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  • Categories  

    List of projects and/or buildings associated with social housing. Inventory built from various data sources of varying quality in the early 2000s and maintained since then on an annual basis. Data used to better understand the supply of social and community housing in the territory. The data is categorized by type of project, i.e.: - HLM: Public housing managed by the Office municipal d'habitation de Montréal, whose rent is fixed at 25% of household income. This category includes the Corporation des Habitations Jeanne-Mance. - OMHM: Affordable public housing resulting from projects by the Office municipal d'habitation de Montréal outside the HLM program and managed in a form similar to NPOs with the participation of residents. - SHDM: public and affordable rental housing owned and managed by the Société d'habitation et de développement de Montréal and whose projects may be managed by an NPO. - NPO: Rental housing owned and managed by a non-profit organization and which targets customers with difficulties in finding adequate housing. NPOs sometimes offer community support to their tenants. - Coop: Housing owned by a cooperative that leases them to its members. Cooperatives aim to offer quality housing at affordable prices while promoting socio-economic diversity in projects. More information on the subject is available on [the City of Montreal's website] (https://montreal.ca/articles/repartition-des-logements-sociaux-et-communautaires-17858).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

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    The deprivation index was designed in the late 1990s in order to measure the deprivation of Quebecers on a small geographic scale. It is used for the purposes of researching and monitoring trends on social inequalities in health, developing policies and programs, allocating resources, and evaluating services. It is composed of a material dimension and a social dimension that can be analyzed separately or in combination. The index includes six indicators, all from the 2011 census and calculated on the basis of dissemination areas (DAs). The file includes the national (province of Quebec), regional (health regions (RSS)), and local (territorial service networks (RTS), local service networks (RLS), and local community service centers (CLSCs)) versions of the deprivation index. In cases where a broadcast area (AD) straddles two territories (in the RTS, RLS and CLSC versions of the file), it is the AD with the largest proportion of the population that determines which RTS, RLS or CLSC is selected in order to have a single deprivation index value per AD for mapping. All the results by AD are available in the equivalence table on the [*Web site of the National Institute of Public Health of Quebec (INSPQ) *] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/defavorisation/indice-de-defavorisation-materielle-et-sociale). For more information on the deprivation index, you can consult [*The Material and Social Deprivation Index: in brief*] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/publications/2639).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

  • Categories  

    The deprivation index was designed in the late 1990s in order to measure the deprivation of Quebecers on a small geographic scale. It is used for the purposes of researching and monitoring trends on social inequalities in health, developing policies and programs, allocating resources, and evaluating services. It is composed of a material dimension and a social dimension that can be analyzed separately or in combination. The index includes six indicators, all from the 2016 census and calculated on the basis of dissemination areas (DAs). The file includes the national (province of Quebec), regional (health regions (RSS)), and local (territorial service networks (RTS), local service networks (RLS), and local community service centers (CLSCs)) versions of the deprivation index. In cases where a broadcast area (AD) straddles two territories (in the RTS, RLS and CLSC versions of the file), it is the AD with the largest proportion of the population that determines which RTS, RLS or CLSC is selected in order to have a single deprivation index value per AD for mapping. All the results by AD are available in the equivalence table on the [*Web site of the National Institute of Public Health of Quebec (INSPQ) *] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/defavorisation/indice-de-defavorisation-materielle-et-sociale). For more information on the deprivation index, you can consult [*The Material and Social Deprivation Index: in brief*] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/publications/2639).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**

  • Categories  

    The deprivation index was designed in the late 1990s in order to measure the deprivation of Quebecers on a small geographic scale. It is used for the purposes of researching and monitoring trends on social inequalities in health, developing policies and programs, allocating resources, and evaluating services. It is composed of a material dimension and a social dimension that can be analyzed separately or in combination. The index includes six indicators, all from the 2021 census and calculated on the basis of dissemination areas (DAs). The geographic file includes the national (province of Quebec), regional (health regions (RSS)), and local (territorial service networks (RTS), local service networks (RLS) and local community service centers (CLSC)) versions of the deprivation index. In cases where a broadcast area (AD) straddles two territories (in the RTS, RLS and CLSC versions of the file), it is the AD with the largest proportion of the population that determines which RTS, RLS or CLSC is selected in order to have a single deprivation index value per AD for mapping. All results by AD are available in the equivalence table on the [Web site of the National Institute of Public Health of Quebec (INSPQ)] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/defavorisation/indice-de-defavorisation-materielle-et-sociale). For more information on the deprivation index, you can consult [*The Material and Social Deprivation Index: in brief*] (https://www.inspq.qc.ca/publications/2639).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**