More people calling Prairies home, despite lower oil prices, economic downturn
REGINA — At the peak of the last oil boom, there were so many people living in the southeastern Saskatchewan city of Estevan that there was nowhere to stay.
“We had people sleeping in trailers — sleeping in vehicles, if you can believe that,” recalled Estevan Mayor Roy Ludwig.
Then oil prices fell, drilling activity slowed to a crawl and Ludwig figures the community lost about 2,000 people, mostly transient workers. By last fall, Estevan had a vacancy rate of 27.6 per cent, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.
It’s much the same situation in Alberta, where big-city vacancy rates were in the single digits five years ago.


