I think it's the same everywhere. Edmonton lost a club a few years ago due to encroachment. I have shot at a few clubs that have had to fight the good fight to keep going and put in landscaping changes massive in size to try to dampen the sound of gun fire for whiny folks who have encroached in areas the clubs have been at long before the suburbs started to expand often miles. SK lost a club two years ago when it's owner suffered severe health issues resulting in his passing a year later. His family didn't want the club and nobody wanted to take it over so the family parted it out and sold it all off at pennies on the dollar just to get rid of it. That's one club that isn't coming back anytime soon and one last venue for the few registered shooters left and the locals lost a club close to home and now have to travel 90 minutes to the nearest club. Our club runs about 28-36 members each year, about 8 of which shoot weekly. We have most evenings we are open 4-6 trap shooters and 2-3 skeet shooters and 99% of the time it's the same 8-9 people.
Add to that today's current environment with few new shooters and the writing is on the wall. There was a time the shooting sports attracted only the very wealthy as they were the only ones who could afford such pastimes then with a better standard of living many more could participate. It is quickly returning to a sport of the wealthy. Add all the things together, an anti-gun government, cost, encroachment, lack of knowledge of the sport by non-participants and it's not hard to see why it's dying. I'll continue to shoot as much and as long as I can, hopefully until I am too old to participate but I truly feel I'll live to see my participation end before that happens.