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Houses selling for $15,000. Schools closed. Hospitals shut down. Grocery stores open twice a week. These are Canada's fastest-dying towns — and people are still buying in. We ranked 8 Canadian towns where population collapse is measurable and ongoing. From Uranium City in northern Saskatchewan to the completely abandoned town of Gagnon, Quebec — each town is at a different point on the same timeline. Some have decades left. Some are already gone. We scored each town on four criteria: severity of population loss, collapse of economic foundation, current serviceability, and realistic trajectory. What you'll find in this video: — A town of 70 people accessible only by float plane in summer — An Ontario town that tried to reinvent itself as a retirement destination — and why it's still dying — The only town on the list with a population of zero — Why remote workers and retirees are buying in despite the decline Towns covered: Uranium City SK · Leaf Rapids MB · Tumbler Ridge BC · Thompson MB · Elliot Lake ON · Marystown NL · Kapuskasing ON · Gagnon QC If you're researching affordable housing in Canada, ghost towns, or the long-term effects of single-industry dependence — this video is for you.