Author name: The Quebec Chronicle Telegraph

Citizen groups, developer spar over height of Îlot Dorchester project

Citizen groups, developer spar over height of Îlot Dorchester project

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The city administration will decide “in the coming days” the fate and shape of a major development project in Saint-Roch.

A battle over the Îlot Dorchester plan between citizens’ groups and the developer, Groupe Trudel, flared up last week over the impact the mixed housing and commercial project would have on the neighbourhood skyline.

The groups claim the developer is trying to “divide and conquer” local residents, while the developer has struck back, denouncing “lies and falsehoods” coming from opponents of the project.

After a series of consultations organized by the city, Groupe Trudel submitted a plan in October to transform what is currently a huge park- ing lot along Rue Saint-Vallier Est into a complex with 410 housing units, including 20 social housing and 40 afford- able housing units, a 150-room, 20-storey hotel and a large grocery store.

The main focus of opposition to the project is the height of the hotel, which does not conform with the urban development plan for that zone of Saint-Roch, which currently has a 10-storey maximum.

Company president William Trudel seems to have stoked opposition to the project with comments he made in media interviews two weeks ago. Speaking on BLVD radio Jan. 20, he suggested citizens are against the project because they don’t want to lose “their partial view of the mountains in a housing crisis […] People have difficulty finding housing, and then they show up and say, ‘I don’t want to lose my sunset.’”

The Collectif citoyen Saint- Roch/Saint-Jean-Baptiste responded Jan. 30 with a long and harshly worded open letter which argues that the city itself has vaunted the “panorama” that would be obstructed by the hotel tower.

The letter said, “The developer’s rhetoric of minimizing the value of this remarkable panorama is all the more laughable, since it is precisely its value that he covets with all his heart! Why build on the Dorchester block a world-class hotel [that] will bring tens of thousands of tourists to Saint- Roch, according to his own words? What is so attractive about this location for a hotel chain, if not, precisely … the remarkable panorama?”

Trudel, in turn, struck back with an open letter published in the Journal de Québec Feb. 5. While saying, “We welcome the expression of opinions contrary to ours since this moves the debate forward,” Trudel wrote, “I take up my pen … to correct the facts on the five biggest lies being spread.”

The letter addresses and rejects claims about the amount of green space allotted to the project, the inclusion of Airbnb units, the amount of social housing, the question of densification of housing and the description of the hotel as “luxury.”

Regarding “densification,” Trudel notes that Quebec City has 5,550 people per square kilometre in its downtown, making it less densely populated than Ottawa (6,800), Montreal (8,370), Toronto (16,600) and Vancouver (18,800.)

He concludes the letter, “[S]preading lies and defaming my company is a line that I will never allow to be crossed. I built Trudel with $1,500 and an immense amount of personal effort and sacrifice. The 150 employees earn their living within the company with pride, honour and honesty. We are the example that anything is possible in Quebec.”

A spokesperson for Mayor Bruno Marchand said the city is expected to make a decision on the Îlot Dorchester project “in the coming days.”

In previous comments, Marchand said the city is looking for compromises to ensure the block is developed.

Citizen groups, developer spar over height of Îlot Dorchester project Read More »

RTC unveils new routes, new app, more àVélo stations

RTC unveils new routes, new app, more àVélo stations

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The Réseau de Transport de la Capitale (RTC), buoyed by a boost in ridership and a new source of revenue, is adding two new routes and implementing an application to integrate mobility services. It’s also moving ahead with an expansion of the popular àVélo bike-sharing network.

At a Feb. 5 news conference at a library in Val-Belair, RTC and city officials confirmed that several elements of the 2025-28 development plan unveiled in the fall will be put into effect as of this spring. The choice of Val-Belair is significant in that as of late August the 804 bus route will be extended into the sector.

According to RTC president and executive committee member Maude Mercier Larouche, the new $60 municipal tax on vehicle registrations, implemented at the beginning of the year, “allows us to maintain, but above all to efficiently develop our service offering.”

The registration fee affects some 300,000 vehicle owners and is expected to add nearly $20 million to city coffers.

In a news release, Mercier Larouche said, “With the improvements planned for the coming year, the RTC is realizing its vision for the future, which is to offer simpler, more direct and more efficient journeys by multiplying travel options.”

One travel option the city is promoting heavily is the àVélo bike-sharing service, which is managed by the RTC. As of May 1, 50 new stations, with 500 bikes will be added to the net- work in the sectors of Vanier, Saint-Louis, Saint-Rodrigue/ Jesuites and Maizerets. This marks the largest expansion of the service, now boasting 115 stations and 1,300 bikes, since it was launched in 2021.

Other new RTC services coming this year are the addition of Flexibus service in Cap-Rouge and the expansion of eXpress bus routes in the suburbs.

Also announced recently, is the awarding of a contract to develop a mobile application to integrate transportation services in the capital region.

According to a Jan. 31 release from the city, the new app, to be tested in the fall, will “bring together bus services offered in the CMQuébec territory (RTC, Société de transport de Lévis, Transport collectif de La Jacques-Cartier, PLUmobile), the tramway, adapted transport [used by people with disabilities], the Flexibus on-demand transport service and the àVélo electric bike-sharing service, as well as services from other partners such as car sharing, ferries (Société des traversiers du Québec), taxis, private and public parking lots and electric vehicle charging stations.”

The city said the app will be “the very first regional mobility platform developed for a public transit company in Canada.”

The city awarded the contract, with an overall estimated cost of $14.28 million, to Siemens Mobility Canada, a division of the German transportation technology giant.

Implementation of the app will be handled by Capitale Mobilité, the RTC’s division that manages ventures separate from bus system operations.

The RTC recorded a significant boost in ridership in 2024, as reported in data released on Jan. 24. Bus users took more than 31.5 million trips last year, a jump of 11.6 per cent.

Students accounted for the biggest increase, at 12 per cent, while there was a three per cent decrease in senior ridership. General customer use rose two per cent.

The increase in ridership added some $8 million to RTC revenue from passengers, for a total of $76.4 million.

RTC unveils new routes, new app, more àVélo stations Read More »

City to pause food waste collection to install new scale

City to pause food waste collection to install new scale

City to pause food waste collection to install new scale

Ruby Pratka

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

City officials are asking residents and business owners who use the city’s “purple bag” food waste collection program not to put their purple bags out for collection from Feb. 15-22, due to work being done at the city incinerator. 

During that time, workers will install a new scale to weigh the garbage that is returned to the incineration pit after the sorting of the purple bags, the city’s communications and citizen relations service said in a statement on Feb. 7. The scale “will allow the collection of data on the quantities of organic and non-organic residual materials,” they said.

Residents are asked not to place their purple bags in their bin during this period in order to keep them from going to the incinerator. 

This is the second time in the program’s history that food waste collection has been briefly paused for optimization; last January, collection was suspended for five days to facilitate improvements to the flow of bags on conveyor belts.  

The Ville de Québec launched its residential compost program in November 2022 in La Haute-Saint-Charles before gradually expanding it to the city’s five other boroughs. Since last year, businesses, industrial facilities and government institutions have been able to sign on voluntarily. Food waste at participating homes and businesses is separated into distinctive purple bags and sent to the city’s organic material biomethanization centre, adjacent to the incinerator, in Beauport. The residue is liquefied, heated and converted into methane gas and digestate, an agricultural fertilizer. 

According to the city website, 75 per cent of households participate in the voluntary food waste separation program. City officials say the conversion of food waste into methane has made it possible to inject more than four million cubic metres of renewable natural gas into the provincewide Énergir network. For more information on the program, visit ville.quebec.qc.ca/sacmauve

City to pause food waste collection to install new scale Read More »

Mary Gillespie House purchased for English-speaking community

Mary Gillespie House purchased for the English-speaking community

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

The historic Mary Gillespie House in Sainte-Foy has been purchased for the use of the local English-speak- ing community. By next year, it will open as a multipurpose venue, thanks in part to the $1.5-million contribution from Canadian Heritage through the Community Spaces Fund program for official-language minority communities. Federal Minister for Public Services and Procurement and MP for Québec Jean-Yves Duclos announced the funding arrangement on Feb. 3.

“This project started with a young individual who saw the potential in this house in July 2023,” said Jean Robert, presi- dent of Jeffery Hale Community Partners. “From there, our staff got involved. The boards of two of our community foundations, architects, lawyers and the staff at Canadian Heritage had the same goal: an inclusive multipurpose space for the community.”

Robert affirmed that Mary Gillespie House will be trans- formed for the English-speaking community by next year, if all goes according to plan. “It will provide an inclusive space for cultural preservation, col- laboration and connection,” said Robert. “It will become a vibrant hub of services and ac- tivities for the English-speaking

community for years to come, promoting a sense of belonging for its members and helping to ensure its long-term vitality.”

“The English-speaking com- munity has been present in Quebec City for over 265 years. This is a lot of years and hard and heavy work with great suc- cess,” said Duclos. “Here, we have an example of a heritage home that will last and be preserved for its beauty and be used for the benefit of our English-speaking community. When we are diverse, we are more proud.”

“The Mary Gillespie House is in my riding, and I’m de- lighted that our government is investing in this community space for the people of Quebec City. I hope that Louis-Hébert

residents will be able to come together and build relation- ships in this magnificent and historic Sainte-Foy building,” said Louis-Hébert MP Joël Lightbound. “This is good for the community. It is not the biggest community, but it is strong, vibrant, and has deep roots. I am very happy that this space will bring the community together.”

According to the Ville de Québec register of historic buildings, the house was built between 1860 and 1867. Its first resident-owner appears to have been Mary Gillespie (1840-1935), widow of mer- chant James Hewitt and sister of James Gillespie, who owned Maple Cottage, formerly located on Chemin des Quatre-Bourgeois. The residence remained in the Hewitt family for almost 30 years.

The house is located at 819 Ave. Moreau in Sainte-Foy. It is a 1.5-storey farmhouse situated on a large lot. The majority of its historical components, including wooden windows, dormers, doors and floors, a metal roof, a covered gallery on three sides and chimneys at each end, have been maintained. Since the front lot was sold for a commercial building on Chemin Sainte-Foy, the original main entrance faces the back of that building rather than Avenue Moreau. 

Mary Gillespie House purchased for English-speaking community Read More »

Jean-Yves Duclos backs Mark Carney for federal Liberal leader

Jean-Yves Duclos backs Mark Carney for federal Liberal leader

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Federal Liberal leadership hopeful Mark Carney has landed the support of Jean-Yves Duclos, a key Quebec minister in the government of departing prime minister Justin Trudeau.

Duclos declared his support for Carney on Feb. 7 and hosted him for a series of events in Quebec City, including a meeting with Bonhomme Carnaval. Carney also met with Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand. Duclos, the minister of public services and procurement and MP for Québec, offered his support via an open letter, the same forum he used two weeks ago to invite all candidates to submit platforms.

Duclos applauded Carney’s response to his letter, and noted his experience in dealing with financial crises “has clearly demonstrated your leadership and partnership capabilities.”

The minister also praised Carney’s “commitment to the protection of the French lan- guage, the arts and culture, and promoting a strong voice for Quebec [which] will help strengthen our country in these turbulent times.”

Duclos also noted that both he and Carney “are economists, not politicians.”

As of this writing, five candidates remain in the leadership race: Carney, former finance minister and deputy prime minister Chrystia Freeland, for- mer minister and House leader Karina Gould, former Montreal MP Frank Baylis and former Toronto-area MP Ruby Dhalla.

The Liberal Party of Canada has set the dates for candidate debates, on Feb. 24 in French and Feb. 25 in English, both to take place in Montreal. Carney, Duclos and Louis-Hébert MP Joël Lightbound – who was one of Carney’s earliest caucus supporters – met with local Liberals at a pub in Place Ste-Foy on Friday evening. Innovation and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne, who gave Carney a tour of Shawinigan the week before, was also in attendance.

In a scrum with reporters beforehand, Carney said he had been meeting with local chambers of commerce to learn firsthand about local concerns. He said he supported the city’s tramway project as an example of investing in the future. In local interviews the next day, the former governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England said he found the “third link” project championed by the Quebec government “interesting” but would not commit to a federal contribution without knowing more about the details of the plan or its cost.

Carney said in the face of American threats to Canada’s economy, “what we need to do is work as a team with all levels of government across Canada.

“I am very encouraged by the resolve Canadians are showing. They want to be positive, they want to be united, they want to move forward, they don’t want division. They’ve had enough of insults. And what we’re offering is that positivity, that sense of action.”

Carney said, “We’re in a crisis, but it’s a massive opportunity.” Picking up a slogan from the Quebec Liberals of the 1960s, Carney said Canadians are “masters of their own house.”

The QCT asked Carney to update his comment on Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show on Jan. 13, prior to jumping into the race, that the Liberals “have a chance” of winning the next election.

Carney said, “We have a very good chance. Given the stakes, given the team we have, given the capabilities of the Liberal Party in addressing this crisis, in building our economy and as well, above all, given the values of the Liberal Party and the importance we place on solidarity, in helping the vulnerable in our society, on building a sustainable economy. We not just can win, we must win and we will win.”

The new leader of the Liberal Party is to be chosen on March 9 by a vote of registered members. Whoever wins automatically succeeds Trudeau as prime minister.

Jean-Yves Duclos backs Mark Carney for federal Liberal leader Read More »

Ateliers du Carnaval pull back curtain on night parades

Ateliers du Carnaval pull back curtain on night parades

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

Ateliers du Carnaval pull back the curtain on night parades

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

Over the past weeks, the staff at Les Ateliers du Carnaval has been working hard to create and restore the iconic floats in preparation for the legendary night parades.

On Feb. 3, reporters were invited to tour the various workshops as staff put the finishing touches on the floats and dancers practised their moves for the parades.

The Ateliers du Carnaval is where the magic of the Winter Carnival is brought to life year after year. It is where 500 people, including 350 artists and artisans, spend 3,000 hours creating temporary art in the dead of winter. With a few coats of paint, some sculpted wood and lots of plywood, the wheeled platforms are transformed into different worlds: Bonhomme’s icemobile, Flip Fabrique’s acrobatic zone, Ubisoft’s Assassin’s Creed Shadows float and much more.

On the evening of Feb. 15, residents who missed the Feb. 8 Lower Town Night Parade (see article in this edition) can see the floats come to life at the Upper Town parade, with lights, music and performers, and the nine sequences directed by 11 artistic directors. There will be something for everyone: circus performances, dancers, lights, music and even pyrotechnics. To enjoy the full experience, spectators are reminded to dress warmly and bring their Carnival trumpets and other noisemakers.

The massive 16-foot-high Ubisoft float will capture everyone’s attention. Inspired by the soon-to-be-released action-adventure video game Assassin’s Creed Shadows, this float resembles a traditional Japanese house. The Assassin’s Creed logo is added to the hanging lanterns.

In an adjacent workshop, workers were building Bonhomme’s float. On the day of the tour, there was little to see. Reporters, like the rest of the public, will have to wait for the parades to see the complete show.

The Feb. 15 Upper Town parade starts at 7 p.m. on Grande Allée from Avenue des Érables.

For more information about the parades and other Carnival events, visit carnaval.qc.ca/en.

Ateliers du Carnaval pull back curtain on night parades Read More »

Bonhomme’s ice palace days away from being ready

Bonhomme’s Ice Palace is days away from being ready

Cassandra Kerwin

Cassandra@qctonline.com

From Feb. 7 to 16, visitors with Quebec Winter Carnival effigies can walk among the eight towers of Bonhomme’s Ice Palace and marvel at their height, with the tallest tower reaching 36 feet (nearly 11 metres). It took more than 17 days for snow and ice sculptor Marc Lepire and his team of 10 builders to complete the “Nordic sanctuary” using 2,800 ice blocks, each weighing 300 pounds and measuring 40 inches by 20 inches by 10.5 inches. Once completed, the Ice Palace will cover 5,800 square feet. Be sure to dress warmly when you visit it, because Bonhomme likes it cold, with ideal temperatures between -10 and -15. 

“There aren’t many people who build ice walls,” said Lepire, who has been building a new Ice Palace for Bonhomme every year for 13 years. “The first year I did it, there were 22 of us, and this year there are 10. I had to adapt and find the right people to do it.

“After last year’s abnormally warm weather forced us to close the site early, we had to rethink the structure and the effects of the sun on the ice, even in February,” said Lepire. “This year, we thought of the palace differently – the corners of the towers, the strongest parts, are oriented toward the sun. We hope it will last throughout the Carnival if temperatures remain below -5 degrees.” 

Quebec’s winter wildlife inspired Lepire and designer Jean-François Couture as they decorated the palace. Visitors will discover ice sculpted into moose, trees, owls, traditional snow boots, ceinture fléchée sashes and more. After sunset, everything is lit by colourful LED lights, bringing life to all the sculptures. 

“It’s truly a representation of Bonhomme’s one and only great love: winter,” said  Carnival director Marie-Ève ​​Jacob. “Lepire and his team finished the exterior of the palace a few days ago and now they are working on the interior. Thanks to their skills in sculpting, visitors will discover eight unique towers. The first one represents the snowflake, because Bonhomme was born from a snowflake. At the end, we have a lookout, to see the site from a bird’s eye view. It will truly be another wonderful Carnival experience.”

Visitors must have a Carnival effigy to visit the Zone Loto-Québec. The effigy, available for $39 plus tax, is valid for entry to all the carnival sites from Feb. 7-16. For more information, visit carnaval.qc.ca.

Bonhomme’s ice palace days away from being ready Read More »

TRAM TRACKER: TramCité planning moves forward despite Ottawa-Quebec funding feud

TRAM TRACKER

TramCité planning moves forward despite Ottawa-Quebec funding feud 

 Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Work continues on Quebec City’s tramway project, called TramCité, despite a war of words over which government is paying what and when for the urban transit system.

In what is being likened to a political ping-pong game, the Coalition Avenir Québec government is demanding the federal Liberal government hand over funds promised for the tramway.

The backdrop to the dispute is the prospect of the election of a Conservative government led by Pierre Poilievre, who has said he will not give “one cent” to Quebec City’s tramway, but redirect funds promised by the Liberals to the building of a bridge or tunnel across the St. Lawrence River.

Last week, Jonatan Julien, the Quebec minister responsible for infrastructure and minister responsible for the Capitale-Nationale region, wrote to federal Infrastructure Minister Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, demanding Ottawa pay up immediately.

In a letter obtained by local media, Julien asks Ottawa to pay $1.44 billion  “in order to guarantee the financial support of your government and thus, ensure that the completion of the project is not compromised by possible political uncertainties.”

Jean-Yves Duclos, the federal minister of public services and procurement and MP for Québec, had replied earlier to a similar request from Quebec Transport Minister Geneviève Guilbault, saying the way the funding arrangement works is for Ottawa to reimburse costs as the project proceeds.

On a previous occasion, Duclos has said the money for the tramway project has been put into an account.

Julien also calls on the federal government to meet departing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s promise to pay 40 per cent of the tramway cost, the same share as the Quebec government. “In order to honour your prime minister’s commitment, I am requesting written confirmation from you that the federal shortfall will be covered by another source of funding.”

In the midst of this political dispute, work on the tramway continues under the project manager, the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec infrastructure division.

CDPQ Infra spokesperson Claudie Côté-Chabot said in an email to the QCT, “Since the signing of the framework agreements last December, CDPQ Infra has been fully active in planning the construction of TramCité.”

She said an information session “with firms interested in participating in the project will take place in mid-February. We are also moving forward with the launch of various calls for tenders.”

The agreement between the Quebec government, CDPQ Infra and the Ville de Québec provides compensation for the city in the event the tramway project is cancelled.

The current cost estimate for the first phase of the tramway project is $7.6 billion. 

TRAM TRACKER: TramCité planning moves forward despite Ottawa-Quebec funding feud Read More »

Demonstrators brave the cold to demand rent freeze

Demonstrators brave the cold to demand rent freeze 

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter 

Cassandra@qctonline.com

Renters’ rights groups are raising the alarm about the combined impact of inflation, rising food prices and record rent increases on renters, a week after the province’s housing tribunal announced a record high 5.9 per cent rent increase benchmark. They are calling on the provincial government to impose a freeze on rent increases. 

During “rent control week” activities organized by the Regroupement des comités logement et associations de locataires du Québec (RCLALQ), on Jan. 30, some 25 protesters gathered in the cold in Parc de l’Amérique-Française and marched across the street to the offices of Housing Minister France-Élaine Duranceau in Édifice Marie-Guyart in the hope of freezing rents. 

Contrary to popular belief, the RCLALQ states, “There is no rent control in Quebec,” leaving tenants vulnerable to abusive increases. When presented with an increase they believe is abusive, tenants can go before the Tribunal administratif du Logement (TAL) and have a judge set an increase. According to the RCLALQ, many tenants are unaware of their rights, and when they do contest abusive, negligent or illegal practices, they often fail to make their voices heard at the TAL. 

On Jan. 21, the TAL announced a 5.9 percent rent increase benchmark for 2025 (see article in Jan. 29, 2025 edition). While the Coalition de Québec contre les hausses de loyer claims this trend drives rents up across the board, landlords argue these increases are overdue, compensating for nearly 10 years of mismanagement within the Régie du Logement and the TAL and allowing landlords to adjust to the rising costs of maintenance. 

Nicolas Villamarin Bonilla of the Coalition stated, “Owners’ income has risen, allowing them to increase rents further. This wealth drain is making the poor poorer and the richest are getting richer at their expense. The outdated calculation methods are concerning, particularly regarding rent evolution this year.” He continued, “We need action before it’s too late. Many tenants are already struggling to pay rent or find affordable housing. Rent-setting by the TAL is ineffective.” 

As a recourse, the RCLALQ and the Coalition are demanding an immediate rent freeze and provincewide rent control. At the Jan. 30 protest at the housing ministry offices, they threw white confetti to mimic snow and sang a modified version of the theme from Frozen while distributing stickers asserting the right of tenants to refuse rent hikes, until security personnel showed them the exit. 

Along with rising rents, there is a housing crisis in Quebec, renters’ groups assert. “There is housing available, but it is even more expensive. What is currently being built in Saint-Sauveur, we are talking about 4 1/2s [two-bedroom apartments] that start at $1,600, $2,000 [per month]. This is well above the ability of a large part of the neighbourhood’s population to pay,” said Guillaume Béliveau Côté of the Comité des citoyens et des citoyennes du quartier Saint-Sauveur.

As of Feb. 1, there is no indication the government plans to legislate to freeze rents, despite calls for a freeze by the Quebec Liberal Party and Québec Solidaire. Duranceau has said the Coalition Avenir Québec government’s approach to the housing shortage is centred around increasing supply. 

With files from Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

Demonstrators brave the cold to demand rent freeze Read More »

Duclos offers suggestions for Liberal leadership candidates

Duclos offers ‘suggestions’ to Liberal leadership candidates

Peter Black

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Senior Liberal minister Jean-Yves Duclos is not endorsing a candidate in the race to replace Justin Trudeau (and potentially become prime minister) until he sees what’s in their platforms. In the meantime, he’s offering up some suggestions for those platforms.

Duclos, the MP for the downtown riding of Québec and minister of public services and procurement, posted an open letter to the five officially confirmed candidates on Jan. 27, titled “The challenges we face.”

Those candidates are former Montreal-area MP Frank Baylis, former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, former Brampton MP Ruby Dhalla, former finance minister and current Toronto-area MP Chrystia Freeland and Toronto-area MP and former minister Karina Gould.

Duclos, a former professor of economics at Université Laval, was first elected in the Liberal wave of 2015 and kept his seat in the two subsequent elections that produced minorities. He served as minister of families, children and social development, Treasury Board president and health minister before taking on his current portfolio.

This past fall, he became Quebec lieutenant for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau when Pablo Rodriguez decided to jump into the Quebec Liberal Party race.

In his message, Duclos offers the candidates “some suggestions to help you build your political platform. I particularly emphasize the place of Quebec and Quebecers in this platform. A strong Canada needs a strong Quebec.”

Duclos applauds the Liberal government’s efforts since 2015, “helping middle-class families, reducing poverty, investing in our infrastructure and building an economy that works for everyone by fighting inequality and protecting our environment.”

But, he writes, “The challenges of 2015 are no longer the same as those of 2025.

“With the rise of populism and the politics of insult and chaos that are hurting the middle class and our world, here in Canada and around the world, we need to do more and differently,” Duclos writes. 

The minister said, “Leadership contestants will be required to demonstrate proficiency in both official languages. It is a question of respect and values.” Of the five candidates, four are functionally bilingual: Baylis, Carney, Freeland and Gould.

“We must defend the ability of Quebecers to strengthen the Canadian federation and take seriously the threat posed by forces that want to separate Quebec from Canada,” Duclos writes. 

Duclos also sets a contentious test in asking candidates to “take into account the particularities of the Quebec nation, recognize the decline of French in Quebec and elsewhere in the country and ensure the sustainability of francophone communities across the country.”

While Duclos is waiting for candidates to reveal what specifics they stand for before picking a favourite, other Quebec ministers have been less hesitant. Carney already sewed up endorsements from Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault, Innovation, Science and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne and Employment Minister Steven MacKinnon.

Freeland has the backing of Fisheries Minister Diane LeBouthillier and Quebec MPs Alexandra Mendes and Anthony Housefather.

Among other items in Duclos’s candidate to-do list are investments in public transit, including Quebec City’s tramway and the high-speed rail project between Quebec City and Toronto “in the first phase.”

Among other issues Duclos raised in his letter was the trade war provoked by U.S. President Donald Trump. “We must stand up and ensure the 

protection of middle-class families, including farm families who are at the heart of the development and vitality of our rural communities. In doing so, we will need to protect supply management across the country, as was the case with the renegotiation of NAFTA during President Trump’s first term.”

Duclos offers suggestions for Liberal leadership candidates Read More »

Community foundations merge to create single entity

Community foundations merge to create single entity

Ruby Pratka

Local Journalism Initiative reporter 

editor@qctonline.com

The Jeffery Hale Foundation, the Saint Brigid’s Home Foundation and the Citadel Foundation have merged their operations to form the Quebec City English-speaking Community Foundation, representatives of the merged foundation announced last week. The amalgamation had been in the cards for the last several years and had been approved by the memberships of all three foundations, they said. The three foundations have shared a single executive team since 2007 and a single investment committee for at least two decades. 

“We’ve co-operated and co-ordinated on many projects over the years, all three foundations, and we serve the same clientele – that is, the English-speaking community, its institutions, its elderly, health and social services, education, heritage and community development,” explained Martin Edwards, board chair of the new foundation. 

Edwards said the merger will simplify the day-to-day philanthropic efforts of all three foundations. “We [used to have] the same staff, similar memberships, same bankers, same auditors, et cetera, but … three annual general meetings, three audited financial statements, three tax returns … three channels of communication for every joint project that we worked on, three brokerage statements, three bank statements, three of everything. Costs and expenses were multiplied by three. What we are targeting in this amalgamation is really unity, efficiency and improved investment opportunities.” 

“We will continue to honour the commitments of those three foundations and pursue and improve on their work going forward,” said Edwards, adding that donors will still be able to specify which project or organization under the foundation’s umbrella their donation will fund. 

Edwards, executive director Michael Boden and assistant executive director Julie Sauvageau presented the amalgamation as a natural progression. “Pooling financial resources, pooling expertise, pooling human resources just seemed to be the logical step,” Boden told the QCT. In recent decades, the three foundations have gradually absorbed the assets of smaller community foundations and philanthropic funds and taken responsibility for administering their assets. Edwards said the merged foundation would continue its predecessors’ work in many areas, including the administration of the Citadel Foundation and Quebec City Women’s Club bursary programs for English-speaking students, and administrative support for organizations serving the English-speaking community.

Edwards said the merger would eliminate competition and overlap between the three foundations and make it easier to fund large projects. The new foundation will have combined assets of $87 million, Boden said, and an estimated $4 million will be distributed to projects in the community in the coming year. Major projects on the foundation’s funding agenda include the Cathedral Gardens at the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity and the sports field at the yet-to-be-named consolidated English high school. The foundation also aims to provide ongoing support to Mount Hermon Cemetery, Jeffery Hale Community Partners and the Fraser Recovery Program, which supports English-speaking youth recovering from substance abuse issues and their families, among others. 

Anyone interested in donating to the Quebec City English-speaking Community Foundation or sharing comments and suggestions is invited to email contact@qcesf.org

Community foundations merge to create single entity Read More »

Black History Month roundtable launches ninth edition

Black History Month roundtable launches ninth edition of celebrations

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

The Table de concertation du Mois de l’Histoire des Noirs de Québec (TCMHNQ; Quebec City Black History Month Roundtable) launched a busy month of festivities on Jan. 31 at Université Laval, with a cocktail reception, a concert by the group AfroVibes and a roundtable discussion featuring members of the city’s Black community who have excelled in a variety of fields.

Event spokesperson Samuel Audet-Sow is a former professional basketball player turned lawyer who now holds a senior management role at Desjardins. During his keynote address, he looked back on his student days at Collège de Lévis, where he was one of only three Black students at the time. “When I was approached by the president [of the roundtable] to be the spokesperson, my first reaction was, really? I mean, it’s true that I used to be a good basketball player; OK, I passed the bar; but my impression was that you had to be a superhero to be the spokesperson for such an important event. I didn’t think I fit that definition of a superhero … but through resilience, as Black people, we discover that our colour can be a superpower. It gave me an opportunity to discover an inner strength I didn’t know I had, to face all the obstacles that came before me, in my career and in life.”

Théodore Leuwat, president of the roundtable, presented the program of the month- long event, under the theme “Histoire des Afro-canadiens: Éduquer et inspirer” (Afro- Canadian History: Educate and Inspire).

“If you are an adult arriving in Canada, you need to tell yourself that anything is possible,” Leuwat said during his address. “You need to have goodwill and be involved every day. We need to talk about education because … some of our parents have brought their youngest children. What do we need to know about young people? We know that a parent has a lot of responsibilities – a young person who isn’t well educated is a problem waiting to happen. If we educate them early enough and give them the tools to understand the problems they’re going to face and to get involved, that’s how we ensure [the success of] the next generation. That’s why we chose our themes.”

Leuwat said the committee had received a “record number” of project proposals for the ninth edition of Black History Month. They chose 40, pitched by 24 different community groups. The activities include free art exhibits and films at public libraries around the city, the seventh edition of the Festival d’arts Afro- Québécois, soccer and fitness events, culinary workshops, roundtable discussions, networking events for entrepreneurs and a Black history heritage tour of Old Quebec. For music lovers, Billie du Page and Fernie will perform at the Grand Théâtre on Feb. 21, Samba Touré will perform on Feb. 24 at the Grand Théâtre and a Motown heritage revue at the Palais Montcalm will close the festivities on Feb. 28. Other highlights include a celebration of French-language African literature on Feb. 28 at the Maison de la Littérature and activities for kids and teens at the Maison des Jeunes Saint-Sauveur. Most activities are free, although some do require advance reservation. For more information and to reserve your spot at ticketed events, visit mhnquebec.ca/programmation.

Black History Month roundtable launches ninth edition Read More »

La Pocatière mayor “clarifies” tramway stance for Poilievre

La Pocatière mayor ‘clarifies’ stance on tramway for Poilievre 

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The mayor of La Pocatière is “clarifying” his town’s stance on Quebec City’s tramway project in the wake of comments made by federal Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre.

During a visit to Rivière-du-Loup on Jan, 22, Poilievre had applauded a resolution adopted a week earlier by the MRC of Kamouraska, which includes La Pocatière, in support of the so-called third link project championed by the Coalition Avenir Québec government.

Poilievre, in the view of La Pocatière town council, had apparently misinterpreted the resolution to suggest the MRC, while supporting the “third link,” opposed Quebec City’s tramway plan.

In a statement sent to the QCT, Mayor Vincent Bérubé said, “We stand in solidarity with our interregional counterparts, but our openness to the third

link is not a rejection of the Quebec [City] tramway project, which would ultimately limit road congestion and reduce the impact on the environment.”

In fact, the mayor noted, La Pocatière would benefit substantially from the tramway project, with the Alstom plant – formerly a Bombardier factory – a major employer in the town of 4,000.

Although the contract with Alstom to build the cars for the tramway, valued at about $569 million, has not been reconfirmed under the most recent version of the project, it’s expected the company, whose largest shareholder is Quebec’s pension fund, the Caisse de dépôt et placement, will get the work. 

Bérubé said it “is obvious that this project has a special resonance given the presence of the Alstom plant in La Pocatière. The economic spinoffs are also felt in the territory of the MRCs of Kamouraska and L’Islet, since many workers live in these regions and several companies that subcontract with Alstom have a presence in the region.”

In his statement, the mayor invited the local Conservative MP, Bernard Généreux (Montmagny–L’Islet–Kamouraska–Rivière-du-Loup), “to facilitate a meeting with Mr. Poilievre, in order to present our regional economic ecosystem and to take the pulse, on the ground, of the importance of companies involved in the rail transportation industry.”

La Pocatière is some 120 kilometres east of Quebec City on the South Shore of the St. Lawrence River.

                     

La Pocatière mayor “clarifies” tramway stance for Poilievre Read More »

Tea, pastries and pleas for peace mark anniversary of mosque massacre

Tea, pastries and pleas for peace mark anniversary of mosque massacre

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

Eight years have passed since the mass shooting at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec. Some 300 friends, relatives, community members and supporters of survivors and victims gathered over tea and pastries on Jan. 25 at the Manège Militaire to commemorate the event. They celebrated the lives of the six men who were killed and the 19 who were injured on Jan. 29, 2017, and shared messages of peace in uncertain times.

The ceremony opened with a performance by Canadian- Palestinian composer and pianist John Farah, that included a classical piece by Johann Sebastian Bach and “A Lullaby for the Children of Gaza.” No matter one’s position on the situation in Gaza and Palestine, the performance was impeccable and inspirational, reminding attendees of the innocence of children in war zones.

“We feel that every time we talk to people who were there or not, we are revealing our permanent scar. It also reminds us every year that we have to pay tribute to Ibrahima Barry, Mamadou Tanou Barry, Khaled Belkacemi, Abdelkrim Hassane, Azzeddine Soufiane and Aboubaker Thabti, our six fellow Muslim citizens whose lives were taken on the evening of Jan. 29, 2017,” said Mélina Chasles, member of the 29 janvier, je me souviens citizens’ committee and co-host of the event. “We are also sharing messages of peace, solidarity and hope for a future without Islamophobia, racism and hatred in all forms.”

Mayor Bruno Marchand spoke about the importance of hope amid tragedy and uncertainty, particularly in light of the re-election of Donald Trump. After a brief apology to Danielle Monosson, the U.S consul general in Quebec City, who was in the room, he said he believed “a lot of people had seen their flame of hope flicker” since Trump was elected. “We have to talk about hope – because if we don’t, then these six individuals will have died in vain – and to honour the survivors and their families,” said Marchand. “People are show- ing us that there is something worth building here. Hope is strong within this community and city.”

This is a sentiment felt by Muslims across Canada, according to Amira Elghawaby, Canada’s special representative on combatting Islamophobia. “Muslim Canadians live in constant worry of being attacked on their way to prayer, school, work or the park,” she said, referencing the white supremacist terrorist attack on June 6, 2021, in London, Ont. where four members of the same Muslim family were fatally injured. “The federal government has taken great measures to support the Mus- lim Canadian communities and other minority communities in Canada by putting in place strategies and plans against Islamophobia, hatred and racism. We all have a role to play to protect every Canadian’s right to be who they are and to live in dignity and safety.”

Tea, pastries and pleas for peace mark anniversary of mosque massacre Read More »

Combined high school project delayed until 2028, CQSB chair says

Combined high school project delayed until 2028, CQSB chair says

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Central Québec School Board chair Jean Robert has confirmed the project to build a new high school most likely will be delayed by at least a year from the earlier target of September 2027.

The QCT reported in December that the Quebec government is pausing approval of new education construction projects, which could include the new English high school in Quebec City that’s been in the infrastructure planning process since 2019. 

Robert told the QCT  “everything is on track” for the project, despite delays. “I’ve been told it’s on the desk now of the Treasury Board. It’s gone through every single ministerial approval. We need the OK from the Treasury Board to be able to go out for tenders.”

Robert said, “We’ve spent over $20 million [on the project] so far. I can’t imagine that the government, having invested so much money, would all of a sudden say it’s a no-go.”

He said even if the board got the green light tomorrow, the school probably would not be finished until spring 2028, but it would make sense to wait until the fall term to move students into the new building. 

In the meantime, Robert said the complex project is moving forward on several fronts. He said the deal to acquire a slice of land adjacent from the federal government “was signed last week.” A similar deal to exchange parcels of land with the neighbouring property of the Centre des services scolaire des Decouvreurs is in the process of being settled.

Regarding another piece of land needed for the project, owned by the Ville de Québec, Robert said the board has reached a deal with the city so that residents will be able to use school facilities such as gymnasiums and sports fields.

The new high school project involves a new building with a capacity of some 1,400 students on the site of the former St. Vincent Elementary School on Ave. Wolfe in Sainte-Foy. It would replace the two aging existing English high schools in the city, Quebec High School and St. Patrick’s High School, and the high school component of Dollard-des-Ormeaux School in Shannon.

Combined high school project delayed until 2028, CQSB chair says Read More »

Claude Villeneuve runs for mayor, wants city ‘that’s easier to live in’

Claude Villeneuve runs for mayor, wants city ‘that’s easier to live in’

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

There are officially three candidates in the race for mayor of Quebec City. Claude Villeneuve, leader of the Québec d’Abord official Opposition party, confirmed he is running, after earlier suggesting he might pass for family reasons.

Villeneuve, 42, made the announcement Jan. 22 at the party’s offices in the Saint-Sauveur district, in the company of Québec d’Abord’s six elected councillors.

Mayor Bruno Marchand, head of Quebec Forte et Fière, and Transition Québec and Limoilou district councillor Jackie Smith have stated they plan to run again for mayor.

Villeneuve, the first-term councillor for the Maizerets-Lairet district, said in remarks to reporters, “I am taking another step forward, because I think we can do more. The citizens of Quebec want new leadership for our city. A mayor who unites, rather than divides. Who understands that leading a city means reconciling interests, rather than imposing one’s own preferences.”

Villeneuve, the father of two young girls with his wife Catherine Gauthier, said, “It’s been my dream to be mayor,” but he needed the blessing of his family to take the plunge.

Asked, in English, what he told his wife to get her support, Villeneuve said, “I love my wife, and I think that she loves me too. She loves me better when I have great projects than when I’m at home and angry,” adding jokingly, “Maybe she just wants me out of the house.”

He said both he and his wife are passionate about politics.  “I think I am a better man, a better father and will be a bet- ter mayor with her by my side.”

Villeneuve took a shot at another potential mayoral rival, former Quebec Liberal cabinet minister Sam Hamad, who has publicly said he is considering running. “I don’t want to become mayor because I’m bored in retirement and I’m looking for a project to keep me unbored.”

Villeneuve made a plea for “a city that’s easier to live in,” asking, “Why are bike paths cleared of snow better than streets or sidewalks? Why is it so difficult to get swimming lessons for children? Why is it so long and especially so complex to obtain a permit to change a door?”

Originally from Métabetchouan in the Lac-Saint-Jean region, Villeneuve was a speechwriter for Parti Québécois premier Pauline Marois. He came to Quebec City in 2004 to study law and economics. He has been a political commentator in various media outlets in the city and been involved in community organizations and businesses in Limoilou.

He won his municipal seat handily in 2021, in a district held by former mayor Régis Labeaume’s party. When the party’s mayoral candidate, Marie-Josée Savard, lost the race to Marchand by a handful of votes, the party’s 10 elected councillors chose Villeneuve to be leader of the Opposition at City Hall.

Three of the party’s coun- cillors subsequently joined Marchand’s party, which had elected seven councillors.

Villeneuve said he plans to have a running mate for his council seat, so that in the event he loses the race for mayor, he would still have a seat on council, assuming the  party wins the district.

As for the tramway project, which has dominated municipal politics for years, Villeneuve, who supports the venture, said he doesn’t expect it will become a big issue in the election campaign, which officially begins in September with the vote on Nov. 2.

Claude Villeneuve runs for mayor, wants city ‘that’s easier to live in’ Read More »

Keep vaccines up to date as flu season looms, Boileau warns

Keep vaccines up to date as flu season looms, Boileau warns

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Quebec public health director Dr. Luc Boileau struck a relatively optimistic note as he delivered a planned update on the progression of common respiratory viruses in Quebec on Jan. 24. “We’ve seen worse in the last few years.”

He presented Santé Québec data showing that test positivity rates for COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) had dipped below 10 per cent for the first time in several weeks. COVID positivity rates, he noted, were at their lowest since early summer. “Things are going in the right direction; there are new variants that have gotten in place, but they are no more threatening than the ones we have seen in the past, and vaccination remains effective.”

Boileau said hospital admissions for RSV, which is most dangerous for elderly and immunocompromised people and newborns, have fallen since the province provided more than 40,000 newborns with an immunotherapy treatment. Seasonal flu positivity rates, however, were on the rise, and that trend was expected to continue. Boileau said health officials expected to see flu circulation peak in early February before tapering off gradually. “Flu is a serious disease, which sends 300 to 400 [Quebecers] to intensive care every year and even causes some deaths; it has an effective means of prevention, which is vaccination.” He said that although efficiency data on this year’s vaccine was not available, he expected it to be as efficient as in previous years.

He noted that certain stomach viruses – noroviruses and rotaviruses, which cause the dreaded gastro – appear to be circulating more than usual. He encouraged people to stay home if they have flu-like symptoms, particularly if they have a fever, and to wear a mask and avoid contact with vulnerable people if they must leave the house, and wash their hands regularly with soap, especially if they have or have recently had gastro.

Measles outbreak confined to Laurentians, Laval

Boileau said there were 13 cases of measles in the province as of Jan. 26, including two new cases in the past week, all linked to an outbreak in the Lauren- tians in early January. Although health officials were still waiting to see if new cases would arise, he said the outbreak appeared not to have spread further than greater Montreal.

Measles is a highly contagious virus that can be especially dangerous for pregnant women and young children. According to Health Canada, Canadians born before 1970 are presumed protected against measles due to prior exposure, and most Canadians born after 1970 were vaccinated against measles in early childhood. Vaccine efficiency is close to 99 per cent. If you were not vaccinated against measles as a child, you can register to receive the vaccine for free on ClicSanté, Boileau said. If you don’t know your vaccination status, he said, it is safe to receive the shot twice.

Keep vaccines up to date as flu season looms, Boileau warns Read More »

Record rent benchmark increase alarms renters’ groups

Record rent increase benchmark alarms renters’ groups

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

At the Saint-Roch offices of the Bureau d’animation et d’information logement de Québec métropolitaine (BAIL-Québec), the phones haven’t stopped ringing for days. The record rent increase benchmark of 5.9 per cent announced by the province’s housing tribunal (Tribunal administratif du logement; TAL) has many renters in a panic as they brace for lease renewal season.

In Quebec, private residential landlords can increase rent annually by as much as they see fit, explained lawyer Richard Goldman of Éducaloi, a legal information nonprofit. Renters have the choice of accepting the increase and renewing their lease, moving out, or refusing the increase. If the tenant refuses the increase, they can either try to negotiate a smaller increase directly with the landlord, or go before the TAL and have a judge set a (non-negotiable) increase. Although the increases determined by the TAL can vary widely depending on the age of a building, whether it has been recently renovated or needs work, the property owner’s tax liability and whether utilities are included, the TAL uses the benchmark as a guideline to determine what a fair increase is. Some landlords also use the benchmark to calculate increases they propose to renters.

“Rent is made up of different components – maintenance, insurance, gas, electricity, net revenue [for the property owner], all of those make up a percentage [of the increase],” explained Jonathan Carmichael, an information officer at BAIL-Québec and a spokesperson for the provincewide Régroupement des comités du logement et des associations de locataires du Québec (RCLALQ; Quebec association of housing committees and renters’ associations). Macroeconomic indicators and housing tribunal jurisprudence also play a role in the calculations. The benchmark “gives [landlords and renters] an idea of what the TAL might decide, if your case goes before the TAL.” Last year’s benchmark was four per cent. Carmichael said the 5.9 per cent benchmark is “the highest we’ve seen in years. … Twenty years ago, it was more like one per cent.”

Carmichael said the organization had been getting “lots of calls” from worried renters. “Most people’s salaries have not gone up that much, and social assistance has not gone up by that much. People have been stretching the rubber band as much as they can for a long time now. The rise of the cost of living is also high, and landlords have been profiting from it.”

Real estate lawyer Martin Messier is president of the Association des propriétaires du Québec (APQ), the residential landlords’ professional association. He refutes Carmichael’s accusation that landlords are taking advantage of the situation to line their pockets. “We know that people are in a difficult situation, and it is also hard for a lot of our property owners, who are dealing with mortgages that have nearly doubled,” he said. “It’s not true that [the increase] is going in our pockets – it’s based on expenses.” He noted that fluctuating interest rates and the rising cost of renovations have made rent increases inevitable. “Every cost involved in maintaining a building has gone up, and we need to be able to maintain the building.”

The RCLALQ, the Quebec Liberal Party and Québec Solidaire have called for a rent freeze. Messier said that was untenable, and that direct aid to the most vulnerable renters might be a better approach as inflation continues to bite and economic uncertainty looms. “A rent freeze would make sense, but only if they banned tax increases, hydro rate increases and price increases for contractors,” he said. “If people’s income does not go up, we’re all stuck. We want renters to be happy and to be in a position to pay.”

Carmichael advised anyone who receives a rent increase that they are unable or unwilling to pay to contact their local housing committee for free advice. A provincewide directory of housing committees can be found at rclalq.qc.ca/en/housing-committee.

Record rent benchmark increase alarms renters’ groups Read More »

Lights-out looms for Avenue Cartier lampshades amid arts funding crunch

Lights-out looms for Avenue Cartier lampshades amid arts funding crunch

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

The 34 giant lampshades on Avenue Cartier, which have displayed a range of works by Quebec artists since 2014, may eventually have to be taken down due to a lack of funding from the Ville de Québec, according to the Société de développement commercial (SDC) Montcalm. The SDC Montcalm and the Musée national des Beaux-Arts du Québec (MNBAQ) have piloted the project, called Lumière sur l’art, since its inception, with funding from the Ville de Québec major events bureau.

The current funding agreement ended in 2024. SDC Mont- calm director general Marie Langlois told the QCT that the major events bureau had indicated it was only able to provide 20 per cent of the funding needed for the project to go ahead.

Jean-Étienne Billette is the president of the SDC Montcalm and the owner of the Fastoche sandwich shop and adjoining burger restaurant in Les Halles Cartier. “The [major events office] has let us know that our funding has been reduced to a minimal portion of what we received in the past,” he said. “We learned at the beginning of the summer that they intended to reduce our funding. We spoke with them, and we also spoke with [city councillors] David Weiser and Mélissa Coulombe-Leduc, but things didn’t move forward.

“Any equipment that is ex- posed to the outdoors is expensive [to maintain] and we have to pay the artists,” said Billette. He said the SDC is not eligible for additional grants and is hesitant to explore private sponsorship options. “We want to save Lumière sur l’art.”

Billette said the lampshades, which have displayed art by Group of Seven artists, local con- temporary artists, high school students and people recovering from mental health struggles over the years, have brightened up the street and become a tourist attraction in their own right. “Especially in winter, they’re really pretty.”

City spokesperson Jean-Pascal Lavoie said the city needed more information before making a decision on the future of the project. “The City of Quebec wants Avenue Cartier to continue to benefit from its own visual signature. However, before committing to a new agreement, we want to ensure the safety of the lighting structures. These structures belong to the SDC. Since the lifespan of the lighting structures supporting the lampshades was initially estimated at five years and they were installed in 2015, the City asked the SDC Montcalm … to produce an engineer’s report to assess their condition. We believe an engineer’s assessment of the structures would be appropriate in order to determine their lifespan and see if the financial support should be revised, in addition to assessing the costs associated with repairing or replacing the structures,” he said. Langlois said tests would be carried out by an engineer in February.

“All parties are looking for solutions so that Avenue Cartier continues to benefit from its own visual signature,” Lavoie said, echoing similar statements by the MNBAQ and a spokesperson for Coulombe-Leduc and Weiser.

On Jan. 21, the SDC Montcalm launched an online petition to call on the city to provide $400,000 in funding over the next five years to keep the lamps lit. Nearly 600 people had signed it as of this writing.

Arts funding fragile

Lumière sur l’art is not the only local artistic initiative that is on thin ice due to lack of funding. Both the Théâtre de la Bordée and Robert Lepage’s Ex Machina, the resident theatre company at Le Diamant, have announced cuts to in-house productions in recent weeks. Clément Turgeon, artistic director of Le Festif!, a major summer music festival in Baie-Saint-Paul in the Charlevoix region, has expressed concerns about the festival’s future, although he expects this year’s edition to go ahead. Between inflation and smaller-than-usual government subsidies, he told Radio-Canada, “something isn’t working.”

Christian Robitaille is the director general of Culture Capitale-Nationale–Chaudière-.Appalaches, a network of cultural organizations in the region. “After the pandemic, there was a moment of increased government investment in culture, but then it was the same as [in every other sector] … but in 2021-22, people started to realize how expensive everything was, and the pandemic-era support disappeared. We have pre-pandemic funding with post-pandemic costs,” he said. “There’s inflation, there are salary increases, philanthropy is harder in a complicated time… and there are more requirements being placed on cultural organizations, which are expensive to fulfil,” he said. “We can raise ticket prices, but there’s a limit to that.”

Grants from government agencies are shrinking amid budget cuts. Robitaille also said he fears that in the current economic context, artists themselves might leave the arts for other, more stable and lucrative fields. “We’re not demanding billions here, but the govern- ment needs to recognize the importance of the arts. We’re getting close to the limit.”

Lights-out looms for Avenue Cartier lampshades amid arts funding crunch Read More »

Bonhomme, Carnival organizers present 50 partner events

Bonhomme, Carnival organizers present 50 partner events

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

One of the best ways to embrace Quebec’s long winter, especially on the coldest days and nights, is to join Bonhomme in the annual Quebec Winter Carnival. For the 71st edition, from Feb. 7 to 16, he and his team have a jam-packed program reaching the four corners of Quebec City. So, as they say … “Enweille Dehors!” (Let’s go outside!)

After presenting the pro- gram of the official sites and unveiling the 71st-edition effigy ($39 plus tax) last November, Bonhomme, programming director Jérôme Déchêne and executive director Marie-Eve Jacob, presented the 50 partner events on Jan. 16 at Le Capitole.

“When people tell me that in Lotbinière, there were Japanese people in a race, I think, ‘That’s great. That’s what’s needed.’ I want to have tourists and locals in the small alleys, in the regions, on Île d’Orléans. It’s part of the DNA of the Carnival,” said Jacob. “We want people to indulge in the forbidden and have extreme fun. We’re not afraid of abuse. Sugar, salt and alcohol, they’re welcome at the Carnival; it’s 10 days, so we make the most of it. We’ll make up for it with sports activities.” She invited Carnival-goers to savour the Calgary Pancake Breakfast (Grande Allée, Feb. 8, 8 a.m. to noon); the Gourmet Route (Old Port, Feb. 8, 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.); Gougoune & Doudoune at Espace Quatre-Cents from now until Feb. 16; and much more.

Bonhomme invites the public to ice skate with him on Jan. 18, 19, 25 and 26, and Feb. 11 and 13 on rinks throughout the city, including at Place D’Youville and the Agora du Vieux-Port. Bonhomme also invites his friends and fans to visit his Ice Palace at Place de l’Assemblée-Nationale or to participate in the friendly broomball match on Feb. 7 at Collège François-de-Laval. In Lotbinière, check out the Grizzly Diet Challenge dog sled race on Feb. 10 and 11. It’s nice to enjoy a hot chocolate and admire some ice sculptures after a day of running around in the cold. Before heading home on Feb. 8 and 15, find a spot along the famous Night Parade routes in Lower Town and Upper Town, respectively.

For those who want to continue partying in town, check out the Dome at Place de L’Assemblée-Nationale. There, performing artists, musicians and comedians will entertain the crowds and keep them warm on Feb. 7, 8, 13, 14 and 15.

A few tickets remain for thrill seekers 18 and older who want to rappel down the facade of the Château Frontenac on Feb. 8 and 9.

To mark this 71st edition, the Winter Carnival is encouraging various buildings in Quebec City to light up in red, Bonhomme’s favourite colour. Grande Allée, Rue Saint-Jean, the Campanile, Jean Lesage International Airport, the Château Frontenac, the Convention Centre, Montmorency Falls, the Complexe Jules-Dallaire, the Hôtel Le Concorde and the Grand Théâtre are among the many structures to be illuminated in red at night.

For more information, visit Carnaval.qc.ca/en.

Bonhomme, Carnival organizers present 50 partner events Read More »

Federal Liberal leadership hopefuls court minister Jean-Yves Duclos

Liberal leadership hopefuls court minister Jean-Yves Duclos

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

He has worked alongside one, but shares a profession with the other.

Québec MP and Public Services and Procurement Minister Jean-Yves Duclos has yet to decide which of the two presumed front-runners he will support in the federal Liberal leadership race – former finance minister Chrystia Freeland or former governor of the Bank of Canada and then the Bank of England Mark Carney.

As of this writing, Carney, Freeland and Liberal House Leader Karina Gould are the most prominent contenders who have officially announced their intention to replace Justin Trudeau. Candidates have until Jan. 27 to pay the $350,000 entry fee to enter the race. The winner is to be announced March 9.

In a Jan. 17 interview with the QCT, Duclos said he had not yet decided on a candidate to support. “I am waiting for all candidates to have had the opportunity to launch their campaign … Once that is done, I will give them a little time to share their platforms and we’ll look more carefully at the way in which the contribution of Quebec to the federation appears. I strongly believe, and many others do, that Canada is stronger because Quebec is part of Canada, and I would like to see how the platforms of the candidates enable that strong social, economic and environmental sensitivity and contribution of Quebecers [to] feature in the candidates’ platforms.”

Duclos said he would have liked to see a francophone candidate in the race despite the so-called Liberal Party tradition of alternance between anglophone and francophone leaders. He said it is important that candidates “be bilingual, but also important to engage with and relate to people of the two official languages, whoever they may be and wherever they may be in Canada.”

(Former Montreal-area MP Frank Baylis, who is completely bilingual, has also said he wants to run for the leadership).

Duclos, first elected in the Liberal wave of 2015, said he “shares characteristics” with both Freeland and Carney. He said he has worked closely with Freeland on such challenges as the federal government’s ac- quisition of the Quebec Bridge. They also co-chaired the government’s COVID pandemic response cabinet committee when Duclos was minister of health.

“We spent a lot of time trying to save jobs and lives,” Duclos said.

As for Carney, a fellow economist by training, Duclos said, “We therefore share the same type of language, the same type of empirical ability to under- stand how to grow the economy while sharing the benefits as equally as possible, so we have that in common. I know him less well than I know Chrystia, but I’m sure I’ll connect with him quite easily.”

Duclos said Carney, Freeland and other candidates have reached out to him seeking his support.

As for a new leader improving the Liberals’ fortunes in an election that will likely come in the spring, Duclos said, “I think it will help, because unfortunately, until the prime minister announced [his] resignation … there was too much focus on him, on his leadership.

“The Conservatives in par- ticular had been very good at attacking him, personal attacks and all that, the social media, the polarization. He had become too much the focus of a lot of negative attention, and that was unfortunately not only harsh and hard on the party, but also obviously even harsher and more cruel on him, himself.”

Duclos said, “Moving to a new leader allows [Trudeau] to invest all of his energy into defending the interests of Canada in the context of [U.S. President Donald] Trump com- ing into office, so he does that full time now while leaving to someone else the hard work of preparing for the next election.

“I think it’s good that this is happening, and I’ve already been feeling informally in my environment here in Quebec City in particular, that this is making a difference in the minds of people. People are saying, OK, fine, Trudeau has given it up, but he’s now passing the puck to someone else for the campaign and investing all of his energy into protecting us against President Trump.”

Duclos has said he plans to run in the next election.

Federal Liberal leadership hopefuls court minister Jean-Yves Duclos Read More »

Four Quebec First Nations buy majority stake in downtown hotel

Four Quebec First Nations buy majority stake in downtown hotel

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Four Quebec Indigenous groups have partnered to buy a majority stake in Quebec City’s Hilton Hotel.

Under the deal announced Jan. 16, the business corporations of the Naskapi of Kawawachikamach, the Mi’gmaq of Gaspé, the Huron-Wendat of Wendake and the James Bay Cree made the acquisition through a new corporation called Atenro, which means friendship in the Wendat language.

The hotel will continue to be managed by Hilton Quebec, which is owned by InnVest Ho- tels, a Toronto-based company owned in turn by Bluesky Hotels and Resorts, described in business publications as incorporated in Ontario but financed by money from Hong Kong.

InnVest owns or manages more than 100 hotels in Canada, including 17 in Quebec, under various brands. The Hilton is the company’s only holding in Quebec City. With 539 rooms, it is also one of the city’s largest hotels.

Besides the representatives of the First Nations partners, other notables in attendance at the announcement included Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand and Quebec Minister for Relations with First Nations and Inuit Ian Lafrenière.

In a news release, the partners said they “plan to implement joint initiatives with Hilton Quebec and InnVest Hotels to provide employment and training opportunities for members of all First Nations. All current jobs will be maintained.”

Fred Vicaire, CEO of Mi’gmawei Mawiomi Business Corporation, owned by the Mi’gmaq communities of Gesgapegiag, Gespeg and Listuguj, told the QCT in an interview that the corporation’s board raised the idea of investing in a hotel back in 2023 as part of the tourism element of its strategic plan.

He said initially the partner- ship would have been between the Mi’kmaq and the Naskapi, but “we realized [the Hilton] was much bigger than we could handle.” They approached the Huron-Wendat group, whose members immediately liked the idea, and the James Bay Cree quickly got on board as well.

“The stars lined up. We all wanted to make an impact in the hotel industry,” Vicaire said, noting the Hilton is a “symbolic hotel” and a landmark of the Quebec capital.

Vicaire said the four First Nations contributed equal shares to come up with the $85.6 mil- lion to acquire 51 per cent of the hotel ownership.

While the Hilton was not necessarily for sale, InnVest having poured some $70 million into a recent major upgrade, Vicaire said the company had done similar deals with Indigenous groups in Western Canada, and “loved the idea of partnering up with First Nations, and wanted to do something in Quebec, especially at the Hilton.”

Huron-Wendat Grand Chief Pierre Picard said in a news release, “This historic transaction honours the memory of the Wendat ancestors who once had an important network of trade and trade alliances. We continue in the same tradition and set an example for our younger generations where collaboration, ambition and visions can converge into con- crete successes that promote our financial independence.”

Vicaire said the acquisition of the hotel creates opportunities to showcase Indigenous culture, featuring design, artisanship and dining experiences.

As for renaming the hotel to reflect the new ownership, Vicaire said that would be a matter for the board to decide. “You never know in the future.”

Four Quebec First Nations buy majority stake in downtown hotel Read More »

Departing U.S. envoy Cohen: ‘You cannot tear this partnership apart’

Departing U.S. envoy Cohen: ‘You cannot tear this partnership apart’

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The departing United States ambassador to Canada, while cleaving to diplomatic discretion, lauded the strength of U.S.-Canada relations on the eve of the inauguration of Donald Trump as the next American president on Jan. 20.

David L. Cohen, speaking on Jan. 15 at a farewell visit to the U.S. consulate in Quebec City, said, “Everyone wants to talk to me about what happens in the United States on Monday. I am not worried. I am not worried about it from the perspective of the U.S.-Canada relationship, because you cannot tear this partnership apart. You cannot break this friendship. It is too deep, it is too enduring. It is everlasting.”

Cohen added, “That is not to say that there aren’t going to be some choppy waters.” He was referring to Trump’s threat to impose across-the-board 25 per cent tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports as soon as he takes power. The threats have rocked the Canadian political firmament and forced leaders to scramble to prepare a response.

Cohen replaced Trump appointee Kelly Craft in December 2021, filling a two-year vacancy after she departed for the United Nations ambassadorship. A corporate lawyer and personal friend of former president Joe Biden, Cohen has clearly come to love Quebec City, and has visited the consulate with the spectacular view of the St. Lawrence River four times in his tenure.

Accompanied by his wife Rhonda Cohen at the reception attended by several dozen local notables, Cohen lauded the landmarks of the city, including the neighbouring Château Frontenac.

“It is at the Château that the late president Ronald Reagan and the late prime minister Brian Mulroney sang ‘When Irish Eyes Are Smiling’ in 1985 at the end of the so-called Shamrock Summit,” Cohen said. “More than any other single moment, this summit led the way for the world’s most enduring, profitable, successful and mutually beneficial trade relationships via the North American Free Trade Agreement or NAFTA, which later evolved to become the USMCA.”

Cohen also noted the significance of the Citadel. “Also known as America’s Gibraltar, it’s home to Canada’s very first French-speaking regiment, whose brave soldiers fought alongside the Americans in the two World Wars. I cite all these not just for a history lesson, but because they’re all reminders of the rich and enduring relationship that exists between Canada and the United States.”

Cohen, 70, informally said he has not decided what he will do now that his diplomatic stint is over. He said in his remarks that he and his wife plan to return to visit the city he has come to love.

“Serving as the United States ambassador to Canada is as good a job as you can have, and it’s been the honour of my lifetime to represent my friend, President Biden, and the United States in this wonderful country and in this wonderful province.

“When I first arrived in Canada, I knew that I was stepping into a role defined by longstanding and exceptional relations. The United States and Canada share more than just a border. We share common values, share economic interests and an enduring friendship that spans generations.

“As I reflect on the incredible journey I’ve had over the past three and a half years, I am filled with gratitude not just for the opportunity to serve, also for the relationships, conversations and co-operation that have shaped my tenure. I will never forget the generosity and warmth that I have felt in Quebec City.”

The ambassador lauded the leadership of Consul General Danielle Monosson, “how she distinguishes herself by her humanity. I’ve seen and learned that Danielle really cares. She cares about United States foreign policy. She cares about Canada. She cares about the province of Quebec and Quebec City.”

In an informal comment to the QCT, Cohen said he especially enjoyed attending two editions of the Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament in the city.

Departing U.S. envoy Cohen: ‘You cannot tear this partnership apart’ Read More »

New owner, manager look to future at Galeries de la Capitale

New owner, manager look to the future at Galeries de la Capitale

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Marie-Christine Paré probably could not have foreseen that one day the former fashion student and teenage nanny in Toronto would one day become the boss of Quebec’s largest shopping mall, and the eighth largest in Canada.

Earlier this month, that unpredictable development became reality as she assumed the post of general manager of Les Galeries de la Capitale, succeeding Stephan Landry who held the job for eight years.

“I feel very proud,” Paré said in an interview with the QCT. “I’m very excited about this new challenge. We’ve got a great team here so I’m very confident the future will be very bright and very fun.”

Paré’s promotion to the top job, after serving eight years in a senior position at Les Galeries, comes as new owners take over the mall, a popular destination since it opened in 1981.

The vision of legendary de- veloper Marcel Adams, the shopping centre was built on what was at the time a remote and empty field at the intersection of Boul. Lebourgneuf and Autoroute Robert Bourassa. In 2013, Adams’s company, Iberville Developments, sold Les Galeries to a partnership of Oxford Properties and the Canada Pension Plan invest- ment fund.

In October 2024, Toronto- based Primaris Real Estate Investment Trust acquired the mall from the Oxford partner- ship for $325 million. Oxford is a major player in Canadian and international commercial, industrial and residential real estate and owner of several of Canada’s largest malls. Primaris, which specializes in smaller-market enclosed shopping centres, boasts 26 malls across Canada, with Place du Royaume in Saguenay the only other property in Quebec besides Les Galeries. Its portfolio is evaluated at some $2.8 billion.

At the time of the sale, Patrick Sullivan, president and COO of Primaris, said in a news release, “Les Galeries de la Capitale exemplifies the type of property we are targeting in our growth strategy. Its strategic location, excellent accessibility, and strong tenant mix make it a valuable addition to our portfolio.”

One of the options on the table, given the size and strategic location of the 91-acre site, is residential development, a trend underway at other malls in the city. Paré said Primaris “will take their time to analyze the site but for sure we’re going to see growth over the years.”

In the communiqué announcing her appointment, Primaris lauds Paré’s “15 years of ex- perience in shopping centre administrative offices,” making her the “ideal manager to lead Galeries de la Capitale’s future projects.”

Paré, 42, got her start in the mall business as an administrative assistant at Place des Quatre-Bourgeois while she was studying business at the Lévis campus of Université du Québec à Rimouski. When the manager retired, she offered Paré the position, which eventually led to her also managing a mall in Charny.

After taking time off to have her daughter, now 11, Paré worked at Cominar, a major city developer, before landing the job with Les Galeries. Having “fallen in love with the shopping centre industry,” she said getting a senior job with such a large mall made her proud.

Paré said, “It’s always been my dream to be in retail. It’s colourful, it’s vibrant, always something new, always moving. I’m very passionate about it.”

Part of her attraction to the business, she said, is her interest in the fashion industry, which she studied in Montreal, and also working in several clothing stores on the marketing level.

As for the fluent spoken English of a girl from Sainte-Croix- de-Lotbinière on the South Shore, Paré credits the two years she spent as a nanny in Toronto when she was in her teens. “It was scary to leave my family and friends and the first few weeks were difficult,” she said, “but it was a great experience.”

Starting a new job at the beginning of a new year, Paré said she is looking forward to announcing new tenants, as well as welcoming a Winners store in the space vacated by the Galeries Gourmandes project.

Paré said for shopping malls to succeed in the face of online competition, “we need to be very innovative” and respond to what customers want.

“People still want to meet at a mall, get entertained, catch up with friends, have a meal; they want to feel, they want to try the clothes,” she said. “I really believe we are here to stay, for sure.”

New owner, manager look to future at Galeries de la Capitale Read More »

Community organizations take on francisation workload

Community organizations take on francisation workload

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Subsidized French language-learning programs for adults offered by school service centres (CSS) in the greater Quebec City area won’t be scaling registrations back up anytime soon, service centre representatives have confirmed.

The Centre Louis-Jolliet in Limoilou, the Le Phénix adult learning centre in Sainte-Foy, the Centre Saint-Louis in Loretteville and the Centre d’éducation des adultes des Navigateurs in Lévis, along with a number of other adult education centres around the province, were forced to suspend enrolment for subsidized French courses known as francisation this fall due to a mismatch between funding provided by the Ministry of Education and Higher Learning (MEES) and higher-than-expected enrolment. 

In December, after months of lobbying by immigrant rights organizations, unions and individual students and teachers, Minister for the French Language Jean-François Roberge announced $10 million in new funding for francisation programs offered by school service centres in underserved regions. However, none of the three greater Quebec City-area service centres – the CSS de la Capitale, CSS des Découvreurs and CSS des Navigateurs – received extra funding, the QCT confirmed early in the New Year. Students who lost their place in a subsidized class offered by a school service centre this fall were expected to be placed on a waiting list for a course administered through a community group in partnership with the Ministry of Immigration, Francisation and Integration (MIFI)

“The ministries [of education and immigration] believe that residents of our territory have access to francization services nearby,” CSS des Navigateurs spokesperson Louise Boisvert said. “Our CSS was not targeted to receive part of this funding.” She added that 28 people were currently enrolled in full-time or part-time francisation classes through the CSS, compared to 576 last January.

With the suspension of francisation programs offered by school boards and service centres, students who want to enrol in francisation classes are turning to private options or joining waiting lists for courses offered by the MIFI through community organizations. 

Those classes are at “98 per cent capacity” according to Carlos Carmona, co-ordinator of the Régroupement des organismes en francisation du Québec (ROFQ), which represents community organizations offering subsidized francisation courses. Nevertheless, Carmona said, people looking for a place in a francisation class can contact community organizations working with immigrants in their area. ROFQ members in Quebec City include the Centre RIRE 2000 and Le Mieux-être des Immigrants. 

In principle, would-be students need to sign up on the Francisation Québec web portal (apprendrelefrancais.immigration-quebec.gouv.qc.ca), although the portal is only available in French as of this writing and requires an internet connection. “I know they are working on a new portal, which should be at least available in English and Spanish, although I don’t know what languages it will be available in,” Carmona said. Alternatively, he said, “People can contact our members and come to their offices with their immigration documents and we’ll help them fill out the forms – that’s a service we offer.”  

A person who signs up for a course today, he added, can expect to wait until “at least April” because organizations are no longer accepting new students for the winter semester. The subsidized classes are open to adult immigrants to Canada, transplants from out of province and Quebecers who would like to improve their French skills.  

Community organizations take on francisation workload Read More »

Quebec sends two more water bombers to Los Angeles to fight fires

Quebec sends two more water bombers to Los Angeles to fight fires

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

Since Jan. 7, Los Angeles has experienced more than 30 wildfires, with the largest destroying two major neighbourhoods at opposite ends of the city. Within hours, the Palisades and Altadena neighbourhoods were evacuated and large expanses burned. Fire departments from around North America swiftly responded, including two water bombers from Quebec that were already deployed. Nonetheless, this was insufficient to tackle the escalating fires, prompting a request for two additional planes from Quebec.

On Jan. 15, Quebec dis- patched two CL-415 planes along with a crew of six firefighters – Éric Pelletier, Carl Villeneuve, Julien Flouquet, Pierre Boulanger, Karol Bouchard and François Lapierre. Their journey took two days, spanning 6,100 kilometres with stops in Columbus, Ohio (for customs), St. Louis, Missouri (for rest), Boise, Montana (for a mechanical inspection) and finally, Los Angeles.

Southwestern California’s landscape and climate are susceptible to rampant forest fires, due to prolonged dry spells, strong warm winds from the Pacific Ocean, and the Santa Ana winds from the east. The presence of highly flammable non-indigenous eucalyptus trees exacerbates the situation. Local officials report that these wildfires have become increasingly devastating in recent years.

Given these conditions, CL-415 planes have become essential firefighting assets due to their unique ability to scoop water from nearby large water sources. They can collect 6,400 litres in 12 seconds and perform this operation three times an hour, nine to 12 times before needing to refuel. Over the years, the United States has acquired 10 such planes, stationed in Washington D.C., Montana, San Diego and Los Angeles. Additionally, each year from September to December, Los Angeles County contracts two extra planes from Quebec. Recently, one of these planes was grounded by a civilian drone; once the culprit is identified, they risk fines of up to $75,000 US and 12 months in prison, as man- dated by the Federal Aviation Administration.

As of Jan. 19, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Palisades fires had burned 23,713 acres, destroyed 4,996 structures, and resulted in the deaths of 10 people in the northwest. The Eaton Can- yon fires have burned 14,117 acres, affected 9,366 buildings and claimed 17 lives in the northeast. Both fires are now mostly contained, although ongoing strong winds and the persistent lack of rain pose challenges. Consequently, Los Angeles authorities requested two more planes from Quebec, which obliged, as Canada has a fleet of 64 CL-415 aircraft.

“We assessed the situation and determined we could assist California without jeopardizing our primary mission of fighting forest fires in Quebec,” said Luc Dugas, senior director of strategic and air operations at the Société de protection des forêts contre le feu (SOP- FEU), the Quebec government agency responsible for fighting forest fires. Typically, Quebec takes advantage of the winter months for fleet repairs.

“I’m feeling a bit fatigued, especially mentally,” said Pascal Duclos, chief pilot of the Service Aérien Gouvernemental (SAG; Quebec government air service) has been battling fires in California for days and spoke to Quebec media via videoconference. “We’ve been coming here for 30 years. We anticipate such situations and have relief teams to manage fatigue. However, the workload has been particularly intense in recent weeks.

“What transpired is truly a tragedy,” Duclos remarked. “On my first day, we saw a few homes in flames. By the second day, an entire neighbourhood was reduced to ashes. I had never witnessed anything like it before. Infrastructure and schools were burned. It’s quite devastating.”

Quebec sends two more water bombers to Los Angeles to fight fires Read More »

Trudeau’s departure draws mixed reaction from local politicos

Trudeau’s departure draws mixed reaction from local politicos

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

He won’t be gone from the scene until some time in March, but Justin Trudeau’s resignation instantly threw Canadian politics into a whirlwind of change amid the looming threats against Canada from incoming U.S. president Donald Trump.

On Jan. 6, the same day the U.S. Senate certified Trump’s election, Trudeau announced his decision to step down as Liberal Party leader and prime minister once a new leader is chosen.

The Liberal Party executive has picked March 9 as the date members will choose a suc- cessor to the man who revived the party and led it to three election victories but resisted stepping down as his popular- ity plunged and his caucus urged him to exit.

The opposition parties in Parliament have vowed to defeat the Liberal minority government at the earliest opportunity. That could come anytime after March 24, the date Parliament returns after the governor general granted Trudeau’s request to send the House of Commons into recess.

When – not if – that happens, Canadians likely will go to the polls in May.

In the wake of Trudeau’s not-unexpected announcement, reaction was swift and in most cases predictable.

One of Trudeau’s most dependable ministers and his Quebec lieutenant, Jean-Yves Duclos, the MP for the downtown Québec riding, said in a statement that the prime minister “will leave a lasting positive legacy for Canadians.” Duclos lauded Trudeau’s efforts to reduce child poverty and tackle the housing crisis, and on the local level, commit funding to the city’s tram- way project and buy back the Quebec Bridge.

Duclos told reporters at a scrum on Parliament Hill that Trudeau ultimately succumbed to Conservative Party and Official Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre’s “policy of lies, insults and contempt.”

Duclos’ Conservative counterpart, Charlesbourg–Haute- St-Charles MP Pierre Paul-Hus, replied to the QCT’s request for comment with a statement replicating Poilievre’s comments. “Justin Trudeau’s resignation changes nothing, because the next leader of the Liberal Party of Canada will come from the same team that supported Mr. Trudeau over the past nine years, marked by disastrous economic policies.

“A federal election must be organized quickly to allow Quebecers and Canadians to choose a new government with a strong mandate, capable of negotiating effectively with the Trump administration.”

Louis-Hébert MP Joël Lightbound, the only other elected Liberal in the Quebec City region, said Trudeau’s exit as leader under pressure from the party caucus is of his own doing.

In several media interviews, Lightbound said “you reap what you sow” with regards to the simmering caucus revolt that prompted the prime min- ister’s resignation. “Loyalty is a two-way street.”

Lightbound said on CBC Radio, “I am grateful for what he has accomplished,” including the acquisition of the Quebec Bridge in his riding, but “the style of Mr. Trudeau became a distraction to what we are trying to achieve as a party and a government.”

Lightbound’s office did not reply to a QCT request for an interview by press time.

As for hopes for the party in the looming election, Lightbound said, “I am still of the opinion the Liberal brand is strong.”

Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand, with whom Trudeau has worked closely on the tramway project, had a low-key and ambiguous response to the prime minister’s resignation.

In a statement, he said, “It is important to highlight the dedication that is required to be elected for more than 16 years in the Canadian Parliament. Time will allow us to recognize the progress Canada has made during Mr. Trudeau’s nine years as prime minister.” Premier François Legault, who has had a hot and cold relationship with Trudeau over the years, said in a statement, “Although our opinions have often differed, today I want to salute Justin Trudeau’s public service and his commitment to Canada. We have significant challenges ahead of us, particularly with the arrival of Donald Trump on Jan. 20. I will continue to work with Mr. Trudeau, his successor and the current government to avoid these tariffs.”

Trudeau’s departure draws mixed reaction from local politicos Read More »

The race is on to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader and PM

The race is on to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader and PM

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Want to be prime minister, if only for possibly just two months?

The job is open and several candidates are already testing the waters and getting the lay of the land.

Last week, the Liberal Party of Canada released the rules for the contest to replace Justin Trudeau as party leader and prime minister. The basic requirements to get into the contest are a $350,000 deposit and the willingness to hustle membership votes for a race to be decided on March 9.

Interested contestants have until Jan. 23 to officially toss their name in the hat.

After a meeting on Jan. 9, the party executive decided to restrict the criteria for party membership to avoid the prospect of foreign interference. To be eligible to be a voting member, a person needs to be at least 14 years old, support the purposes of the party, be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, not be a member of another federal party in Canada, and not have publicly declared the intention to run as a candidate for another federal party.

The deadline to register as a Liberal, through the party’s website, is Jan. 27. There is no fee to become a member.

Party president Sachit Mehra said in a release, “This is a time for Liberals across the country to exchange ideas and engage in thoughtful debate to shape the future of our party and our country – and I encourage all Liberals to get involved in this exciting moment for our party.”

Whoever wins the race faces the task of forming a cabinet, preparing a throne speech to outline new directions for the government, and then leading the party in the next election, which would come quickly. Op- position parties have declared they will defeat the Liberal minority government at the earliest opportunity once Parliament returns from prorogation on March 24.

As of this writing, only two fringe candidates have official- ly said they want to run: former Montreal-area MP Frank Baylis and Ottawa-area MP Chandra Arya. Some potential heavy- weights have ruled themselves out, including Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc, Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly and Transport Minister Anita Anand.

Those seriously considering a bid are former Bank of Canada head Mark Carney, former finance minister Chrystia Freeland, former British Columbia premier Christy Clark, Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson, Employment Minister Steven MacKinnon and Innovation Minister François- Philippe Champagne.

This scenario matches the one predicted by veteran local Liberal and former MP and senator Dennis Dawson. “We will start with six or seven candidates and will have bor- ing debates where everyone gets two or three minutes to convince Liberal supporters he or she is the best to challenge both [incoming U.S. president Donald] Trump as well as [Conservative Leader Pierre] Poilievre.”

Dawson said Quebec ministers interested in running will argue the Liberal Party’s traditional “alternance” between leaders from Quebec and the rest of Canada “is a myth while the others will say it is sacred.”

Dawson, who won the Louis- Hébert riding in three elections under Pierre Trudeau, said, “Rules and timing of the convention and debate schedules will also play in favour of some candidates such as Freeland, who will be front runner, but, depending on the rules, coalition strategies will weigh heavily on the final result.”

He said outsider candidates such as Carney and Clark “might have stronger support than predicted, but I think both are looking at a long-term strategy. In the last 50 years the person who lost came back to win the next one.”

He noted that “[John] Turner lost to Trudeau, [Jean] Chrétien to Turner, [Paul] Martin to Chrétien, and all three came back to win the [leadership] next time.”

Dawson, appointed to the Senate by then-prime minister Paul Martin in 2005, said he is “not at this time convinced by any of the prospective candidates.”

The last time the Liberal Party of Canada held a leadership race was in April 2013, when Trudeau won with 80 per cent of the vote. His most serious rival, former astronaut and MP Marc Garneau, dropped out of the race, clearing the way for Trudeau’s easy win.

The race is on to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader and PM Read More »

Navigator helps anglophone patients find their way in Quebec City

Navigator helps anglophone patients find their way in Quebec City

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

There was a time when walking through the doors of a Quebec City hospital was the last thing Steve Guimond ever wanted to do again. He and his family were living in Montreal and had to make regular trips to the provincial capital so his children could receive care for a long-term medical condition. The family found the three-hour road trips, bureaucracy and navigating the health system in two languages exhausting.

“We had no choice but to come here [to Quebec City] and our experiences were not great. My wife and I actually told ourselves that after the situation with our kids was over, we would never come back here again,” said Guimond, a bilingual anglophone originally from Saguenay who has lived most of his life in greater Montreal.

A decade later, perhaps ironically, helping English- speaking patients get in and out of Quebec City hospitals is Guimond’s full-time job. He works as a patient navigator for the Community Health and Social Services Network (CHSSN), a Quebec City-based provincewide nonprofit promoting access to health care in English. When patients from isolated English-speaking communities in the Gaspé, the North Shore or the Lower North Shore need to come to Quebec City for medical appointments, Guimond is the person they call.

“The way the health system is set up in the province is that anyone living east of Quebec City – and that’s a very large region, the Lower St. Lawrence, the North Shore, the Lower North Shore, the Gaspé and the Magdalen Islands – [is] usually sent here for specialized health services, because the services they have access to in their own regions are pretty minimal. Anytime you need an MRI, you have to come here.”

For someone from the Lower North Shore – the stretch of isolated, primarily English- speaking villages between Kegaska, where Route 138 ends, and Blanc-Sablon – this means several days of travel, often by ferry or snowmobile and then by plane. Once a patient arrives at his or her destination, the culture shock of going from an anglophone village of a few hundred people to a mostly French-speaking city of close to one million can be intense, especially for patients who never learned French or who aren’t comfortable in the language. “You have the stress of the medical aspect, the stress of the travel – the Lower North Shore has a very unreliable air carrier – the stress of arriving in a big city where you potentially don’t know anyone, the stress of not knowing much about the hospital or where you’re staying … and the stress of actually going to the hospital, which is much larger [than health facilities patients are used to]. There’s also the language barrier.”

Jody Lessard is executive director of the North Shore Community Association, which helps connect the estimated 2,500 anglophones of the upper North Shore – between Forestville, across the river from Rimouski, and Natashquan, until recently the end of Route 138 – with services in their preferred language. “If you’re an English speaker from a small town of 20 or 200 people, there’s a lot of fear [when you arrive in Quebec City]. By just having someone like Steve there to pick you up when you arrive, that fear is gone,” she said. “He provides a sense of security. This is a great project and it’s highly needed … and he’s the only one doing it.”

Both Lessard and Guimond said they believed the project, currently run by the nonprofit CHSSN, could benefit from increased government support. “We’re basically stepping in to deal with the problems or the issues that are created by the health system. It’s like the health system should be the one making sure that these measures should be in place, but they’re not,” Guimond said. People from remote communities and people living with chronic conditions often pay the price, he observed.

As a patient navigator, Gui- mond often drives patients to and from appointments at hospitals in Quebec City and Lévis, helps them get admitted, helps patients find long-term places to stay and acts as a translator and patient advocate. No two days are ever the same. “It takes a lot of flexibility, foresight and ingenuity, I guess, but people are great – they understand I’m the only person doing this, so there are times I can’t be there exactly on time.”

Guimond said he has noticed that health-care professionals are increasingly willing and able to ensure patients who need service in English get it, despite a recent raft of confusing and contradictory government guidelines on the use of languages other than French in health care. “There’s a real disconnect between what the government is trying to instill [in terms of the prevalence of French] and what is actually happening on the ground,” he said. “The patient comes first, and no one is going to be refused service because they can’t speak French. I’ve seen people go out of their way to make sure patients are comfortable and make sure there’s someone around who can communicate with them.” Even so, he pointed out that not all written documentation handed out to patients is available in both languages, due in his estimation to inter-agency communication challenges within the health system.

He advised anyone preparing for a medical appointment, even if they live in the city and don’t need directions or help getting to the health facility – to make sure they have their health insurance card on them at all times – “that’s like your passport.” He also told patients not to hesitate to ask for English service if they need or prefer it. “That’s your right.” For more information on the health navigator program, visit travel4health.ca/going-to/quebec/patient-navigator.

Navigator helps anglophone patients find their way in Quebec City Read More »

Province reports slight drop in ER wait times

Province sees slight drop in ER wait times

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Officials with Santé Québec, the Crown corporation launched last fall with a stated goal of improving the co-ordination of the various agencies within the province’s public health system, sounded an opti- mistic note as they briefed reporters about provincewide emergency room crowding at a press conference in Montreal on Jan. 10.

“Since Dec. 28, our hospitals have been under pressure,” said Santé Québec executive vice president for operations and transformation Frédéric Abergel. According to the In- dex Santé portal, emergency rooms at full-service hospitals in Quebec City were averaging 100.9 per cent capacity as of this writing; in the first week of January 2024, according to a La Presse report from the time, emergency rooms in the region were at 132 per cent of capac- ity. Other indicators across the province, Abergel said, were also creeping downward relative to where they were last January; the average wait time for a patient registered at an emergency room has dropped from 19.2 to just under 18 hours. Forty-eight of the 55 large hospitals in the province (with 100 beds or more) have seen some improvements in ER wait times, Santé Québec data suggested. “Overall, we have seen improvements even though we still have some challenges,” said Abergel, adding that the agency planned to provide weekly updates.

“We will keep working with establishments to improve things … and we have some busy weeks ahead. We want to accompany regional health agencies to help them find their own solutions. We’ve only [legally] existed for 41 days and we’re still putting everything in place.” However, he emphasized that he didn’t want to imply “that everything is going great.”

He said the agency had been working since last July to prepare for the winter rush, focus- ing on a better organization of care for patients who frequently end up in emergency rooms with poorly controlled chronic or mental health conditions, check-in calls to seniors 75 and older who are on the family doctor waiting list, and better co-ordinating the schedules of certain health professionals so patients can be discharged at any time of the week.

He said the agency would “stay on guard” over the next few weeks as flu season is expected to peak, but that initial indications were encouraging.

Abergel cited data showing that 44 per cent of emergency room visits were for conditions that could be treated else- where. “There are patients who have a family doctor and who come to the emergency room because they can’t reach their doctor – we’re going to find out why,” he said. “We need to understand the reasons why people go to the ER [in non- emergency situations].”

He encouraged people concerned about their health or the health of a loved one to call the Info-Santé 811 helpline. Calling 811 and pressing 3 leads to the Primary Care Access Point, where a nurse can help a patient who doesn’t have a family doctor book an appointment with a doctor, nurse or pharmacist. “Obviously, if your condition requires it, you do need to go to the emergency room,” he said.

Province reports slight drop in ER wait times Read More »

Demand for food aid expected to rise, study suggests

Demand for food aid expected to rise, study suggests

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

The organization representing the province’s food banks expects demand for food aid to continue to rise in the coming year.

Late last week, Banques

Alimentaires du Québec (BAQ) released a study it commissioned forecasting future need for food aid in the province. The study “confirms the worrying trend observed by BAQ, namely that the number of requests for food aid to which the network responds will increase,” BAQ said in a statement. In 2024, the 34 food banks in the BAQ network responded to 2.9 million requests for assistance. BAQ estimates that this figure will reach 3.22 million per month in 2027, an increase of more than 320,000 requests within three years.

“The network isn’t built to sustain such a quick increase in demand,” BAQ director of philanthropy Véronique Beaulieu-Fowler told the QCT.

The study also explored the factors that influence demand for food aid in Quebec, finding that poverty and dependence on government assistance are major risk factors for food insecurity. Other risk factors include the rental housing crisis, “especially when employ- ment income is not growing at the same speed as the main household expenditure items,” the growth of part-time jobs at the expense of better-paid full-time positions and the financial precarity experienced by many recent immigrants. “The pandemic was the start of it, and then the housing crisis and inflation and the fact wages have not followed,” Beaulieu- Fowler said. “The reason food aid exists is that people don’t have enough money to meet their basic needs; we need to address wages and housing so people can meet their needs.”

In March 2020, as demand for food aid skyrocketed amid pandemic-driven job losses and economic uncertainty, the Coalition Avenir Québec government provided $2 million in emergency assistance, the first in a series of emergency grants. Amid rising food prices, BAQ is calling for government funding for food banks to become permanent and predictable. “We have had some help to purchase food over the last few years, we have had $18 million, then $24 million, then $30 million, but [a one-time grant] is an emergency solution. We are asking for recurring funding so we can invest to help build a more self-sufficient network,” Beaulieu-Fowler said. As part of the 2025-2026 pre-budget consultations, BAQ is request- ing funding of $38 million in 2025-2026, $36 million in 2026-2027 and $34 million in 2027-2028.

“With this study, we are able to anticipate what the coming years will look like for our net- work, which is already facing increased pressure to support people facing food insecurity in Quebec. Although we are fac- ing a sad and worrying trend, this allows us to have predictability about how the situation will evolve over the years and to prepare ourselves accordingly. As long as structural measures and actions that address the roots of poverty and social inequalities are not implemented, we will be faced with this increase. Given the results of this study, we hope to be able to establish a constant and predictable agreement with the Quebec government in order to ensure assistance to the most vulnerable,” said BAQ executive director Martin Munger.

“We don’t have regional data, but everything that’s being observed in the study, the fac- tors are pretty much the same here,” said Elisabeth Fortin, communications co-ordinator at Moisson Québec, a BAQ member and the largest food bank in the Quebec City region. “There are complex supply chain issues that have an im- pact on how much [donated] food we get, and we’re buying a lot more than before. We’re getting a lot more requests for assistance and a lot more people coming back month after month. During the pandemic, we talked a lot about a ‘perfect storm’ – the storm has never stopped.”

To make a financial or in-kind donation, to volunteer with Moisson Québec or to request food aid, visit moissonquebec.com.

Demand for food aid expected to rise, study suggests Read More »

Ice Hotel returns to its origins for 25th edition

Ice Hotel returns to its origins for 25th edition

Cassandra Kerwin

cassandra@qctonline.com

Year after year, dedicated artisans, architects and engineers work together to create a winter paradise from snow and ice. Stepping across the Ice Hotel’s threshold, the expected 80,000 visitors will discover a world of wonder built around the theme of “Back to the Origins.” The hotel is open to tours, visitors and overnight guests until mid-March, weather permitting.

Construction began as soon as temperatures dropped be- low freezing over consecutive days, giving artists, arti- sans and construction crews about a month to complete the 53,000-square-foot Ice Hotel from 45,000 tons of snow and 3,000 ice blocks. Visitors have

been touring the hotel since Dec. 27, with the first overnight guests welcomed on Jan. 4. Over the following weeks, all 30 suites, including 20 themed rooms, will be completed, add- ing to the Grand Hall, the Ice Bar, the Chapel and the 60-seat restaurant, a collaboration with the Château Frontenac. All of this is to accommodate an expected 80,000 visitors and 3,000 overnight guests over the season.

“From what I know, from what I’ve seen, a 100 per cent natural ice hotel, I don’t know of any other ice hotel in the world that has this surface area,” said Hugues Painchaud, site manager of the hotel located at Village Vacances Val- cartier.

The four basic elements, wind, fire, water and earth, are sculpted into the walls of the Chapel to be united at the altar. Their human shapes stand tall in the entrance hall. Behind them, visitors discover powwow dancers and a traditional canoe made of ice, and a snow longhouse. At the Ice Bar, visitors can order cocktails and mocktails served in glasses made of ice.

“We have new ideas every year. The talent for sculpture, since I started the ice hotels 15 years ago, has really increased tenfold,” said artistic director Guy-Olivier Deveau. “We pay tribute to nature and the elements in our lobby, our grand hall and our bar. Then, we also have a section that pays tribute to the First Nations. We are celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Hôtel de Glace and we are taking a look back at the history that brought us here.”

After admiring the sculpted snow walls, visitors tour the rooms, each with their respective themes: origami, mosaic, Quebec and outer space, to name a few. People cannot help but stare, smile and wonder.

As day turns to night, visitors leave and guests check into their rooms. Thanks to the soundproofing and insulation provided by snow, people sleep through some of the quietest nights in rooms with temperatures hovering around -5 degrees Celsius, regardless of the noise and temperature outside. The hotel provides its guests with thermal sleeping bags, a pillow and a foam mat- tress on plywood over an ice base. In larger rooms, wood- burning fireplaces offer added warmth and ambience. Some lucky guests even have access to hot tubs and saunas. Wash- rooms are located in a heated building adjacent to the hotel. For an additional fee, guests can also reserve a room in the adjacent hotel.

Besides the Ice Hotel, the Village Vacances Valcartier offers a range of other winter activities including ice skating, snow sliding and the tropical indoor water park, Bora Parc. For those coming from the city without a car, Unitour offers transportation for a fee from the Château Frontenac to Village Vacances Valcartier and back, according to a schedule found on toursvieuxquebec.com. For more information, visit valcartier.com/en.

Ice Hotel returns to its origins for 25th edition Read More »

Crowds are invited to learn about crowds at the Musée de la Civilisation

Crowds are invited to learn about crowds at the Musée de la Civilisation

Cassandra Kerwin

cassandra@qctonline.com

Standing in the middle of a crowd, have you ever taken the time to observe it? Are crowds good or bad, safe or dangerous? The latest exhibit at the Musée de la Civilisation (MCQ), Crowds: A Human Laboratory, explores these questions and observations.

Until Aug. 30, 2026, visitors are invited to learn about the fascinating nature of crowds. Discover how they can be manipulated and influenced by individuals both inside and outside. Crowds: A Human Laboratory is designed to challenge the public’s perception of crowds and promote a better understanding of their behaviours.

From the research laboratories of the Max Planck Institute for Human Develop- ment in Germany, scientific curator and researcher Mehdi Moussaïd shared his passion for studying the behaviours of crowds on his YouTube channel, Fouloscopie. Over time, his work led to the creation of the exhibit Crowds: A Human Laboratory, first displayed at the Cité des Sciences et de l’Industrie in Paris from October 2022 to May 2024. From there, it crossed the At- lantic to the MCQ, where Mous- saïd tweaked it with a touch of Quebec flair and a nod to the Festival d’Été de Québec.

“It touches me personally to have this exhibit in Quebec because it is at [Université du Québec à Montréal] where it all began for me in 2004,” Moussaïd said in a YouTube video shown at the exhibit’s press conference on Dec. 18. “Crowds are first of all huge gatherings of thousands of people. In some cases, they can be so close together that it can become dangerous. In these situations, we study many things, including fluid mechanics, the spreading of rumours, crowd manipulation and collective emotions, errors and intelligence.” He continued, “I hope you will have as much pleasure in discovering [the exhibit] as we had in designing it.”

The new director general of the MCQ, Julie Lemieux, is of a similar opinion. “Crowds: A Human Laboratory is tailor-made for the MCQ, which loves to cross perspectives, gather, make people think and explore new subjects. It is a true hu- man and living laboratory that offers us a dual experience – experiencing the crowd and extracting ourselves from it to better analyze it and, perhaps, better understand ourselves.”

In this exhibit, visitors can cram into a square metre, step through one of three doors, sing karaoke in public and discover the science behind crowd evacuations, mosh pits, stampedes and much more.

For more information, visit mcq.org.

Crowds are invited to learn about crowds at the Musée de la Civilisation Read More »

TRAM TRACKER: TramCité deal signed; federal funding in election limbo

TRAM TRACKER: TramCité deal signed; federal funding in election limbo 

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Though a deal is now signed to proceed with Phase 1 of a tramway plan for Quebec City, a dark cloud hangs over the project with a federal election inevitable in 2025.

On Dec. 16, the Quebec government, the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec infrastructure division (CDPQ Infra) and the city signed a se- ries of agreements “sealing the partnership for the planning of the tramway component” of the project, henceforth to be known as TramCité.

Phase 1 is the construction of a 19-kilometre east-west tramway line from Charles- bourg to the Le Gendre sector of Cap-Rouge, comprising 29 stations serving areas such as the shopping strip on Boul. Laurier, Université Laval, Parliament Hill and Saint-Roch. The line will double the frequency of transit service along the corridor.

Construction of the line is not expected to begin until 2027, with completion targeted in 2033. The cost for Phase 1 is pegged at $7.6 billion.

With the deal now signed, CDPQ Infra will “set up a team dedicated to the project and to begin the technical studies and analyses required for its implementation,” according to documentation released at the Dec. 16 news conference.

The tramway project was first announced in March 2018 under the administration of then-mayor Régis Labeaume. It was budgeted at $3.3 billion, with a contribution of $1.2 billion from the federal government. Since then, with the arrival of the Coalition Avenir Québec government the same year, the plan has been delayed and changed repeatedly.

The current version is the one CDPQ Infra presented in June after being mandated by the CAQ government to study overall urban transit needs for the capital region.

Mayor Bruno Marchand, who inherited the tramway project when his Québec Forte et Fière party came to power in 2021, declared the agreement with the two other partners to be an “irreversible milestone in the construction of the tramway, and all citizens of the greater Quebec City region benefit from it.”

Under the deal, the city will contribute some $675 million to the project, amounting to half the costs of the preparatory work. The contribution is to be financed from a cli- mate change fund already established, and from revenues derived from real estate devel- opment, much of which would be stimulated by the tramway project.

Marchand said, “We’re paying cash” for the tramway, as opposed to resorting to tax increases.

The mayor said another important element of the deal is that in the event the tramway project is cancelled, the city will be reimbursed for funds invested.

While the city’s share of the funding is about nine per cent, the Quebec government is demanding the federal government cover 40 per cent, beefing up the $1.2 billion already committed.

In a year-end interview with the QCT, Jean-Yves Duclos, federal minister of public services and procurement and MP for Québec, said additional funding is available from an annual $3-billion fund the Liberal government has created for such urban transit projects.

The fate of any federal funding for the tramway whatsoever, however, looms over the project, with Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre stating unequivocally that he will not commit “one cent” to the project should he become prime minister.

Poilievre’s Quebec lieutenant, Pierre Paul-Hus, has said in recent media comments a Conservative government would put money the Liberals committed to the tramway into the CAQ government’s promised “third link,” presumably a new bridge over the St. Lawrence River.

Under current election timing, neither the tramway nor the third link would be under construction until after the planned Quebec provincial election in October 2026.

TRAM TRACKER: TramCité deal signed; federal funding in election limbo Read More »

City to fell thousands of ash trees in new year

City to fell thousands of ash trees in new year

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The city is stepping up its campaign against the devastation the emerald ash borer insect has wrought on forested areas.

Under a program announced in December, some 4,300 ash trees are to be felled by June in an effort to contain the spread of the beetle. The trees are to be cut in virtually all areas of the city.

First detected in the Montcalm district in 2017, presumably aboard a load of firewood, the insect infestation has quick- ly spread and forced the city to take action. Last year, the city issued a four-year action plan to limit the impact of infected and threatened trees on the environment.

Forestry experts consider the eradication of the emerald ash borer impossible given that the insect kills virtually all ash trees in any given area. According to the city plan, “municipal governments are responsible for managing the economic, environmental and social impacts in both urban and forested areas.”

Coun. Marie-Josée Asselin, the city executive committee member responsible for natural environments and biodiversity, said in a news release, “The emerald ash borer is transforming our landscapes and there will be fewer and fewer ash trees in Quebec City in the coming years. The city is proactive in providing a safe environment at all times and thus preventing the fall of branches or trunks of ash trees attacked by the emerald ash borer.”

The list of targeted trees in urban areas includes 170 in Beauport, 27 in Charlesbourg, 317 in La Haute-Saint-Charles, 261 in La Cité-Limoilou, 214 in Les Rivières and 55 in Sainte-Foy–Sillery–Cap-Rouge.

In forested areas of the city, the removal of ash trees amounts to a logging opera- tion. In Parc Duberger, 1,500 trees will come down; in Parc de la rivière Cap-Rouge, 1,000; Parc du Marais, 435; Domaine Cataraqui, 216; and Domaine Maizerets 120.

As for threatened ash trees on private property, the city encourages residents to take action to avoid risks associated with dying trees and falling branches. Grants are available for the felling and removal of trees. Information on the ash borer program is available on the city’s website.

Such a major tree removal operation creates a lot of wood. City spokesperson Jean-Pascal Lavoie told the QCT in an email, “All the wood felled to combat the emerald ash borer is reval- ued. Several ‘products’ can be generated from the same tree depending on the quality of the wood. First, the wood chips generated by the cutting are generally used as forest mulch in various flower beds in the city, as well as distributed to local organizations working for the city (e.g. community gardens).

“When the quality of the wood meets the necessary criteria, we repurpose it, through the forestry industry, for pulp and paper or sawn products,” Lavoie said.

Some of the ash wood is turned into various products by non-profit groups. Les Artisans du Saint-Laurent, for example, builds sailboats and rowboats from the wood. Another organization makes park benches with ash lumber.

City to fell thousands of ash trees in new year Read More »

CIUSSS offers second language training to JHSB staff

CIUSSS offers second-language training to JHSB staff

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Amid sweeping cuts to subsidized French language-learning programs offered by school boards and service centres in the Quebec City region, organizations serving the local English-speaking community are placing their hopes in workplace-based programs that allow employees to develop their second language during work hours.

“I think at this point, strategies by employers for language acquisition in the workplace are probably our best bet, as well as initiatives such as [a one-on-one language-learning mentorship program] to try and mitigate these losses,” Brigitte Wellens, executive director of Voice of English-speaking Québec told attendees at a regional round table hosted by the Provincial Employment Round Table (PERT) late last year.

A partnership between Jeffery Hale–Saint Brigid’s (JHSB) and a McGill University program may be part of the solution. About a dozen francophone and anglophone JHSB employees, in management, administrative and pa- tient care roles, have been quietly improving their second- language skills with online courses since 2020.

The program is offered to “any employee of the CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale who would like to improve their practice of the English language in the context of their work” and whose job is on a long list of eligible positions, CIUSSS spokesperson Mariane Lajoie told the QCT. French-as- a-second-language courses are also offered through the same program.

“These are language classes – French or English – tailored to health professions [and] to staff who interact with the public,” explained Nancy Boulanger, manager responsible for the living environment at Saint Brigid’s Home. The online group courses are vol- untary, free and offered by the CIUSSS outside of work hours. Current employees can contact their manager or department head if they’d like to sign up for courses in either language. “It’s probably not that well known, so there’s a lot of word of mouth,” said Boulanger.

JHSB is the only designated bilingual hospital and long- term care centre in the Quebec City region; consequently, employees in most public- facing positions must have a baseline level of both English and French. “Since we want employees who speak English, sometimes we hire people who don’t speak French, but we’re not a 100 per cent English- speaking centre either, so they have to get by in French for various reasons,” Boulanger said. “There’s a minimal level of bilingualism required for user safety.”

JHSB also hires some health professionals, such as nurses, who have moved to Quebec from out of province and must pass a French exam to continue to practice.

“They have a licence from the Ordre des infirmières et infirmiers du Québec, but with restricted rights because they must pass a French exam … [It’s] beneficial for us to support them in their progress in French because they already have the element that is difficult for us as employers to get, which is English,” Boulanger explained.

Other employees sign up to keep their second language skills sharp, she said. “For those who learned English as a second language, it’s a golden opportunity to keep your skills up.”

CIUSSS offers second language training to JHSB staff Read More »

TRAM TRACKER: Phase 1 deal to be signed after long delay

TRAM TRACKER: Phase 1 deal to be signed after long delay

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Supporters of Quebec City’s tramway project are getting an early Christmas present.

Barring a last-minute glitch, as of this writing, sources say the Quebec government has reached a deal to proceed with Phase 1 of the massive urban transit plan.

Transport Minister Geneviève Guilbault has been saying in recent days that negotiations are on track with the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) Infra division to restart construction the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government halted in November 2023 in the face of rising costs for the project.

In June, after a six-month study the government requested, CDPQ Infra presented recommendations for a modern urban transit system serving Quebec City and Lévis. The central recommendation was Phase 1, a 19-kilometre tramway line between Charlesbourg and a hub on Ave. Le Gendre in Cap-Rouge.

The CAQ approved Phase 1 pending negotiations with the Caisse and at the same time committed to building a “third link” between the north and south shores.

Guilbault set a Dec. 15 target –a Sunday–for a deal to be signed in time to prepare for the 2025 construction season. The estimated cost of Phase 1, which also includes rapid bus service lines in Quebec City and Lévis, is $5.27 billion.

According to reports, two deals were to be signed this week: One between the Quebec government and CDPQ Infra, and the other between the Quebec government and the Quebec City administration.

It’s not clear whether the agreements will have a precise financial structure for Phase 1. The Quebec government is committed to upwards of 30 per cent of the cost, with the rest split between the federal government and the city.

In its 2025 budget, the city forecasts spending on the tramway in the order of $260 million next year.

In anticipation of the announcement, Mayor Bruno Marchand told a media scrum on Dec. 12, the announcement of the green light for the tramway project “couldn’t come at a better time for the Quebec economy; to have this opportunity for public and private funds that will have a colossal impact.”

The city estimates the project will stimulate some 5,000 new housing units along the route over the next two years.

Coupled with private investment, the mayor said, the tramway will “literally [have] the impact of a mini James Bay for Quebec City.”

TRAM TRACKER: Phase 1 deal to be signed after long delay Read More »

Québec MP Duclos: Quebec Bridge and tramway big wins in 2024

Québec MP Duclos: Quebec Bridge and tramway big wins in 2024

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

As our interview with Jean-Yves Duclos wrapped with a question about plans for the holidays, the federal minister scrambled to pull out his phone and show a picture of his newborn grandson.

“Spending more time with him,” Duclos said. Getting some cross-country skiing in is also on the list.

The year-end chat with the minister of public services and procurement at his Boul. Charest riding office on Dec. 13 came with two major events looming on his political agenda, symbolizing the dual role he plays as a key minister in the Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and as the MP for the Québec riding in the heart of Quebec City.

On Dec. 16, were it not for his commitment to be present on the front bench in the House of Commons for the government’s fall economic statement, he would have been in Quebec City for the announcement of the deal to proceed with Phase 1 of the city’s tramway project. (It’s unclear as of this writing whether Chrystia Freeland’s abrupt resignation as finance minister on Dec. 16 changed those plans.)

The tramway, indeed, is one of the two major achievements of 2024 on Duclos’ list, as well as the federal government’s acquisition of the Quebec Bridge.

Duclos said the bridge deal, involving some $40 million over 25 years, secures the future of the historic span. “So now we know what to do in the next year, years and decades, because it will take between 15 and 20 years for the entire bridge to be completely refurbished, painted and secured for the next 75 years. So that’s great news.”

Duclos said with the repair job on the bridge in the works, future uses of the link will be considered, including improved bicycle and pedestrian access, urban transit service including the tramway and as a temporary alternative for heavy truck transport should the Pierre Laporte Bridge be closed. As for the tramway announcement on Dec. 16, Duclos said, “I would have liked to be there, to celebrate the hard work of so many others over the last few years, the support of economic groups like the chambers of commerce and industry on both sides of the river, the environmental groups, the social groups, all of the housing developers [who] are keen on building more homes and more rapidly, attracting new and younger people to the area.”Duclos explained the federal funding commitment to the tramway includes the initial $1.5-billion investment, and “the second is from 2026 onwards. Every year there is an additional $3 billion per year that the federal government is making available to provinces and territories to invest or reinvest in their public transit system.”Of that, the tramway would be eligible for a portion of Quebec’s share of about $700 million annually, Duclos said. “The money is there.”

Whether the money will still be there in the event a Conservative government led by Pierre Poilievre is elected next year, Duclos said it’s the usual “incoherence” from the Tory leader. “[H]e travels outside of Quebec and says how marvellous it is for other cities who have received federal public transit support because it leads to more homes being built. He wants to steal the money that is already there and take it away from the city and use it for other purposes.”Duclos is in his fourth cabinet portfolio since the Liberals under Justin Trudeau defeated Stephen Harper’s Conservatives in 2015. Previously minister of families, children and social devel- opment (2015-19), Treasury Board (2019-2021) and health (2021-23), Duclos became Trudeau’s Quebec lieutenant in the fall, when Montreal-area MP Pablo Rodriguez stepped down to run for Quebec Liberal Party leader.

With an election inevitable in 2025, Duclos said Liberal fortunes will improve once Canadians “have to de- cide as to what type of society and country we want to live in in the years to come, and when that time comes, it will be, I think, more clear for Quebecers in particular that the other option being Poilievre’s option, is far from their values and their interest.”Does he plan to run for a fourth term? “Of course, because I’m going to fight for the people in my rid- ing and my region as much as I can … knowing the threat that the election of Pierre Poilievre would bring and knowing that the Bloc Québécois is unable to address that threat.”

His message for 2025? “To keep being mindful of the for- tune we have to live in Canada, in Quebec City in particular. We take many things for granted in life. It’s wonderful to be given the chance, in my case, to be serving the interest of my constituents.”

Duclos added, “I wish [for us to] think of every day as a gift, the gift of being there for each other.”

Québec MP Duclos: Quebec Bridge and tramway big wins in 2024 Read More »

Striking Canada Post staff must return to work, labour board rules

Striking Canada Post staff must return to work, labour board rules

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Canada Post delivery staff are expected to return to work on Dec. 17, despite the fact that by all accounts, the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) and Canada Post are far from an agreement.

CUPW members across the country have been on strike since Nov. 15, and the parties remain far apart on issues including wage increases and staff planning for weekend deliveries. Since the strike, nonprofit organizations have seen a significant drop in donations, small business advocacy groups have raised concerns about disruption to the holiday shopping season and people living in rural and remote areas have struggled to access supplies. Govern- ment services such as deliv- ery of renewed passports and permanent resident cards have also been interrupted – during peak travel season. La- bour Minister Steven MacKin- non, who had previously ruled out legislating striking postal workers back to work, raised those issues when he told reporters on Dec. 15 that he would refer the dispute to the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB).

“It is my view … that the parties are at an impasse. I have asked the CIRB, if they also determine that there is an impasse, to resume and continue their operations under the existing collective agreement until May 22, 2025,” he said.

Shortly before midnight on Dec. 15, CBC reported that after two days of hearings, the CIRB ruled that there was indeed an impasse. Mail delivery was set to resume on Dec. 17 at 8 a.m. No further information was available as of the QCT’s deadline.

“Canadians are fed up,” the minister said. “As minister of labour, I have a responsibility to protect Canadians, the public interest, by maintain- ing industrial peace and respecting the rights of the par- ties involved in this dispute. That is why I am here today to announce that I am providing a solution to promote favourable conditions for the resolution of this labour dispute and thus protect the interests of Canadians. Not only have the parties been unable to show any progress towards an agreement, the federal mediator has now informed me that the negotiations between both parties are now, in fact, going in the wrong direction.”

MacKinnon mandated labour commissioner William Kaplan to meet with both parties in the coming months to try to find a long-term solution at the negotiating table. “The government is commit- ted to collective bargaining. It’s not easy, but we’ve seen time and time again that it produces the strongest enduring agreements to the benefit of workers and employers alike.” In the interim, MacKinnon encouraged Canadians to donate to charities however possible.

CUPW national president Jan Scott called MacKinnon’s proposal “troubling.”

“We denounce in the strongest terms this assault on our constitutionally protected right to free and fair collective bargain and our right to strike,” she said in a statement. “We are going to continue to fight hard to get good negotiated collective agreements for our 55,000 members. We will continue to fight for fair wages, safe working conditions and to retire with dignity. We have been pushing Canada Post for years to expand services to generate more revenue. We must stand strong in the face of this abuse of power.”

Canada Post said it “looked forward to welcoming employees back to work” while remaining committed to the negotiations. Post office pick-up and dropoff are expected to resume on Dec. 19.

Striking Canada Post staff must return to work, labour board rules Read More »

Chapelle du Séminaire opens after years of restoration

Chapelle du Séminaire reopens after years of restoration

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

As churches close and are torn down throughout the city and province, one has been saved, restored and reopened after being deconsecrated in 1992. After three years of restoration costing $5.2 million, the Centre de Conservation du Québec (CCQ) and the Musée de la Civilisation de Québec (MCQ) reopened the Chapelle du Séminaire de Québec on Dec. 10.

“What a joy it is to be able to return the Chapelle du Séminaire de Québec to the community, which will be able to appreciate all of its artistic beauty and historical significance through a rich pro- gramme of cultural mediation activities,” said Julie Lemieux, the newly appointed director general of the MCQ. “I would like to salute the remark- able professionalism of the conservation and restoration specialists who have pooled their knowledge to ensure that this jewel of religious heritage remains sustainable for cur- rent and future generations.”

The conservation team had quite a task ahead of them when they started in the autumn of 2021. Besides the customary work done on a historic building, they also had to remove the traces of 90 years of daily use of incense, candles and tapers during religious celebrations. This was the CCQ’s largest project since its foundation in 1979. After three years of meticulous and innovative work and $5.2 million, the chapel has regained its original character, colours and shine. The final detail came from Quebec actor Roland Lepage, a major backer of the project, who restored its original name: Chapelle du Séminaire de Québec.

According to the MCQ, the current chapel was opened to worship in 1900, on the ruins of a much older chapel – built in 1753 – that had been destroyed by fire in 1888. Architect Joseph-Ferdinand Peachy (1830- 1903) redesigned it with certain improvements designed to make it more fire-resistant. For example, the trompe-l’oeil motifs of the ceilings, walls and columns were painted on sheet metal rather than wood. Upon closer inspection of the interior, visitors will discover that not everything is an illusion. The high and secondary altars are sculpted from white marble. The limited amount of wood is red cherry. The parquet consists of tiles from England. These details come together nicely to create an eclectic, busy and very colourful Second Empire-inspired decor.

The chapel is steeped in Quebec City’s rich architectural history: stained glass win- dows by Wallace J. Fisher from the Bernard Leonard workshop, gilded busts, a 1930 Casavant Organ and a replica of the 1753 Richard organ from Paris, originally made for the Cathedral-Basilica Notre Dame de Québec (which burnt in 1759 during the Conquest), and an alcove dedicated to Mgr. François de Laval, the founding father of Catholicism in New France, who had a chapel built on or near this site. When the chapel was deconsecrated, his remains were transferred to the adjacent basilica.

Now that the chapel is refurbished and restored, it also has a new vocation. The MCQ and the CCQ have a concert program lined up. On Dec. 21, the Solstice des insoumis will merge Scandinavian and Quebec music celebrating the winter solstice and Christmas under the direction of Gabrielle Bouthillier. Details can be found at mcq.org/decouvrir/activites/le-solstice-des-insoumis.

Chapelle du Séminaire opens after years of restoration Read More »

City broke promise on community centre renos, councillor says

City broke promise on community centre renos, councillor says

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

In May 2018, then-city councillor Jonatan Julien left his seat on then- mayor Régis Labeaume’s executive committee to enter provincial politics, setting off a byelection in the district of Neufchâtel- Lebourgneuf. During the byelection campaign, Labeaume promised a $10- million renovation to bring the Charles-Auguste-Savard community centre in the district up to code, paid for entirely by the city if necessary.

“Honestly, I have to tell you, it’s been neglected,” Labeaume told Le Soleil at the time.

Six years and two mayoral administrations later, the work still hasn’t been completed, despite promises of completion by several parties, including Mayor Bruno Marchand’s Québec Forte et Fière (QFF) and Québec 21 (now Équipe Priorité Québec) under former leader Jean-François Gosselin, now a QFF councillor and member of the executive committee. Earlier this month, the project was potentially delayed further when city officials said it was conditional on support from other levels of govern- ment, according to Neufchâtel- Lebourgneuf Coun. Patricia Boudreault-Bruyère, a member of Équipe Labeaume’s successor party, Québec D’Abord.

Boudreault-Bruyère said the centre, which offers a wide range of activities for youth, families, seniors and amateur athletes in Neufchâtel, no longer meets city standards for accessibility and energy efficiency, and only has a single emergency exit. The Marchand administration, according to Boudreault-Bruyère, had announced plans to demolish and rebuild the centre at a cost of $16.6 million. “Two or three weeks ago, I was told they were targeting 2027 [for completion] and the project was well on its way.” Plans and estimates were already being developed, she said.

During discussions about the city’s 2025 budget, she was surprised to learn that the funding for the community centre project had become conditional on funding from other levels of government.

“Citizens and people in the recreation field have been waiting for this since 2018, and it was aberrant to see that the money wasn’t there,” said Boudreault-Bruyère, pointing out that Marchand recently promised the city would build a $40-million curling centre without support from other levels of government if necessary. “The administration made a political choice to put the [money allocated for the community centre] elsewhere and deprive 165,000 people of a community centre. They backed down from their commitment, and this is the kind of thing that contributes to cynicism in politics.”

The Ville de Québec had not responded to requests for comment at press time.

City broke promise on community centre renos, councillor says Read More »

Budget holds line on taxes, ups spending on public safety

Budget holds line on taxes, ups spending on public safety

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Describing it as a responsible financial plan that shuns electoralist goodies, Mayor Bruno Marchand last week unveiled his third budget, the last one before next year’s municipal election.

As promised, the budget keeps the average property tax increase at 2.9 per cent, below the rate of inflation. It increases spending for hiring more police officers and firefighters, addressing homelessness and building more housing.

The mayor said at a news conference Dec. 4, following a briefing by city finance officials, “The task has been enormous” to deliver sound city finances with a view to the future.

With the easing of inflation and improvement in the labour market, Marchand said there’s been “a certain return to normal” in the current year. That’s allowed the city to “maintain the quality of life and the num- ber of services the city offers free to citizens.”

The city’s overall operating budget for 2025 is $2.015 billion, an increase of $111.3 million or 5.8 per cent over the previous year. Of that amount, the largest outlay is $1.2 billion, or 61.5 per cent, for “expenditures of administrative units,” meaning salaries.

The next largest expense is $311 million to service the city’s debt, which stands at $1.523 billion; the new budget takes a $5.2-million bite out of the debt, the 10th straight year of reduction, totalling $146.7 million.

The budget cuts some $31 million in expenses with various reduction measures.

For residential property owners, the tax hike on an average home valued at $379,000 will be about $93, with only slight variations from borough to borough. The average tax total is $3,348.

The city plans to boost revenue from several sources, including $18.8 million from the new $60 vehicle registration fee to be implemented next year, and $6 million in levies on undeveloped land.

As announced prior to the budget, the city is adding an extra $10 million to fund a major boost in police and fire department hiring next year. The police force will be bolstered by 51 officers and the fire department by 36. There will be additional hiring in 2026 for a total of 173 new positions. The mayor said the beefed-up police force will be tasked with reducing gang violence.

Funds to stimulate housing are nearly tripling in 2025, from $24 million to $71 million. The same goes for funds to fight homelessness, from $2.2 million to $7 million.

The city is dipping into its climate change reserve fund to pay for two environmentally related projects next year: a new covered and refrigerated rink to be built next to the Duberger arena, as part of a plan to have such a facility in each of the city’s six boroughs, and a flood-prevention project along the Lorette River.

The budget does not ignore the tramway project, which has dominated City Hall politics since Marchand’s Québec Forte et Fière party came to power three years ago. The budget allots $262 million for tramway work in 2025, while the city awaits the final agree- ment on the project, possibly next week.

“We’re ready for 2025,” the mayor said. “It’s going well. Quebec needs it. The money is there. The partners are there. We’ve got a good vibe.”

Asked to explain why he calls the budget “non-electoralist,” Marchand said, “We’re not giving gifts that will make people happy for a while. We’re not taking the easy way; it’s about being responsible and rigorous. It’s not our money, it’s the money of the citizens.”

Budget holds line on taxes, ups spending on public safety Read More »

City to sell Maison Pollack after investing $4 million

City to sell Maison Pollack after investing $4 million

City to sell Maison Pollack after investing $4 million

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The “For Sale” sign has not been posted yet, but the city is preparing to rid itself of the distinctive Maison Pollack mansion on Grande Allée.

The subject of a long dispute between the previous city administration and the building’s former owner, Maison Pollack was famous for its towering columns and its one-time owner, retail entrepreneur and philanthropist Maurice Pollack.

The city bought the property at 1 Grande Allée Est in 2021 for $1.15 million with the intention of transforming it into a “Maison de la Diversité” for diversity-focused cultural programming.

A further $2.5 million was poured into preserving and renovating the structure, originally built in 1910 for merchant James McCarthy. The badly rotting columns on the portico and balcony were removed in the expectation they would eventually be replaced as part of the restoration plan.

Further work was put on hold once the initial repairs were completed in the spring.

Although Mayor Bruno Marchand had indicated a year ago he was not interested in converting Maison Pollack into a cultural hub and that it could be sold, it was only last week that city officials confirmed the property is considered “surplus.”

At hearings into last week’s city budget, Carl Desharnais, deputy director of sustainable infrastructure, said the objective is to put it up for sale in 2025. “The city wants to sell the building, but wants to allow for an improvement that will maintain the features of the current building,” he said.

Maurice Pollack and family lived in the house from 1930 until 1948. Pollack subsequently sold it to the federal government for use by a Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachment. The building’s three-storey interior was transformed into offices. The RCMP moved out in the 1970s and the building became a rooming house.

City to sell Maison Pollack after investing $4 million Read More »

Multi-party campaign calls for wider access to prenatal care

Multi-party campaign calls for wider access to prenatal care

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

In 2021, after years of pressure from immigrant and refugee advocacy groups, the Coalition Avenir Québec government passed a law allowing children born in Quebec to access public health care through the Régie d’assurance-maladie du Québec (RAMQ) regardless of their parents’ immigration status or RAMQ eligibility. However, that coverage only kicks in once they’re outside the womb.

On Dec. 4, Québec Solidaire (QS), the Quebec Liberal Party and several advocacy groups launched a renewed push to expand RAMQ eligibility to cover prenatal, labour and delivery care for all pregnant women, regardless of immigration status. As it stands, a woman who gives birth in a Quebec hospital and doesn’t have a health card or private insurance must pay thousands of dollars of hospital bills out of pocket – up to $100,000 or more if there are complica- tions, according to Médecins du Monde (MDM) Canada.

“If we want to protect our children, we have to protect their mothers, throughout their pregnancies and through- out the prenatal period,” QS immigration critic Guillaume Cliche-Rivard told reporters after tabling a bill that would expand coverage. “It’s a ques- tion of human dignity, equal opportunity, public health and prevention. A child, from the moment of birth, will be covered by the RAMQ, but during pregnancy, neither the child nor the mother is covered. We need to correct this incoherence which has a major impact on the lives of women and on society as a whole.” Cliche-Rivard and MDM national director Pénélope Boudreault, whose organization has long advocated for expanding RAMQ eligibility, argued that covering prenatal care would save the province money, because complications would be detected and addressed earlier. Boudreault said some new mothers at risk leave hospital earlier than they should to save money.

Not all Quebec residents without health coverage are undocumented – homeless people, people waiting for an immigration decision and some work and study permit holders are among those who may not have valid health cards. “More than half the women who come to see us for prenatal care work in health, social services and education and have work permits,” said Fernanda Gonzalez, a formerly undocumented mother who is now a peer support worker at the SPOT community health clinic in Saint-Roch. “We’re not tourists – we’re workers, students, spouses, mothers … and participants in Quebec society.”

“I had a lot of difficulties during my pregnancy because I didn’t have access to health care and because the immigration system is very complicated,” she said. “The financial burden and the stress that we have when we come out of hospital with a bill of thousands of dollars is unjust and it impacts our own health.”

Quebec City resident Andréa Mataragba-Nguiasset is a work permit holder who gave birth in August. She said she had a single prenatal care appoint- ment during her pregnancy – doctors generally recommend one per month during the first five months of pregnancy and more frequent appointments thereafter – and had to work until the day before giving birth because she was unable to see a doctor to be signed off work. “The government needs to realize that it is recruiting human beings abroad, and not just ‘labour’ – what I experienced is inhumane,” she said.

A petition launched by MDM with nearly 3,200 signatures was tabled in the National Assembly the same day by Liberal immigration critic André Fortin.

“Médecins du Monde welcomes the tabling of the petition and the bill, which reinforce the social and medical consensus of a hundred organizations and institutions in Quebec. Refusing pregnant women access to perinatal care because of their migratory status endangers their health and that of their children. We need concrete and immediate solutions for the health of all women in Quebec, without exclusion,” concluded Boudreault.

MNAs agreed to consider Cliche-Rivard’s bill. During Question Period, Health Minister Christian Dubé told MNAs he planned to establish a working group to “look at what was possible” in terms of expanding RAMQ access.

Multi-party campaign calls for wider access to prenatal care Read More »

Villeneuve blasts ‘frivolous’ spending on covered rinks

Villeneuve blasts ‘frivolous’ spending on covered rinks

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The Official Opposition leader at City Hall is criticizing Mayor Bruno Marchand’s administration for tapping into a climate change reserve fund to build refrigerated skating rinks.

The budget earmarks $45 million from the fund to build the rinks, as well as a project to prevent flooding on the Lorette River.

Coun. Claude Villeneuve, leader of Québec d’Abord, said in a post-budget meeting with reporters, “We are using the climate reserve [fund] for leisure investments. It seems frivolous to us. It is cynical. It is populist. It is using funds that we have to deal with an emergency.”

Limoilou councillor and Transition Québec Leader Jackie Smith also gave the thumbs-down to the use of the climate funds to build a rink. She said she was “really disappointed that we’re going to withdraw money to use the climate fund for skating rinks. From the beginning, I was skeptical about this fund because it wasn’t well put together when it was announced.”

Marchand defended the expenditure on the rinks, which would extend the skating season from October to May, as a concrete adaptation to climate change.

“We can’t wait until 2028, 2030, 2032 to say, ‘Well, we will have a well-stocked fund, but in the meantime, we will have experienced negative effects. So, we want to accelerate change.”

Patrick Paquet, leader of the other opposition party, Équipe Priorité Québec, attacked the city’s finances, saying without the increase in vehicle registration fees bringing $18 million, the “real tax increase” would be 5.4 per cent, not 2.9 per cent.

Villeneuve blasts ‘frivolous’ spending on covered rinks Read More »

City budget a year-round affair

City budget a year-round affair

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

The annual presentation of the Ville de Québec budget involves the preparation of reams of documentation covering every detail of expenses and revenue, down to the last penny.

Although the budget is delivered on one day in December, followed by several days of detailed examination by council members, the preparation of the budget is a year-round affair.

“We’re going to start the next one in January,” Anne Mainguy, the city’s treasurer and director of finance, told the QCT in an interview following Mayor Bruno March- and’s budget presentation on Dec. 4 (see detailed story in this edition).

Budget 2025 is Mainguy’s second budget as the city’s top financial officer, although she has contributed to the previous five as a finance department employee.

“It’s a great job. All the units [at City Hall] contribute to the budget; it starts with them,” Mainguy said. “We give them the guidelines and they work to make them fit with what we are looking for.”

Mainguy, a chartered accountant who heads a 100-employee finance depart- ment, said, “Each year has its challenges, but we’re always proud of what we deliver.”

City budget a year-round affair Read More »

Postal strike hampers charity fundraising campaigns

Postal strike hampers charity fundraising campaigns

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

editor@qctonline.com

Local nonprofits which rely heavily on year-end postal donation campaigns are having to get creative amid the ongoing postal strike.

The Quebec Community Christmas Hamper Campaign has gotten used to dealing with the unexpected. After COVID precautions forced the elves at Hamper Headquarters to rework donation and delivery procedures in 2020, 2021 and 2022, a teachers’ strike last year required them to move operations from the Eastern Québec Learning Centre to the Jeffery Hale Pavilion on short notice. Now, the postal workers’ strike has slowed donations and put yet another wrench in the works.

“About a third of the donations we receive – 35 per cent – are through cheques in the mail, so it is pretty significant,” said campaign spokesperson Brigitte Wellens. “This time last year, we were at over $20,000 in donations, and this year we’re at about $16,000, so we’re quite a bit lower than where we normally are.

“We were hoping for a positive resolution [to the strike] before the holidays, but we were already thinking that we might have to find alternative measures for people to donate,” Wellens said, adding that she expects an uptick in donations after the strike ends, as cheques put in the mail before Nov. 15 find their way to Hamper Headquarters. She encouraged those who haven’t yet donated to consider donating online, dropping donations off at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church or the Jeffery Hale Pavilion, or calling Hamper Headquarters at 418-684-5333, ext. 11835 to discuss alternative ways to contribute. Financial donations are used to bulk-buy staples like flour, sugar, coffee and produce that go into each hamper, while donations of nonperishable food are used to top up the hampers. (Expired, opened or homemade items cannot be accepted. Breakfast cereal and canned soup, meat, fish and fruit are especially appreciated.)

Wellens emphasized that even if the campaign raises less money than expected between now and Delivery Day, delivering fewer hampers is not an option. “Times are tough. There has been a 15 per cent increase in demand. Some people are asking for a hamper for the first time, and we don’t know their stories, but my guess would be that they’re working full time and having a hard time making ends meet. The hamper is a big help during the holiday season. We’re in a situation where we might just have to run a deficit for a while after getting all the food.” Wellens expects that over 260 households will receive hampers this year.

At the Société protectrice des animaux de Québec, the city’s largest animal protection nonprofit, director general Karina Painchaud and her team have called up a small army of volunteers to drop off and pick up envelopes for the organization’s annual campaign at donors’ houses.

“We’re 150 years old, and the mailing campaign has had a privileged place for many of those years,” Painchaud told the QCT. “Our goal this year is to send out at least 2,000 letters. I’ve signed them all by hand!”

“Like a lot of nonprofits, we have this issue of distributing [appeals for donations] through the mail. Being confronted with the strike, we had to reinvent ourselves and find a solution. What we did was call on people’s generosity in terms of time; we asked volunteer elves to distribute the mail. Nine people distributed half of our cargo, and we’re still looking for a few elves!” she said. Like Wellens, Painchaud said the campaign has received fewer donations than this time last year.

Painchaud is also encouraging those who can to donate online or drop their cheques off at SPA headquarters on Avenue Galilée in Les Saules. Donations allow the SPA to feed, house and care for the 7,500 vulnerable cats and dogs the organization takes in every year.

Negotiations ongoing

Disagreements over wage increases, health and safety concerns and weekend de- livery staffing and schedules have hampered negotiations between the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) and Canada Post. On Dec. 8, Canada Post released a statement saying it was “still waiting” for the union’s response to its latest proposals.

Postal strike hampers charity fundraising campaigns Read More »

New CQSB boss Robert ‘cautiously optimistic’ about new HS project

New CQSB boss Robert ‘cautiously optimistic’ about new HS project

New CQSB boss Robert ‘cautiously optimistic’ about new HS project

Peter Black, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

“Cautiously optimistic,” is how Jean Robert, newly sworn-in chairperson of the Central Québec School Board (CQSB) Council of Commissioners, describes the board’s mood regarding approval of the new combined English high school project.

Robert was commenting on a report in the Journal de Québec last week saying only three new schools have been authorized to be built in the province next year. The report does not identify the three schools that got approved.

According to the Journal, the Quebec government has given the green light in 2025 to 28 projects, worth half a billion dollars, to add space to existing schools throughout the province.

The report said, “The budget dedicated to ‘adding space’ will mainly finance the acquisition of modular classrooms, since only three new constructions and four expansions have received approval from Quebec.” A spokesperson for Education Minister Bernard Drainville is quoted in the report, and does not deny the basic facts. Antoine de la Durantaye said, “We will continue to invest in order to meet the growing needs, while respecting our ability to pay.”

The QCT asked de la Durantaye via email whether the CQSB’s new high school was among the three schools approved for construction in 2025. Education ministry spokesperson Bryan St-Louis responded, saying, “The English secondary school project has already been announced. The process to obtain approval of the business case in accordance with the directive on the management of major public infrastructure projects is underway.”

Asked to clarify the statement, St-Louis said, “The business case must first be analyzed and authorized before confirming further details regarding the project.”

He said details on the project are available on the Treasury Board “dashboard” which indicates the project is managed by the Société québécoise des infrastructures (SQI) and has been at the planning stage since June 2022 and under study as of November 2019.

The “dashboard” description is this: “The project in- volves the construction of an English-language secondary school on the territory of the Central Québec School Board to replace the obsolete St. Patrick’s High School and Quebec High School secondary schools. Student places from Dollard-des-Ormeaux secondary school in Shannon will also be transferred to the new school. In order to reduce the space deficit recognized by the ministry, 183 additional student places are planned. This will bring the school’s capacity to 1,421 student places.”

On the SQI website, according to a document called “Tender calls to come” (appels d’offres à venir) and dated spring 2024, the CQSB school is slated for a call for tenders in the third quarter of 2024, and construction to be started in the first quarter of 2025.

The new English high school serving the greater Quebec City region is one of only five new school projects on the SQI list. The SQI manages large infrastructures in the province, with budgets of $50 million or more. The CQSB school is in the category of $150-$500 million.

Robert, who has succeeded longtime board boss Stephen Burke after many years as vice-chair, said that despite the “worrisome” report in the Journal, “We’ve been told we should continue to be optimistic” about the new school moving forward.

Robert said much has been invested already in the new school project, to be built on the site of the now-vacated St. Vincent Elementary School, including acquiring parcels

of land from the federal gov- ernment and a neighbouring school property.

This fall, CQSB opened New Liverpool Elementary School, its new school in Lévis, to accommodate a growing population of students on the South Shore who had travelled by bus to St. Vincent. Former students living on the North Shore were transferred to other board schools.

Robert said he will be meeting with government officials in the coming days to help ensure the project moves forward.

“We just want to get it started … get that first shovel in the earth,” he said.

In the event the new high school project is delayed, Robert said, “We’d have to invest so much in the existing schools,” both of which were built decades ago and do not meet modern standards.

The current St. Patrick’s High School building dates back to 1918 and was expanded in 1956. QHS opened in its current building in 1941.

Meanwhile, the demolition of St. Vincent is on hold. Robert explained that the plan is to tear down the old building at the same time as construction starts on the new one.

Robert said he is hopeful an announcement will be made soon on the new schools approved for 2025, possibly before Christmas.

New CQSB boss Robert ‘cautiously optimistic’ about new HS project Read More »

Morrin Centre wants to ‘make space for magic’ in 2025

Morrin Centre wants to ‘make space for magic’ in 2025

Ruby Pratka, Local Journalism Initiative report

editor@qctonline.com

The Morrin Centre is asking for community members’ support to “make space for magic” during its annual year-end fundraising campaign.

The campaign – launched on Giving Tuesday, Dec. 3 – aims to raise funds to refurbish the library’s children’s area and make it even more child-friendly, said education program co-ordinator Manuela Flores Denti.

“We’d like to make it more colourful and more obvious that it’s the kids’ section,” Flores Denti said. “We don’t have a lot of space for new books. We would like to get more books for the children’s section, the juvenile section, the young adult section, but there’s no space. We’re looking forward to doing that, but also changing the furniture. Hopefully, with money from the campaign, we’ll be able to buy more shelves for more books.”

She would also like to set up a display area where children and teens participating in the centre’s activities can show off their handiwork. “For example with the book club, we’re reading novels, but we’re also reading a lot of graphic novels. I got them to draw their own graphic novels and they did such an amazing job. I’m looking for ways to display it, showcase what we’re doing, and just finding a space is a challenge because the space is really limited. With creativity, we hope to be able to do that, but we need the budget.”

Funds will also go toward supplies for the centre’s science, technology, engineering, art and math club (S.T.E.A.M. Club) and book club for school-age children and storytime activities for younger kids.

People interested in supporting the Make Space for Magic campaign can drop off a cheque at the Morrin Centre, donate online at morrin.org or email info@morrin.org or manuelafloresdenti@morrin.org.

In addition to financial donations, Flores Denti said the centre is eager to accept in-kind donations of arts-and- crafts supplies. Gifts of time or expertise are also welcome – community members who are interested in proposing an activity should contact Manuela Flores Denti directly.

Morrin Centre wants to ‘make space for magic’ in 2025 Read More »

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