environmental reclamation strategies. More recently, the city has begun to rehabilitate the slag heaps that surround the Copper Cliff smelter area, with the planting of grass and trees.
Sudbury is on the Canadian (Precambrian) Shield. With 330 lakes within its boundaries, Sudbury has more lakes than any other municipality in Canada. Among the most notable are Lake Wanapitei, the largest lake in the world completely contained within the boundaries of a single city, and Lake Ramsey, just a few kilometres south of downtown Sudbury, which held the same record before the municipal amalgamation in 2001 brought Lake Wanapitei fully inside the city limits.
Seismic activity

On November 29, 2006, the city was hit by a minor earthquake, which registered 4.1 on the Richter scale and had its epicentre approximately five kilometres west of Lively. It is believed that the movement began on the 7200 level of Creighton Mine, as ground stress worked its way through upper and lower levels along what is called the Creighton fault. [2] No major damage was reported, although there were reports of the quake being felt as far away as Toronto.
Seismologists confirmed in early December that the quake was most likely related to mining activity in the region. Mining-related seismological activity is not uncommon in the region, although it rarely causes any significant damage — in the most notable such incident, the then-outlying community of Worthington was destroyed on October 4, 1927 when a rock shift caused part of community to collapse into a mine shaft. No lives were lost in that incident, however, as a mine foreman had noticed the warning signs and successfully evacuated the community the previous evening. Similarly, on June 20, 1984, four miners at Falconbridge were killed in a rock burst which registered 3.4 on the Richter scale.
Small earthquakes were also reported on March 13[3] and September 20, 2005 [4].

Demographics


(Multiple Responses Included)
Ethnic originPopulationPercent
Canadian74,94548.82%
French59,58038.81%
English30,29519.73%
Irish24,91016.22%
Scottish21,30013.87%
Italian12,0257.83%
German10,1806.63%

[5]
The population of Sudbury has declined slightly in recent years, due mostly to many young Sudburians moving to other parts of Canada, especially the southern cities of Ontario. In 2001, the total population of Sudbury was 155,219, a drop of 6.1 percent, comparing to the 1996 population of 165,336. Approximately 18.27 percent of the population is under 14 years of age, while those over 65 number 13.84 percent. The average is 38.9 years of age.
In the 2006 census, the city's population increased to 157,857, a growth of 1.7 per cent over 2001 but still down from 1996. Of that population, 106,612 lived in the city's urban core, while the remaining 51,245 lived in more rural communities within the city limits.
Sudbury is largely a bilingual city. Sudbury has a large Francophone population, mostly due to the vast amount of inhabitants of French origin. Some 62.3% of the population speak English as their first language, followed by French at 28.2%.[6]
Similar to other northern cities, the majority of residents are Christian[7]. Almost 90 percent of the population claims various Christian denominations, the vast majority being Roman Catholic: 64.58%, Protestant: 23.09%, and other Christian groups numbering 1.62%. Other religions such as Islam, Judaism, and Hinduism constitute less than one per cent.

Transportation


Highway 17 is the main branch of the Trans-Canada Highway, connecting the city to points east and west. An approximately 25-kilometre (15 mile) segment of Highway 17, from Mikkola to Whitefish, is freeway. As of 2006, this segment is one of only two full freeway segments (the other being Highway 11 southeast of North Bay) in all of Northern Ontario.
Highway 69, also a branch of the Trans-Canada Highway, leads south to Parry Sound, where it connects to the Highway 400 freeway to Toronto. Highway 400 will eventually be extended to reach Greater Sudbury; although the timetable may be subject to change, this construction is currently scheduled for completion in 2017.
Highway 144 leads north to Timmins.
The provincial Ministry of Transportation has announced tentative plans to extend the Highway 17 freeway east to Coniston along the Southwest and Southeast Bypasses in the mid-2010s, near the completion date of the Highway 400 construction. Studies have also been completed on the freeway segment's westerly extension as far as Espanola, although no construction timetable has been set. In the longer term, the whole highway may eventually be subsumed into Highway 417, although to date no formal project planning has taken place and that is likely decades away.
Greater Sudbury is the only census division in Northern Ontario that maintains a system of numbered municipal roads, similar to the county road system in the southern part of the province.
The Greater Sudbury Airport is served by regional carrier lines such as Bearskin and Air Canada Jazz. Sunwing Vacations also offers direct flights out of the Greater Sudbury Airport to Orlando (Florida, USA), Varadero (Cuba), and to Cancún/Mayan Riviera (Mexico). Sudbury is also served by rail (Via Rail, with The Canadian between Toronto and Vancouver, and the Lake Superior between Sudbury and a string of smaller area communities to White River) and inter-city bus service (Greyhound Canada and Ontario Northland). The city also maintains a public transit system, Greater Sudbury Transit.

Education


Greater Sudbury is home to three postsecondary institutions: Laurentian University, a bilingual university, Cambrian College, an English college of applied arts and technology, and Collège Boréal, a francophone college with additional campuses throughout Northern Ontario. (Boréal does, however, offer a few trade courses in English.) Laurentian University is also home to the Sudbury campus of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM). NOSM was the first medical school to open in Canada in 30 years, opening its doors in September 2005.
English-language public schooling is provided by the Rainbow District School Board. The board operates 30 elementary and seven secondary schools throughout the city, plus one school for students with special needs and the Cecil Facer Youth Centre for young offenders. The Sudbury Catholic District School Board offers publicly-funded English-language Catholic schools, with 18 elementary schools, four high schools and an adult education centre. French-language public schools are administered by the Conseil scolaire de district du Grand Nord de l'Ontario with nine elementary and three secondary schools. Finally, the French-language catholic board is the Conseil scolaire de district catholique du Nouvel-Ontario, with 18 elementary and four secondary schools.
There are also two Christian private schools in the city (Glad Tidings Academy and King Christian Academy), as well as a Montessori school.

Culture


The Big Nickel at Dynamic Earth in Sudbury

Franco-Ontarians

Approximately 30 per cent of the city's population is Franco-Ontarian, particularly in the former municipalities of Valley East and Rayside-Balfour. The city has the largest proportion of francophones to the general population of any major city in Ontario. Sudbury also has the second largest francophone community of any city in English Canada, ranking behind only Ottawa.
As a result, Sudbury is a very important centre in Franco-Ontarian cultural history, and the francophone community of Sudbury has played a central role in developing and maintaining many of the cultural institutions of francophone Ontario. Those institutions include the Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario, La Nuit sur l'étang, La Galerie du Nouvel-Ontario, Le Centre franco-ontarien de folklore and the Prise de parole publishing company.
The Franco-Ontarian flag, as well, calls Sudbury home. It was first flown in 1975, at Laurentian University. As of 2006, it is now permanently flown at Tom Davies Square.
Visitor attractions

Sudbury has lent its mining heritage to two major tourist attractions: Science North, an interactive science museum built atop an ancient earthquake fault on the shore of Lake Ramsey, and Dynamic Earth, an earth sciences exhibition which is also home to the Big Nickel, one of Sudbury's most famous landmarks. A mining heritage monument also overlooks the city's Bell Park.
Another city landmark, the Inco Superstack, is the tallest freestanding chimney in the Western hemisphere. The city is also home to the Greater Sudbury Heritage Museums, a network of historical community museums.
In 2007, the city undertook a community project which saw the downtown Paris Street bridge retrofitted with 72 flagpoles, each of which will permanently display the flag of a world nation demographically represented among the population of Sudbury. Although its status has not yet been confirmed, organizers of the project submitted it to the Guinness Book of World Records for consideration as the world's longest span of flags on a bridge.
Science and technology

Sudbury was one of the first Canadian cities to plan and implement its own digital telecommunications strategy. Beginning in 1996, the city began constructing a fibre optic network which saw over 400 kilometres of cable laid down to serve the city's business and citizen populations. In November 2005, the city was named one of the world's "Smart 21 Communities" by the Intelligent Community Forum, a worldwide project to honour technological innovation. Other named cities included Waterloo, Ottawa, Philadelphia, Dubai, Seoul, London, Manchester and Melbourne. [8]
The Creighton Mine site in Sudbury is the site of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory, the lowest background radiation particle detector in the world.
Sudbury hosted the International Physics Olympiad in 1997.
Retail

Sudbury is one of the only cities remaining in Ontario where retail stores are still not permitted to open on Boxing Day, December 26. Instead, stores in Sudbury begin their post-Christmas Boxing Day sales on December 27. In recent years, some major chain retailers in the city have occasionally chosen to disregard the municipal bylaw, opening on December 26 and voluntarily accepting the risk of a fine.
With retail businesses in the city increasingly locating outside of the downtown core, particularly in the Four Corners, Kingsway and Lasalle Boulevard areas, the city has struggled in recent years to maintain a vibrant downtown. Recent projects have included the creation of Market Square, a farmer's and craft market, the redevelopment of the Rainbow Centre mall, streetscape beautification projects, and the creation of the Downtown Village Development Corporation, a committee of business and government representatives responsible for creating and maintaining neighbourhood improvement initiatives in the downtown core. At various times, city councillors and community groups have proposed that the city purchase the CPR stockyards west of Elgin Street in order to expand the downtown area, although to date this has not been pursued.
Arts and theatre

The city is home to two art galleries, the Art Gallery of Sudbury and La Galerie du Nouvel-Ontario. Both are dedicated primarily to Canadian art, especially but not exclusively artists from Northern Ontario.
The city has two professional theatre companies, the anglophone Sudbury Theatre Centre and the francophone Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario. The STC has its own theatre venue downtown, while the TNO stages its productions in the auditorium at Collège Boréal. Theatre productions are also staged by students at Laurentian University's affiliated Thornloe faculty, by a community theatre company at Cambrian College, as well as by high school drama students at Sudbury Secondary School and École secondaire Macdonald-Cartier.
An annual film festival, Cinéfest, is also held in the city each September. The animated CBC Television series ''Chilly Beach'' is produced at March Entertainment's Sudbury studio.
Music

In 2006 and 2007, community discussion has centred on the creation of a performing arts centre. Sudbury has some trouble attracting concert tours, in part because, since the demise of the Grand Theatre in the 1990s, the city lacks a suitable mid-size concert venue for bands that have outgrown the bar circuit but are not yet able to fill venues such as the Sudbury Arena. Bell Park's outdoor Grace Hartman Amphitheatre and Laurentian University's Fraser Auditorium are sometimes used for summer bookings, although neither is available year-round. Additionally, the relatively small size of the Northern Ontario market means that major touring artists will appear, if they play any venues in the region at all, at either the Sudbury Arena ''or'' Sault Ste. Marie's Steelback Centre, but not both.
Smaller touring indie rock bands, as well as some local musicians, are usually booked at The Townehouse Tavern, while local bands play a number of small music venues across the city.
The city is also home to two annual music festivals, the Northern Lights Festival Boréal and La Nuit sur l'étang. The local Sudbury Symphony Orchestra performs six annual concerts of classical music, currently staged at the city's Glad Tidings Tabernacle.
Although local bands in the Sudbury area play music in a variety of genres, from rock to punk to country to heavy metal to folk to hip hop, the city's most nationally and internationally successful artists, such as Robert Paquette, Kate Maki, Nathan Lawr, Gil Grand, Kevin Closs, CANO, Jake Mathews and Chuck Labelle, have predominantly been in the country, folk and country-rock genres. Another notable Canadian country rock band, Ox, includes two musicians from Sudbury, Ryan Bishops and Mark Browning, but is currently based in Vancouver. The punk rock band Statues and the rap metal bands Project Wyze and Konflit dramatiK have also had some success.
LGBT community

Sudbury also has a moderately sized but active LGBT community. This community is partially fuelled by local residents, out of town students attending the city's three postsecondary institutions, as well as residents of surrounding Northern Ontario cities. Zig's, the city's prominent gay business, is the only gay bar in all of Northern Ontario.
The city first held its Pride parade in 1997. The event, which takes place in August, has been held annually ever since. There was no parade in 2006 due to organizational problems, but the 2007 ten-year anniversary march was a success.
Sudbury in art and literature

Notable works of fiction set primarily or partially in Sudbury or its former suburbs include Bruce McDonald's film ''Roadkill'', Paul Quarrington's novel ''Logan in Overtime'', Robert J. Sawyer's ''Neanderthal Parallax'' trilogy, Alistair MacLeod's novel ''No Great Mischief'', and Jean-Marc Dalpé's play ''1932, la ville du nickel'' and his short story collection ''Contes sudburois''. The city is also fictionalized as "Chinookville" in several books by American comedy writer Jack Douglas.
One of Stompin' Tom Connors' most famous songs, "Sudbury Saturday Night", is inspired by the city and its hard rock mining image. Quebec musician Mononc' Serge also wrote a song about the city, titled "Sudbury", on his 2001 album ''Mon voyage au Canada''.
In the television show ''Heroes'', character Eden McCain was dumped into Lake Ramsey after committing suicide.
In the 1990 film ''Roadkill'', the main character is sent to Sudbury to track down the band Children of Paradise.
Artist A. Y. Jackson's 1953 painting "Spring on the Onaping River" depicts a waterfall on the Onaping River between Dowling and Onaping. A scenic lookout on Highway 144 enables a view of the waterfall. The painting itself hung at Sudbury Secondary School from 1955 to 1974, when it was stolen from the school grounds shortly after Jackson's death and has never subsequently been recovered.
In 2007, Ontario's French language public broadcaster, TFO, announced that it would produce a new comedy series, ''Météo Plus''. The series, set to premiere in 2008, will be both produced and set in Sudbury.

Health care


Greater Sudbury serves as the health care centre for much of northeastern Ontario through the Sudbury Regional Hospital. The hospital currently has three sites: St. Joseph's Health Centre (the old Sudbury General Hospital), Sudbury Memorial, and Laurentian. Formerly three separate hospitals, the government of Ontario amalgamated the hospitals in the late 1990s under its health care restructuring agenda. The one-site care facility is still under construction at the site of Laurentian Hospital. Laurentian is also the site of the Regional Cancer Program, which treats cancer patients from across the north. In 1968, the first successful coronary artery bypass surgery in Canada was performed at Sudbury Memorial Hospital.
Mental health services are also provided to the area through the Northeast Mental Health Centre.

Emergency services


Greater Sudbury is served by the Greater Sudbury Police Service, [9] headquarted in downtown Sudbury. There is also a detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police located in the McFarlane Lake area of the city's south end. The city also provides ambulance / EMS and fire services. Greater Sudbury Fire Services operates from 25 fire stations located throughout the city, with a combination of full-time and paid part-time firefighters. Prior to the municipal amalgamation of 2001, most of the suburban towns were served by separate volunteer fire departments, which were amalgamated into the current citywide service as part of the municipal restructuring. Police and EMS services, however, were provided by a single region-wide system prior to amalgamation.

Sports


The Sudbury Wolves of the Ontario Hockey League play in the city, at the Sudbury Arena. The city is also home to a harness racing track, located in Azilda, called Sudbury Downs. That facility, although not a full casino, also has slot machines.
Laurentian University is represented in the Canadian Interuniversity Sport league by the Laurentian Voyageurs and the Laurentian Lady Vees. Cambrian College is represented in the Canadian Colleges Athletic Association by the Cambrian Golden Shield, and Collège Boréal is represented by the Boréal Vipères. High school students compete in the Sudbury District Secondary School Athletic Association (SDSSAA), which is a division of Northern Ontario Secondary School Athletics (NOSSA).
The city hosted the IAAF World Junior Championships in Athletics in 1988. Sudbury also played host to the Brier, Canada's annual men's curling championships, in 1953 and 1983, and to the 2001 Scott Tournament of Hearts, the women's curling championship.
The Sudbury Spartans football club have played in the Northern Football Conference since 1954. The team was originally known as the Hardrocks in honour of the city's mining industry. However, then coach Sid Forster believed that the name "Hardrocks" sounded too much like a street gang and the name was changed to the Spartans in 1967.

Climate


Temperature Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Daily Average -13.6 -11.4 -5.3 3.1 11.3 16.2 19 17.7 12.3 5.8 -1.5 -9.5 3.7
Daily Maximum -8.4 -6.1 -0.1 8.5 17.2 22 24.8 23.1 17.3 10 2 -5.1 8.8
Daily Minimum -18.6 -16.6 -10.4 -2.2 5.3 10.4 13.3 12.3 7.2 1.5 -5.1 -13.9 -1.4

Precipitation Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Rainfall(mm) 12.5 7.1 29.8 47 75.9 77.7 76.6 90.7 101.2 76.8 47.6 13.7 656.5
Snowfall(cm) 63.8 50 38.9 18.3 1.5 0 0 0 0.1 5.3 32.4 64.2 274.4
Precipitation(mm) 68.6 50.6 65.9 64.9 77.5 77.8 76.6 90.5 101.3 82.1 76.5 67.1 899.3

Weather averages are for the period from 1970 to 2000.
December 2006 was notable for a lack of lasting snow cover from mid-December to mid-January 2007. In 2006, Sudbury experienced a rare "Green Christmas".

Notable People


This list includes people from all communities who have lived, or continue to live within the ''current'' city boundaries.

Robert Adetuyi, screenwriter (''Stomp the Yard'')

Al Arbour, NHL hockey coach

Larry Aurie, former captain of the Detroit Red Wings

Alex Baumann, Olympic gold medalist (1984)

Todd Bertuzzi, controversial NHL hockey player

Hector "Toe" Blake, NHL hockey player, coached 8 Stanley Cup teams

Michel Bock, historian and winner of the 2005 Governor General's Award for French language non-fiction

Joe Bowen, Canadian sportscaster "Molson Leafs Hockey"

Andrew Brunette, NHL hockey player

Daryl Brunt, ''Canadian Idol'' competitor

Jeffrey Buttle, figure skater

Robert Campeau, financier

Randy Carlyle, NHL hockey player, NHL hockey coach

Judy Feld Carr, humanitarian who rescued over 3,000 Jewish people from wartorn Syria in the 1970s and 1980s

Cindy Cook, children's entertainer and former host of ''Polka Dot Door''

Jean-Marc Dalpé, dramatist and two-time winner of the Governor General's Award

Paul Desmarais, businessman

Robert Dickson, poet and winner of the 2002 Governor General's Award for French poetry

Ron Duguay, NHL hockey player

Rand Dyck, political scientist and professor at Laurentian University

Judy Erola, former federal cabinet minister and Member of Parliament

Robert Esmie, Olympic gold medalist (1996)

Mike Foligno, NHL hockey player, OHL Hockey Coach

Aaron Gavey, hockey player

Michael Gillis, former NHLer

Gerald S. Graham, imperial and naval historian; University of London professor

James Jerome, former federal Member of Parliament and Speaker of the House of Commons

Rebecca Johnston, played hockey for Team Canada

Gary Kinsman, sociologist and professor at Laurentian University

Floyd Laughren, former Member of Provincial Parliament and Ontario Minister of Finance

Dave Lowry, NHL hockey player

Ross McLaren, filmmaker and artist

Bruce Mau, designer

Stef Paquette, Francophone singer-songwriter

Michael Persinger, cognitive neuroscience researcher and professor at Laurentian University

James Pidutti, professional baseball player signed by the MLB Toronto Blue Jays

Reg Plummer, Olympic field hockey player

Marie-Paule Poulin, Senator and president-elect of the Liberal Party of Canada

Kimberly Rogers, woman whose death in 2001 while under house arrest for a disputed welfare fraud conviction became a major political issue in Ontario

Art Ross, NHL hockey player

John Rutherford, professor emeritus, Laurentian University and local business owner

Brian Savage, NHL hockey player

Eddie Shack, NHL hockey player

Sandra Shamas, comedian

Sonja Smits, television actress (''Traders'', ''Street Legal'', ''The Eleventh Hour'')

Pat Travers, rock guitarist (''"Boom Boom (Out Go the Lights)"'')

Alex Trebek, television host (''Jeopardy!'')

Media


Main articles: Media of Greater Sudbury

Sister cities



Gomel, Belarus

Kokkola, Finland

References


1. "Liberals Declare Growth Plan for North," ''Sudbury Star'', 18 May 2007.
2.

3.

4.

5.
Ethno-Cultural Portrate of Canada, Table 1
6.
2001 Community Profile
7.
2001 Community Profile

8.
URENIO Portal: Innovation, Environments of Innovation, Intelligent Cities and Regions

9.
Greater Sudbury Police Service

External links




Google Map - Sudbury, Ontario

City of Greater Sudbury

Greater Sudbury Development Corporation

Sudbury Tourism

The Real Sudbury Page

Downtown Sudbury

Sudbury Photos

Sudbury Museums

Virtual Sudbury

Greater Sudbury Community Web Portal

Talk Sudbury Forum

Maps & Lake Data
Weather information


Full Weather Data

The Weather Network - Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

Weather from Environment Canada/Weather office

Sudbury, Ontario Forecast from Weather Underground (weather service)

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