Uranium City is a northern settlement in Saskatchewan, Canada. Located on the northern shores of Lake Athabasca near the border of the Northwest Territories, it is 230 metres (750 ft) above sea level. The settlement is 760 kilometres (470 mi) northwest of Prince Albert, 760 kilometres (470 mi) northeast of Edmonton and 48 kilometres (30 mi) south of the Northwest Territories-Saskatchewan boundary. For census purposes, it is located within the province's Division No. 18 territory.
History
In 1949, athabascaite was discovered by S. Kaiman while he was researching radioactive materials around Lake Athabasca near Uranium City.
In 1952, the provincial government decided to establish a community to service the mines in the Beaverlodgeuranium area developed by Eldorado Mining and Refining, a federal crown corporation. In 1954, the local newspaper, The Uranium Times, noted that 52 mines were operating and 12 open-pit mines were next to Beaverlodge Lake.[2] Initially, most of the residences in Uranium City were simply tents.
Two options were considered for communities in the region: small communities near the mine site or larger more centralized communities with adequate services. Not wanting to replicate some of the problems associated with small mining towns at the time in Northern Ontario, the government pushed for the second option and modelled Uranium City after the community of Arvida, Quebec.[3] In 1956, the provincial government passed the Municipal Corporation of Uranium City and District Act, creating a unique, chartered "district" with authority over education, health, and welfare.[4]
The population of Uranium City started to grow significantly only once Eldorado Resources made a deliberate initiative in 1960 to see staff housed in Uranium City instead of the Eldorado campsite.[3]
After reaching a population of 2,507 in 1981,[5] the closure of the mines in 1982 led to economic collapse, with most residents of the community leaving. The Uranium City Act was repealed on 1 October 1983, reducing the community to an unincorporated "northern settlement".[6] The local hospital closed in the spring of 2003. Its population in 2016 was 73,[7] including a number of Métis and First Nations people.[8] The town is considered a uranium boomtown due to the rapid increase in population during the mining period and substantial depopulation that followed.[9][10]
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Uranium City had a population of 91 living in 41 of its 59 total private dwellings, a change of 24.7% from its 2016 population of 73. With a land area of 5.99 km2 (2.31 sq mi), it had a population density of 15.2/km2 (39.3/sq mi) in 2021.[16]
Transportation
The community has a certified airport, Uranium City Airport, that features a treated gravel runway of 3,935 ft (1,199 m) operated by the Saskatchewan Ministry of Highways and Infrastructure. The airport is one of the few employers left in the community. West Wind Aviation previously served Uranium City with flights to Prince Albert and Saskatoon three times a week. Norcanair served the community with scheduled flights until it ceased operations in 2005.[17]Transwest Air also provided a route with Saskatoon and Regina until that company cancelled its service in November 2008.[18][19] It now serves Uranium City with a flight from Saskatoon that stops in Prince Albert, Points North and Stony Rapids.[20] There is also a small water aerodrome located next to Uranium City.
There is no normal road access connecting Uranium City with the rest of Canada. There is provision for a winter road which connects with Fond-du-Lac.[21]Saskatchewan Highway 962 provides travel for a short distance within the local area. A significant bridge replacement project on Highway 962 was conducted in 2001 at the Fredette River.[22]
Communications
Local telephone service is provided by SaskTel and was first available in Uranium City on 30 November 1955.[23] Current telephone numbers for international calling are of the form +1 306 498 xxxx (NPA-NXX: 306–498, CLLI: URCYSK05DS0).[24]
Canada Post continues to deliver mail to the community. The post office is located at the municipal office (Postal Code: S0J 2W0).[25]
Radio broadcasting in the community is provided by:
Until 2012, television service was provided by CBKAT operating on channel 8 at a power of 15 watts. This was a rebroadcast of CBC Television service from CBKSTSaskatoon. Until 2003, the local transmitter's television programming originated from CBC North.[29] This repeater was one of 620 analog television signals nationwide shut down by the CBC on 31 July 2012 due to budget cuts.
Climate
Uranium City is part of the Taiga Shield Ecozone and experiences a subarctic climate (KöppenDfc) with long, cold, snowy winters, brief transitional periods, and short, cool, and humid summers. The temperature range is typically large due to frigidly cold winter temperatures that often plunge below −30 °C (−22 °F). The highest temperature ever recorded in the settlement was 38.0 °C (100.4 °F) on 30 June 2021 during the 2021 Western North America heat wave.[30]Wind chill factors are prominent as well in the winter months, making the cold temperatures seem to be much colder than they actually are. Uranium City has recorded one of the coldest wind chill factors of any Canadian location, with −74 °C or −101.2 °F wind chill reading being recorded on 28 January 2002.[citation needed] Additionally, an average of 34 days a year record wind chill readings below −40 °C or −40 °F.[31] The lowest temperature ever recorded in the settlement was −48.9 °C (−56.0 °F) on 15 January 1974 and on 7 February 2021.[30]
Education in Uranium City is under the authority of the Northern Lights School Division #113, a school district that covers most of northern Saskatchewan. The only remaining school in Uranium City is Ben McIntyre School, serving classes from kindergarten to Grade 9. The school opened in 1977 and is named after the first teacher in Uranium City who established the first school in the community in 1952 with 40 students in ten grades. As of September 2005, 10 students were enrolled.[35]
Secondary education was provided by CANDU High School, named after a nuclear reactor. According to travellers Vincent Chan and Tricia Holopina who visited the city in 2002, locals state that the school was opened in 1979 and closed in 1983 after only three years of service, with the building since sustaining extensive vandalism.[36][37]
Notable people
The following people are associated with Uranium City by birth, residence or career:
Ride the Cyclone, a musical created by Brooke Maxwell and Jacob Richmond about six teenagers from a fictionalized version of Uranium City who are involved in a roller coaster accident.
^ ab1981 Census of Canada(PDF). Place name reference list. Vol. Western provinces and the Territories. Ottawa: Statistics Canada. May 1983. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
^Admunson, Michael A. (2002). Yellowcake Towns: Uranium Mining Communities in the American West. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado Press. p. 116. ISBN0-87081-662-4.
^McIntyre, Bernard Garnet (1993). Uranium City: The Last Boom Town. Mill Bay, B.C.: Driftwood Press. ISBN9780969713401.
^"Population of unincorporated places of 50 persons and over, Alberta, 1961 and 1956". 1961 Census of Canada: Population(PDF). Series SP: Unincorporated Villages. Vol. Bulletin SP—4. Ottawa: Dominion Bureau of Statistics. 18 April 1963. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
^"Population of unincorporated places of 50 persons and over, 1966 and 1961 (Alberta)". Census of Canada 1966: Population(PDF). Special Bulletin: Unincorporated Places. Vol. Bulletin S–3. Ottawa: Dominion Bureau of Statistics. August 1968. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
^"Population of Unincorporated Places of 50 persons and over, 1971 and 1966 (Alberta)". 1971 Census of Canada: Population(PDF). Special Bulletin: Unincorporated Settlements. Vol. Bulletin SP—1. Ottawa: Statistics Canada. March 1973. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
^"Geographical Identification and Population for Unincorporated Places of 25 persons and over, 1971 and 1976". 1976 Census of Canada(PDF). Supplementary Bulletins: Geographic and Demographic (Population of Unincorporated Places—Canada). Vol. Bulletin 8SG.1. Ottawa: Statistics Canada. May 1978. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
^"Communities List". Missinipi Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 27 May 2006. Retrieved 4 September 2006. Frequency information is inconsistent – this source indicates frequency is 101.1 FM but other sources claim 99.9 FM.