The front page of this morning's Helsingin Sanomat charts a shift in the people moving to the 10 municipalities that border the capital region.
According to the paper, municipalities including Nurmijärvi, Kirkkonnummi and Tuusula have seen a rise in foreign language-speaking inhabitants, a term that refers to non-native speakers of the Finnish, Swedish or Sámi languages.
During the period 2015-2019, the majority of the population growth seen in the 10 bordering municipalities can be attributed to incoming foreign language speakers, the paper says. Population growth in almost all the municipalities concerned has relied on new migrants outnumbering departing Finnish, Swedish or Sámi speakers.
HS says that the largest group the data shows are Estonian speakers, with 1,650 people moving into the area between 2015 and 2019.
Pekka Vuori, a population data specialist from Helsinki's Urban Research and Statistics Unit, is quoted as saying that this migration trend helps explain another demographic shift.
"The number of Estonians in Helsinki has been declining for many years," he told HS.
Early morning coastguard rescue
Daily tabloid Iltalehti reports on an incident in which a man was rescued after spending almost an hour in the icy waters of the Gulf of Finland.
According to the paper, the man fell from a cargo ship that was at anchor off the island of Orrengrund in the early hours of Friday morning.
A call for help from the ship was answered by the Gulf Coast Guard Rescue Centre, which dispatched a boat from Orrengrund and a rescue helicopter from Helsinki.
According to reports, the man was pulled from the sea fifty minutes after falling in. A lifeboat transported him to Orrengrund, before he was taken by helicopter to hospital in Kotka.
Iltalehti reports that the Coastguard described the man's condition as "good, given the circumstances."
The temperature in the area was -14C, with a northerly wind of 7 metres per second, the paper says.
Snow-clearing workers could shift record number of cars
The cold weather this winter has had a knock-on effect for car owners in Tampere, reports Pirkanmaa's regional paper Aamulehti.
Contractors clearing snow from the city's streets have already had to move over 200 cars to allow their work to take place. Last year, they didn't have to move a single one, the paper reports.
Kari Heikkinen from Tampere Infra told Aamulehti that the company's workers have had to shift cars out of the way every day since their work began on 25 January.
In previous years the company has had to move up to 800 vehicles to allow snow clearing works to take place, but according to Heikkinen this year the figure could reach 1,000.
Drivers needn't be too concerned however, Heikkinen told the paper. "The cars are either moved to nearby streets or lifted out of the way during ploughing, before being put back again," he said.