Government and society
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Constitutional framework
Saskatchewan’s constitution, based on custom and the Saskatchewan Act of 1905, provides for a British parliamentary system, in which the tenure of the executive depends on the support of a majority in the legislature. A general election must be held every five years on a set date. As in all the provinces, the lieutenant governor is appointed and has become by custom and judicial decision the counterpart of a constitutional monarch, whose position and powers are largely symbolic. Saskatchewan’s larger centres have their own local police, but in the province as a whole the law is enforced by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Unlike those of Canada’s other Prairie Provinces, the Saskatchewan legislature has a long tradition of strong vocal opposition in the assembly, with a two-party system ideologically divided into free enterprise (e.g., Liberal, Progressive Conservative, and Saskatchewan parties) versus democratic socialism (New Democratic Party [NDP], formerly the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation). In the 1970s the Progressive Conservatives gained support at the expense of the Liberals, and they became the governing party in 1982, temporarily ousting the NDP. The NDP returned to power in 1995, and the Progressive Conservatives reconstituted themselves into the Saskatchewan Party in 1997. The Liberals, the Progressive Conservatives, and the Saskatchewan Party all drew their greatest strength from rural areas. The NDP has a stronger base in urban areas and in the northern portion of the province. The right-of-centre parties have generally espoused development of the province by business and corporate means, while the NDP has generally supported the use of public and cooperative enterprise. However, it was the NDP government that introduced policy changes, including reduced royalties, that encouraged renewed investment in the resource sector.
The province is divided into a multiplicity of local administrations including health districts and school districts, all constitutionally under provincial jurisdiction but all having considerable local responsibility. Municipal government in Saskatchewan is based on the U.S. mayor-council model, with a mayor elected separately from the council and with a number of appointed boards and commissions operating largely independently of either.
For much of its history, Saskatchewan has qualified for the kind of federal aid available to those provinces whose economy operates below the national average. The province’s reliance on federal subsidies as a percentage of total revenues varies with crop conditions and mineral revenues. When these are high, Saskatchewan no longer receives subsidies but instead contributes to the support of other regions of Canada.
Health and welfare
The province’s “middle” position carries over into its internal affairs: it is socially and economically one of the least-stratified areas in Canada, having little of great individual or corporate wealth on the one hand and little general destitution on the other. Average income is typically somewhat below the national average, but participation in the labour force tends to be higher and unemployment lower. Saskatchewan’s First Nations, and to a lesser extent its Métis, are generally more disadvantaged than other Saskatchewan residents, with lower incomes and higher unemployment rates. Many First Nations people lack the education needed to qualify for good jobs, especially if they live in rural areas remote from employment opportunities. About one half of First Nations people still live on reserves.
Education
Saskatchewan provides free education for children from kindergarten to grade 12, funded partially through provincial grants and partially through municipal taxes. Public schools, “separate” schools for Roman Catholics, a small number of Francophone schools, and independent (mostly religious or special-purpose) schools all receive funding from the provincial government. Private, for-profit schools raise their funds through school fees.
Postsecondary education needs are met by a variety of regional colleges, vocational institutions, and universities. Several of these (most notably, Gabriel Dumont Institute and First Nations University of Canada) were designed to cater to the First Nations and Métis population. The province’s oldest institution of higher education, the University of Saskatchewan, was established at Saskatoon in 1907. The university has produced much fundamental research that is particularly relevant to Saskatchewan (for example, it houses the Canadian Light Source synchrotron, one of the most powerful third-generation synchrotrons in the world). Both the University of Saskatchewan and the smaller University of Regina have associated research parks that combine the skills of the private sector and university researchers. At Saskatoon the biotechnology industry is prominent, whereas the Regina Research Park focuses on energy-related research.
Cultural life
Although lacking great metropolitan centres, Saskatchewan has developed creditable art galleries as well as professional theatre and musical venues. The Regina Symphony Orchestra, founded as the Regina Orchestral Society in 1908, is the oldest continuously performing orchestra in Canada. However, provincial audiences are small, and many artists leave for careers elsewhere. Writing in and about the province, always strong, has blossomed since the 1960s, and the same is true of painting and sculpture. The province has produced a number of visual artists including the modernist group known as the Regina Five. A number of Saskatchewan natives have also made their marks as performers, including actor Leslie Nielsen, radio and television host Art Linkletter, and popular musicians Joni Mitchell, Buffy Sainte-Marie, and Colin James. The province is served by the radio and television networks of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and by private broadcasting services.
The province is noted for the number of professional hockey players and curling champions it has produced. The community-owned gridiron football team, the Saskatchewan Roughriders, of the Canadian Football League, enjoys provincewide support.
History of Saskatchewan
Because Saskatchewan became a full member of the Canadian federation only in 1905, much of the area’s historical interest depends on events vastly older than the province. Dinosaur and mammoth finds have been common. The first known human inhabitants were present at least 12,000 years ago; they were mainly hunters. On the eve of European colonization, First Nations people from a variety of cultural and linguistic origins occupied the forest and prairie regions. With the coming of the Europeans, First Nations became involved in the fur and provisioning trade. The first European known to see the Saskatchewan River was Henry Kelsey, who in 1691 explored part of the plains for the Hudson’s Bay Company, which received its charter in 1670. Fur trappers, traders, and buffalo (bison) hunters, many of whom were First Nations or Métis, along with European traders, explorers, and missionaries, made up the bulk of the area’s inhabitants until the second half of the 19th century.
The area from which Saskatchewan is carved was first granted to the Hudson’s Bay Company and then, in 1869, surrendered by the Rupert’s Land Act back to the British crown, in order that it could be turned over to the newly formed Dominion of Canada, which was done in 1870. Canada administered its newly acquired western territories almost as if they were colonies and in 1873 created the North West Mounted Police (later called the Royal Canadian Mounted Police) to maintain law and order. In 1885 the national authorities sent out troops to quell the second Riel Rebellion, an uprising in which a large number of Métis, by then deprived of their main sustenance, the buffalo, sought to establish their rights to western lands in the face of growing settlement. Constitutionally, the territories in 1875 were granted an executive council with a promise of an elected assembly, and by 1897 they had won responsible parliamentary government on the British model.
Saskatchewan, created by the Saskatchewan Act in 1905, entered confederation with its present boundaries and the status of a province equal to the others except that, as with its sister province Alberta, the federal government retained control of its natural resources, paying a subsidy in place of the revenues the resources might have yielded. (The resources were assigned to the province in 1930.) The new provincial government, after a good deal of rivalry among the towns, chose Regina, the former territorial capital, as its centre of operations, and the first premier appointed was Walter Scott, a believer in partisan politics, as opposed to those who favoured a continuation of the kind of cooperative effort that had led to the creation of Saskatchewan as a separate province. A member of the party in federal power at the time, the Liberal Scott was the first of several able politicians who kept the party in power in Saskatchewan except in 1929–34 and 1944–64 and after 1971. The 1944–64 period was unique in North American history. During that era the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), successively led by T.C. Douglas and Woodrow Lloyd, established the first avowedly socialist government on the continent, and the party won international attention in 1962 when it implemented the continent’s first compulsory medical care program.
Regardless of which political party has been in power at any given time, the Saskatchewan environment has always demanded much governmental intervention in the economy. The provincial telephone company and the power and gas utility, for example, were publicly owned (although neither was created by a socialist government) into the 1980s, when privatization began under a Progressive Conservative government. The cooperative movement has been encouraged by all parties and has been influential in a wide range of service, retail, and wholesale activities that include large credit unions and an oil refinery. In the handling of grains, once the backbone of the province’s economy, the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool was also a cooperative until it became a publicly traded corporation (known as Viterra) in the 1990s. It was subsequently acquired by Glencore International PLC, a large multinational corporation. The co-ops helped many individuals survive the drought and economic depression of the 1930s, during which Saskatchewan society is considered to have sustained setbacks as severe as any suffered in Canada. After World War II the province attained a major development in mineral exploitation and industrial growth, and its diversified base was combined with new farming techniques to increase economic potential. Unfortunately, periods of prolonged low commodity prices inhibited economic growth, and the province continued to suffer out-migration.
In the first decade of the 21st century, commodity prices improved, spurred by economic growth in emerging countries such as China, India, and Brazil. These developments attracted migrants to the province, providing expanded markets for domestic growth. The revival of population growth and the economic stabilization that resulted increased Saskatchewanians’ confidence in the future, leaving a province that had historically regarded itself as “next year country” tentatively wondering if “next year” had actually arrived.