Mékinac Regional County Municipality Explained

Mékinac (RCM)
Settlement Type:Regional county municipality
Coordinates:46.8167°N -103°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Mauricie
Established Title:Effective
Established Date:January 1, 1982
Seat Type:County seat
Seat:Saint-Tite
Parts Type:Municipalities
Parts Style:coll
P1:Saint-Tite
P2:Notre-Dame-de-Montauban
P3:Sainte-Thècle
P4:Trois-Rives
P5:Hérouxville
P6:Lac-aux-Sables
P7:Saint-Adelphe
P8:Saint-Roch-de-Mékinac
P9:Saint-Séverin
P10:Grandes-Piles
P11:Lac-Boulé
P12:Lac-Masketsi
P13:Lac-Normand
P14:Rivière-de-la-Savane
Government Footnotes:[1]
Government Type:Prefecture
Leader Title:Prefect
Leader Name:Alain Vallée
Area Total Km2:5,554.90
Area Land Km2:5,222.10
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Total:12,358
Population As Of:2016
Population Density Km2:2.4
Population Blank1 Title:Change
2011-2016
Population Blank1: 4.4%
Population Blank2 Title:Dwellings
Population Blank2:8,324
Timezone:EST
Utc Offset:−5
Timezone Dst:EDT
Utc Offset Dst:−4
Postal Code Type:Postal code(s)
Area Code:418 and 581
Website:Official web site

Mékinac (in French mekinak/) is a regional county municipality (RCM) of 5,607 km2 located in the administrative region of Mauricie, along the Saint-Maurice River, which also crosses the RCM from one end to the other, and the Matawin River, a tributary of the Saint-Maurice. Located in the province of Quebec, Canada.

Established in January 1982, the Mékinac RCM is made up of 10 or 11 municipalities depending on the source, Saint-Tite is the most populous city, four unorganized territories occupying two-thirds of its surface area.[3] [4]

Geography

Eleven municipalities and Unorganized Territories make up the RCM de Mékinac. It is distinguished by a huge forest dotted with more than 2,000 lakes, agriculture adapted to the environment, popular holiday sites and picturesque villages. The Mékinac RCM is located on both sides of the Saint-Maurice River, between the upper and central Mauricie regions. It is adjacent to the RCMs of Matawinie, Maskinongé, Centre-du-Québec, Les Chenaux, Portneuf and Haut-Saint-Maurice. As part of the Mauricie administrative region, it is divided into two provincial electoral districts; Portneuf and Laviolette, while the federal riding is Champlain.

Concentrated in the southeastern tip of the territory, agricultural land corresponds to the limit of the invasion of the Champlain Sea. There is also some land cleared for cultivation in certain settlement hamlets scattered between the Laurentian Mountains, on the banks of the Mékinac River, and the northern portion of the Batiscan River.

The forest covers nearly 93% of the total area of the Mékinac RCM. It was the raison d'être of the colonization of the territory and still supports 20% of all jobs.

Forest ownership is shared between: the provincial government (public lands), the federal government (La Mauricie National Park) and approximately 587 private landowners, with a proportion of 79%, 1% and 20% of the forest respectively.

Hydrology: 3 major rivers - 4,665 lakes

The Saint-Maurice River, the Batiscan River and the Sainte-Anne River flow from west to east on the territory of the MRC de Mékinac, the hydrographic network includes:

The Mékinac RCM has 4,665 lakes for a total area of 34,272.8 ha (342.7 km2).

Photos

The Mauricie region river's Saint-Maurice, Batiscan, Sainte-Anne (Les Chenaux) and their tributaries cross the territory of Mékinac RCM

Toponymy

Mékinak, (Algonquin). — Lake, river and township of Champlain County. The Mékinac River flows into the Saint-Maurice twelve miles upstream of Les Piles, and 57 miles from Trois-Rivières.A few spell it Mékinac, but the geographic office of Canada considers the ending in k.This word means turtle, and according to Father N. Caron, it was given because of a mountain that had more or less the shape of a turtle.

In the Cree idiom, this word also has the same meaning.In his lexicon of the Algonquin language, Father Cuoq translates Micinimakina as "big turtle" and brings this word of mici which would have lengthened in micini, and mikinak.
—Translate from french, source: Publications de la Société du Parler français au Canada 1906[6]

The Algonquin Mikinak means turtle. Native Americans often referred to places based on the naming of the animal kingdom. Once well known, the toponym made it possible to refer to the same place in conversations. The designation Mikinak would have been assigned to a nearby mountain. However, it remains possible that the abundance of turtles in this portion of the territory explains this name[7]

However, the name is also similar to the historical Algonquin word mekanâc, pronounced /me:kana:ʃ/, meaning "small path". The toponym Mekinac was assigned to the Mékinac River, Mékinac Lake, at Mékinac (township), in the ex-municipality of Saint-Joseph-de-Mékinac, Quebec, and town of Saint-Roch-de-Mékinac.

The foothills of the Laurentians are located in Saint-Tite. The Laurentide hinterland is developed for hunting and fishing; it includes, among others, the Tawachiche, Gros-Brochet and Chapeau-de-Paille zecs, as well as the Saint-Maurice Wildlife Reserve

Municipalities of RCM Mékinac

The RCM has 14 entities

MunicipalityStatusSurface
km2
Population (2011)[8] Density
hab./km2
Grandes-PilesVillage municipality
HérouxvilleParish municipality
Lac-aux-SablesParish municipality
Lac-BouléUnorganized area
Lac-MasketsiUnorganized area
Lac-NormandUnorganized area
Notre-Dame-de-MontaubanMunicipality
Rivière-de-la-SavaneUnorganized area
Saint-AdelpheParish municipality
Saint-Roch-de-MékinacParish municipalityh
Saint-SéverinParish municipality
Saint-TiteCity
Sainte-ThècleMunicipality
Trois-RivesMunicipality
Total

Between 2006 and 2011, the population grew by 2.0%. The RCM has 8,237 private dwellings whose 6,096 private dwellings are occupied by usual residents. The median age of the population is 52.6 years old. Statistics Canada reports that in 2011, 88.5% of the population was aged 15 and over, meanings 11,430 individuals (including 5700 men and 5730 women), divided into 3,940 private households. This census indicates that 2,070 people lived alone. Of this population, 1,880 individuals have mastered both French and English, or 14.6%.

Transportation

Access routes

Highways and numbered routes that run through the municipality, including external routes that start or finish at the county border:[9]

See also

References



Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mékinac - Résertoire des municipalités . 2008-01-11 . Ministère des Affaires municipale et des Régions du Québec . https://web.archive.org/web/20131220094721/http://www.mamrot.gouv.qc.ca/repertoire-des-municipalites/fiche/mrc/350/ . 2013-12-20 . dead .
  2. Web site: Census Profile, 2016 Census Mékinac, Municipalité régionale de comté [Census division], Quebec ]. Statistics Canada . December 8, 2019.
  3. Web site: Mékinac . Commission de toponymie Quebec . Government of Quebec . 2023-11-24 . fr . 1985-03-07 . Along the Saint-Maurice River.
  4. Web site: Regional County Municipality of Mékinac Revised Land Use Plan . Mékinac . 2023-11-24 . 423 . fr . 2008 . Developer tool.
  5. Web site: Andrée-Ann Cloutier . Plan régional des milieux humides et hydriques- MRC de Mékinac- Document de travail . Société d'aménagement et de mise en valeur du bassin de la Batiscan (SAMBBA) . 67 . fr . 2021-09-29 . 2023-11-24. Bassin versant Saint-Maurice.
  6. Web site: Rouillard . Eugene . Noms géographiques de la province de Québec et des provinces maritimes empruntés aux langues sauvages . Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec . Publications de la Société du Parler français au Canada 1906 . 19 June 2023 . 61.
  7. Web site: Saint-Roch-de-Mékinac, origin and signification . Commission de toponymie Quebec . Quebec Gouvernement . 20 June 2023 . fr.
  8. Recensement de 2011 du Canada
  9. http://www.quebec511.gouv.qc.ca/fr/carte_routiere/ Official Transport Quebec Road Map