Today the area known as the
Kalyna Country ecomuseum, which preserves and showcases Ukrainian Canadian culture. It is also home to the
Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village which contains pioneer buildings from all across the area. At one time within the boundaries of the settlement block, up to 80% of the population was of Ukrainian origin. However, internal migration within Canada has changed the patterns. As well, since Statistics Canada has allowed people to claim "Canadian" as an ethnic origin only since 2001, figures are not comparable before and after that date. According to the 2006 Census, in
Alberta census division 10 there were 6,700 people who claimed to be single-origin Ukrainian (the largest of any ethnic group, excluding "Canadian") and 17,130 people who claimed some Ukrainian origin out of a total population of 85,155, giving approximately 20% of the population. In
Division 12 there were 3,575 who claimed to be Ukrainian single-origin and 11,220 total claiming some Ukrainian origin out of 59,305, for around 19% of the population. Ethnic origin statistics are not available for many of the municipalities with the most concentrated Ukrainian populations, because
Statistics Canada does not publish this information for communities with a total population of less than 5,000 for privacy reasons.
Rural-to-urban migration has reduced the populations of
Lamont County,
Thorhild County, the
County of Two Hills No. 21, and the
County of Minburn No. 27 below this threshold. The counties for which there are statistics that have the highest proportions of total respondents claiming some Ukrainian origin are the
County of St. Paul No. 19 (26%),
Sturgeon County (18%),
Beaver County (16%), the
Municipal District of Bonnyville No. 87 (17%), and the
County of Vermilion River (16%). Other than Ukrainians, the largest responses in this area are French (especially near Bonnyville and St. Paul), German (especially near
Josephburg), Native Indian, and Metis, with smaller number of English, Scottish, and Irish, and some Romanian, Polish, Russian, Jewish, and Norwegian. In the three largest towns in the region the percentage of the population claiming some Ukrainian origin were:
Vegreville 44%, (5,720)
St. Paul, 31%, and
Bonnyville, 18%. Other towns and villages thought to have large Ukrainian populations include
Myrnam,
Willingdon,
Lamont,
Mundare,
Andrew,
Chipman, plus numerous hamlets and rural communities. == References ==