Local Journalism Initiative

Unified regional identity to grace Outaouais

Taylor Clark

LJI Reporter

The Comité d’identité régionale de l’Outaouais officially unveiled a regional identity to unite the Outaouais and promote the region as a hotspot for prospective families, businesses, and tourists. The Outaouais’ new slogan “The natural choice” highlighted the region’s perfect balance of nature and city.

“It’s true, your smile is your logo, your personality is your business card. What people represent after an experience with you becomes your brand. Let’s be a natural choice. Let’s be Outaouais,” said Benoit Lauzon, president of the Comité d’identité régionale de l’Outaouais, during a press conference on March 2.

The regional promotional campaign was supported by the Conférence des préfets de l’Outaouais and received nearly $100,000 in financial support from the Quebec Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, covering 80 per cent of the project costs.

Fueled by the results of a consultation in 2022, the advertising agency Orkestra was tasked to curate a brand that would unify the region’s rural and urban identity.

Although he was not able to attend the press conference, the Minister responsible for the Outaouais region Mathieu Lacombe shared a few words in a video. “We know very well that our beautiful Outaouais region offers an extraordinary environment for families living here and great opportunities for businesses established here,” he said.

Not only was the campaign aimed to instill a sense of regional pride but also to strengthen Outaouais’ appeal, visibility, and competitiveness.

“I think that over the years, we will be proud of it,” said Lauzon. “I say to businesses, to the education sector, to all territories, to elected officials, take this image, and bring it to life.”

Photo caption: Artist Julien Morissette is joined by Benoit Lauzon, president of the Comité d’identité régionale de l’Outaouais, and Julie Kinnear, president and chief executive officer of Tourisme Outaouais, in revealing Outaouais first brand identity on March 21.

Photo credit: Taylor Clark

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Public sector grapples with housing shortage, local recruitment

By Ruby Pratka

Local Journalism Initiative

A representative of the human resources department of the CIUSSS de l’Estrie-CHUS has said the agency is “worried” about the possible impact of the ongoing housing shortage on public sector recruitment.

Marc-Antoine Rouillard, assistant director of human resources at the CIUSSS, was reacting to a report by the provincewide nonprofit Place aux Jeunes suggesting that hundreds of young professionals living in cities have had to decline job offers in the regions after they were unable to find appropriate housing close enough to work. Private and nonprofit sector employers in Brome-Missisquoi have also raised concerns about the impact of housing on recruitment.

“Like all major industries, we’re worried by it. We haven’t felt a major impact yet; it’s not a brake on recruitment at this time, but it is starting to be a concern,” said Marc-Antoine Rouillard.

Rouillard said the agency hires about 3,200 people each year and is currently seeking to fill about 3,000 positions, both frontline health professionals and administrative roles. Once candidates from outside the region are hired, the CIUSSS works with community organizations “who help us help people get housing and bank accounts and daycare.” He said spending on community organizations to support the integration of new arrivals has quintupled – from $20,000 to $120,000 per year – since before the pandemic, as housing and daycare have become harder to find.  Finding housing is hardest in the Granby region, Rouillard said. “The inoccupancy rate is very low, and sometimes there are places available but there’s an issue of [affordability].”

Rouillard said the CIUSSS and its nonprofit partners are “super aware of the issues” and working together to attract and support new employees. “If ever [housing] becomes a serious obstacle, it will raise a whole host of additional challenges,” he added.

Housing is also one of many concerns for municipalities seeking staff. “Recruitment is always an issue in the municipal sector, and the housing shortage doesn’t help,” Pascal Smith, director general of the Ville de Sutton, told the BCN. He said one prospective employee hadn’t been able to take a job offer at the city because of a lack of housing; the housing shortage has also created difficult situations for employers. 

Over the past few years, the city has passed regulations allowing people to build additional outbuildings on their property, and tightened regulations on short-term rentals and building conversions, “to hopefully get more [housing] units back on the market.”

“Most of our personnel lives elsewhere. That doesn’t cause any major difficulties, but it does reduce my candidate pool [for certain roles]. There are still enough staff living here that we have our finger on the pulse of the city,” Smith said.

Public sector grapples with housing shortage, local recruitment Read More »

Montreal calls for proposals for social and affordable housing units at former bus station site

by Lorraine Carpenter, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

The City of Montreal has put out a call for proposals today to build social and affordable housing units on the site of the former bus station between Berri and St-Hubert streets, and de Maisonneuve boulevard and Ontario Street. The 700 units will be located in a new 23-storey building.

Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante called the project “a win-win,” given that the centrally located property is being offered “at a fraction of the price, with profitable and responsible terms.”

“We are giving ourselves the means to ensure that it is built quickly and efficiently. The city purchased the land and we made sure to set up a call for tenders so that it aroused strong interest from the market.”

Plante previously stated that the goal is for work to begin at the site in the summer of 2025. Plante announced the project in the context of the “the housing crisis raging throughout Quebec.”

“We are using all the means at our disposal to create affordable housing in Montreal. We intend to increase the number of such actions, which allow us to maintain the affordability of living in the city.

“This project will offer more social diversity to the sector and more affordable housing in Montreal. We can’t wait to see it get off the ground.”

Îlot Voyageur, which is currently occupied by an apartment building on the north end and a building that will be demolished on the south end, was the site of a scandalous unfinished UQAM real estate development project in the 2000s, which cost $300-million in public funds. The land was bought from the Quebec government by the city for $18-million in 2018.

Montreal calls for proposals for social and affordable housing units at former bus station site Read More »

City of Montreal encourages tenants to register their rent to help curb soaring rental prices

The City of Montreal is calling on all tenants to register their current rent with Vivre en ville, whose online registry aims to help curb soaring rental prices — a situation that has exacerbated the housing crisis in Montreal for years.

Southwest borough mayor Benoit Dorais, who’s also the VP of the city’s executive committee, noted that registering rent “is essential while waiting for the government of Quebec to make such a measure mandatory.”

As Vivre en Ville general director Christian Savard explained, “the rent registry can be a valuable tool for governments in their mission to protect tenants against abusive rent increases and curb property inflation.”

To register your rent in Montreal (or elsewhere in Quebec or Ontario), please visit the Vivre en ville website.

City of Montreal encourages tenants to register their rent to help curb soaring rental prices Read More »

Trudel brothers to transform Place Quatre-Bourgeois mall

Peter Black

March 20, 2024

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com 

Not content with a massive redevelopment of a mall in an asphalt wasteland in Vanier, the company founded by brothers William and Jonathan Trudel is undertaking a similar major revamp in Sainte-Foy.

Last week, Trudel Alliance released details of a long-term plan to transform Place Quatre-Bourgeois into a residential and commercial zone, replacing the sprawling parking lot with green space and buildings with vegetated roofs. 

The plan, developed following consultations with residents, features some 1,500 housing units of various sizes, 15 per cent of which will be designated affordable housing and 10 per cent adaptable for people with physical disabilities. 

As for the aging shopping centre, the only tenant remaining would be the IGA grocery, which itself would undergo a facelift. The mall’s current tenants include Winners, Jean Coutu, Dollarama, Aubainerie and Nautilus Plus.

The new commercial mall will have the same configuration but with each tenant having street access. About 1,000 underground parking spaces would be created.

Construction is slated to begin in the fall of next year or spring 2026.

The Trudel company acquired the mall in 2019 from Toronto-based open-air mall giant First Capital Realty, one of seven Quebec City region shopping centres included in the $165 million deal. 

The previous year, the Trudels bought Place Fleur de Lys in Vanier, which is now undergoing a vast redevelopment.

A similar redevelopment is in the works for Galeries Charlesbourg.

PHOTO BELOW 

Nouvelle rue d'accès au site et parc central.

The vast parking lot at Place Quatre-Bourgeois is to be transformed into a more green residential and commercial zone. 

Images from Trudel Alliance 

Trudel brothers to transform Place Quatre-Bourgeois mall Read More »

RTC denounces modest CAQ budget boost for green urban transit

Peter Black

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com 

Quebec City’s transit authority says it “deplores” last week’s provincial budget for failing to provide adequate funding for more environmentally sustainable urban transport.

Coun. Maude Mercier Larouche, the city executive committee member who heads the Réseau de transport de la Capitale (RTC), issued a statement in the wake of the March 12 budget, denouncing “the absence of a stable, indexed financial framework consistent with the objectives of the government’s sustainable mobility policy.”

What Mercier Larouche was referring to obliquely was the modest increase in the budget “to improve mobility and electrify public transit.” The Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government spending plan includes just $700 million on top of the $13.8 billion allocated over 10 years.

Despite the lack of a big spending increase on modernizing urban transit, Mayor Bruno Marchand remains confident the Quebec government is still committed to funding a major “structured” transit project, notably the tramway.

He told reporters after the budget speech in the National Assembly, “We were told that there was still capacity in the budget [for the tramway]. We will see what they are able to do. If there is no launch in the next year, the region has lost.”

The minister responsible for the capital region and for infrastructure, Jonatan Julien, said the CAQ government is still committed to a transit project for the Quebec City region. He told a parliamentary committee studying spending credits in the budget, “We have not abandoned this firm and clear desire to create a structuring network for the national capital. We believe in it ardently.”

Julien said the tramway project is still included in the government’s infrastructure plan and the financing is secured. 

Julien also told the committee that several “red flags” prompted the CAQ government to pause the tramway project in November and ask the Caisse de dëpot et placement infrastructure division to study the region’s transit needs and file a report by June.

The red flags included the “tripled” estimated cost of the project, from $3.3 billion to at least $10 billion, the lack of consensus on “social acceptability,” and the fact no company had submitted a bid for the major infrastructure contract.

In a related story, Liberal party critic for the capital region, Montreal-area MNA Marwah Rizqy, blamed Julien, a one-time right-hand man to former mayor Régis Labeaume, personally for the lack of major projects in the region. 

Addressing the minister at a National Assembly committee session on March 13, she said, “They [the CAQ government] made many promises, they talked a lot, but they delivered nothing. Honestly, for the capitale nationale, it’s embarrassing.” 

“He [Julien] is the problem,” she said.

While the city awaits the outcome of the deliberations of the Caisse, RTC head Mercier Larouche said the CAQ government is thwarting the long-term goals of the transit body as “a leading player in achieving the GHG [greenhouse gas] reduction targets of the Quebec government, particularly in Quebec City where the share of emissions linked to transport is higher than elsewhere in the province.”

Mercier Larouche said, “We must demonstrate ambition to maintain and improve our service offering.… Without a stable, indexed and recurring financial framework, we will eventually have to make difficult choices, which go against our mission which aims to facilitate the travel of thousands of people daily, throughout the territory.”

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Photo below  

RTC president Maude Mercier Larouche “deplores” the lack of funding for transit in the CAQ budget. 
Photo by Peter Black from QCT archives

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Neighbourhood council calls meeting on future of Provisions Inc.

Peter Black

March 20, 2024

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com 

The Montcalm neighbourhood council is rallying residents to discuss the future of Provisions Inc., a popular grocery store on Ave. Cartier that closed suddenly under murky circumstances in January.

The Conseil de quartier de Montcalm has organized a meeting on March 25 to share information and gather opinions and suggestions regarding the fate of the store. It is to take place at 7 p.m. at the Centre culture et environnement Frédéric Back at 870 Avenue de Salaberry.

Meanwhile, the plot thickens as to what led the owners of the grocery, Stéphanie Guessas Bouillon and her husband Christophe Bouillon, to abruptly close and abandon the business they had acquired less than a year previous.

According to a Journal de Québec report, the couple, who came from Ardennes, France, rapidly found themselves in a perilous financial situation with the new business, a state of affairs worsened by health issues Guessas Bouillon was experiencing.

Le Journal contacted the lawyer for the couple who have since returned to France. Ahmen Harir said the Bouillons had closed the store “in extremis” due to Guessas Bouillon’s health problems as well as mounting financial difficulties.

Harir said the French couple were “scammed” by the store’s former owners. “The last six months have been a nightmare,” the lawyer told Le Journal. “She [Guessas Bouillon] was no longer sleeping, it was really catastrophic for them.… They had no other choice but to leave … They lost everything.”

In the same report, the former owners, cousins Vincent and Bruno Drouin, deny the couple’s allegations. The Drouins have sued the Bouillons for nearly $500,000 in Superior Court, the “balance of the sale price” established during the sale of the store in November 2022.

That lawsuit and other legal entanglements put in doubt a quick resolution to the future of the 70-year-old business, a popular spot, especially in summer when it becomes a miniature market for local produce.

The former owners have said they would be willing to help out any future buyer wanting to restart the business, but have ruled out reacquiring it. 

Jonathan Tedeschi, president of the Montcalm neighbourhood council, told the QCT there are reports of people interested in buying the grocery. 

He said the March 25 meeting will be an opportunity for “residents to come together to see what we can do.”

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Photo below 

The Provisions Inc. grocery store on Avenue Cartier has been closed since January. 

Photo by Peter Black from QCT archives 

Neighbourhood council calls meeting on future of Provisions Inc. Read More »

Appliance compliance: Manufacturers say new French rules don’t wash 

Peter Black

March 20, 2024

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

Le transmission t’a lâché,” the repairman said after listening to about five seconds of the violent thunka-thunka of our Inglis washer. (Who knew a washer had a transmission? It also has a clutch, the guy said).

This was the same repairman who had fixed the same washer a few years ago with a nine-dollar spring and a modest service charge. The same guy who last year made our fridge like new with a replacement part and the same reasonable house call fee.

Our washer is like part of the family, having cleaned a mountainous heap of our clothes, sheets, tablecloths and the like for nearly three decades. 

The transmission replacement, while not cheap, is much, much more affordable than the new machines, which, the repairman said with thinly disguised scorn, he’s been called to repair after only two years of operation.

Where are we going with this sentimental ode to an appliance? Well, as you know all too well in Quebec, all, or at least many, roads lead to the peculiarities, put politely, of the distinct society.

In this case, we mean how the looming application of the new jacked-up language law known as Bill 96 is causing concern in the major appliance community. Call it the “appliance compliance” showdown.

Quebec government language officials recently informed businesses what needs to be done to conform to the new regulations. In the case of household appliances, as of June 2025, wording of controls as well as digital displays must be available in French. 

Manufacturers are not thrilled about the new regulations – which are not actually new, the government of Jean Charest having given the idea a try in 2012 – and are not eager to comply.

The Association of Household Appliance Manufacturers submitted a brief to the government saying Quebec makes up just two per cent of the North American market and it’s not worth it for factories to retool at a high cost to accommodate that minor pool of consumers.

The association says a survey of its members indicated 90 per cent would not comply with the new regulations. 

The result, observers say, will be fewer choices and higher prices for Quebec consumers who would thus be tempted to buy online instead of patronizing brick and mortar stores.

Language Minister Jean-François Roberge begs to differ, saying the global French-speaking world numbers 320 million people and “if some companies don’t want to do business in Quebec to avoid translating the instructions on their products, if they refuse to speak to Quebecers in French, we’re convinced that their competitors will take advantage of these opportunities to the benefit of Quebecers.”

The government notes that in countries such as Belgium, Poland and Portugal, appliances are available in the local language. It also says as recently as 1977, 80 per cent of appliances sold in Quebec had bilingual controls, compared to two per cent today.

The larger question, one supposes, is how this measure in any way advances the elusive goal of Bill 96 to increase the use of French in the province.

As Journal de Québec columnist Marc-André Leclerc put it, “In Quebec, everyone understands what the famous ‘on/off’ on our devices means. No one became anglicized by cooking their pizza on ‘broil.’ So why waste your time and ask for a requirement that is not demanded by Quebec consumers?

In the meantime, our washing machine keeps chugging along unilingually. We take some patriotic comfort knowing our washer was actually built in Canada, an increasing rarity these days with household appliance production consolidated in the United States and Asia. 

If eventually our washer does give up the ghost and we want to get another Inglis, well, the brand still exists, but the company has been owned for decades by Michigan-headquartered global appliance giant Whirlpool. 

Of course, if, as seems likely, Whirlpool rejects the Quebec bilingual controls rules, we’ll be shopping for another brand.
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Appliance compliance: Manufacturers say new French rules don’t wash  Read More »

Mayor: Colisée ‘no longer suitable,’ doomed to demolition

Peter Black

March 13, 2024

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com 

Nearly nine years after it hosted its final event, a concert by rock gods Metallica, the historic but obsolete Colisée arena is edging closer to demolition.

While consultations are still underway on a development vision for the zone that includes the Colisée on the ExpoCité site, Mayor Bruno Marchand has made it clear the building must go.

At a March 4 news conference to unveil sports and recreation infrastructure investments, the mayor reaffirmed his campaign promise to demolish the 75-year-old structure, which he said is beyond saving.

“It is not profitable. We had suggestions [for other uses], but the fact remains that it is an enormous infrastructure which is no longer suitable. Just bringing it up to fire safety standards is out of the question. It would cost a crazy amount.”

Official Opposition and Québec D’abord Leader Claude Villeneuve is of the same opinion. “Maybe it’s too old and needs too many repairs and investments,” he said in an interview with the QCT.

Villeneuve said he knows people have sentimental memories of the old arena and he wants to hear what people have to say about its future in ongoing consultations on the future of ExpoCité.

He said he disagrees with former mayor Régis Labeaume’s idea of transforming the building into a centre for “emerging sports” such as BMX and rock climbing. 

Labeaume estimated the cost of converting the building for its new mission at $40 million. When the former mayor made the announcement in 2021, the price of demolishing the Colisée was pegged at $17 million.

Limoilou Coun. and Transition Québec Leader Jackie Smith, whose district includes ExpoCité, is proposing a hotel for the site, in contrast to the mayor’s stated desire for more housing.

She told reporters, “I recognize the need and I am fighting to increase the number of housing units, but it’s going to cost a fortune to redo the place and we don’t need $3,000 housing in the neighborhood.”

Smith said, “I like the idea of densification, but not of creating a neighbourhood for rich people in this area.”

Villeneuve said a proposal for a hotel needs to be “coherent” with other developments in the area, notably the massive redevelopment in the Place Fleur de Lys zone the Trudel brothers’ company has launched, which includes a hotel.

Consultations on the future of ExpoCité are expected to continue into June. 

The Colisée, first built in 1949, has seen many changes over the years. In 1979 it underwent extensive renovations to prepare it to welcome the NHL’s Nordiques, which had been transferred from the World Hockey Association.

The last NHL game in the Colisée was a first-round playoff game in May 1995 between the Nordiques and the New York Rangers. Shortly afterwards, the team was bought and moved to Denver, Colorado, and renamed the Avalanche. More recently, the arena was the home of the Quebec Remparts, until the opening of the Videotron Centre in 2015. 

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Mayor Bruno Marchand has said he intends to demolish the Colisée Pepsi. 

Image from Ville de Quebec

Mayor: Colisée ‘no longer suitable,’ doomed to demolition Read More »

City expanding pedestrian-only zones in Old Quebec

Peter Black

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

March 13, 2024

Vowing to put an end to the “degradation” of the ambiance of the historic Old City, Mayor Bruno Marchand has announced the doubling of zones where motorized vehicles will be banned during the summer months.

Building on last summer’s pilot project, the city will create an additional pedestrian area to supplement the zone established last year in the “Latin Quarter” north of Côte de la Fabrique. 

The new zone will be south of Rue Saint-Louis between Ave. Saint-Denis and bordered by rues Sainte-Ursule and Haldimand. 

Eight concrete barriers will serve as barricades, and only local residents with city-issued passes, taxis and delivery drivers will be allowed to enter with vehicles. The zones will be in place every day from June 26 to Aug. 23 between 11 a.m. and midnight.

Other changes include the enlargement of the pedestrian walk on Rue Saint-Louis and the removal of parking zones on rues De Buade, des Jardins and Côte de la Fabrique to allow more room for pedestrian traffic and for restaurants with terrasses.

The mayor, speaking at a March 8 press conference at City Hall, said his administration is proceeding with these changes because “the status quo is not acceptable. The slow degradation is over.” He added he is determined to stem the exodus of residents from the Old City and prevent it from becoming like a “cardboard” Disneyland.

Marchand, who is the current president of the World Heritage Cities Organization, presented figures showing the residential population of the Old City has declined by nearly 700 since 2006, now totalling some 4,600. 

He said Quebec City is facing the same problem as hundreds of cities around the world where vehicular traffic and overdevelopment are threatening popular historic areas.

The city has launched a series of consultations on the “pedestrianization” measures it is putting in place in the Old City. Last summer’s changes drew some criticism for the impact they had when major construction projects were underway, such as revamping the square in front of City Hall.

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This diagram shows where new pedestrian zones are to be established this summer in the Old City.

Image from Ville de Quebec

City expanding pedestrian-only zones in Old Quebec Read More »

Meet some of the prospects for your future Poilievre government

March 13, 2024

Peter Black

Local Journalism Initiative reporter

peterblack@qctonline.com

If, as the pundits and pollsters predict, the Conservative Party of Canada romps to power some 16 months hence – figuring on or about June 2025 when the Liberal-NDP shack-up expires – it might be as good a time as any to take a look at what the government of future prime minister Pierre Poilievre might look like.

Before we go further, let’s accept that the Conservatives need to win 52 more seats than the 119 they now have (including the recent Toronto-area byelection win to replace ousted leader Erin O’Toole) to get past the magic mark of 170 seats for a majority. 

With some polls showing the Tories soaring into 1984 Mulroney territory (211 out of a 282-seat House), who knows what common sense lawmaking talent such an impending blue wave might wash up? 

We’ll soon get an inkling as the nomination process heats up and the rightward political stars come to light. The enticing prospect of serving in a Poilievre cabinet surely must be stirring in many an ambitious Conservative brain across the land.

So, what kind of timber might Poilievre have with which to cobble together a cabinet to axe the tax, give everyone powerful paycheques, abolish Justinflation and make Canadians forget about the woke Marxist-Liberal government?

Let’s start with his shadow cabinet, which, truth be told, casts a rather expansive pall, given that just about all members of the Tory caucus have been assigned some kind of critic task, no matter how insignificant. 

One of Poilievre’s two deputy leaders is Toronto-area MP Melissa Lantsman, who used to be a go-to Conservative talking head on CBC political panels; at least she was until the leader forbade members of his caucus to collude with the Liberal propaganda organ he has vowed to defund once he takes the keys to the kingdom.

Lantsman, a professional Conservative operative in the mould of Poilievre, is one of two out gay MPs in the Conservative caucus. She has been at pains lately to explain her leader’s recent declaration that trans women be forbidden to use women’s washrooms.

“I think the leader has made his common-sense Conservative position very clear, and our caucus stands by it, alongside most Canadians,” she said in a Hill Times report.
Who knows what portfolio the leader will assign Lantsman when the time comes – OK, if the time comes.
What about candidates for a future Conservative finance minister? The current shadow minister of finance is Edmonton MP Jasraj Singh Hallan. He has an accounting diploma from an Alberta college and a master builder certification with which he established his house-building business. Not a Michael Wilson or Jim Flaherty, perhaps, but who’s to say what it takes to manage a multi-trillion-dollar economy?
What about the prickly portfolio of Canadian Heritage, which handles everything from minority languages to culture to policing the internet to funding the CBC?
The shadow minister is Lethbridge, Alberta MP Rachael Thomas (née Harder; she changed her last name when she got married in 2021) who made headlines in November when she asked the current minister of Canadian Heritage, Pascale St-Onge, to speak English at a committee hearing.
Thomas also got attention for claiming the CBC is “on the side of terrorists” and that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets the criteria of “dictator.” She is also known to be among the more hard-core anti-abortion MPs in Poilievre’s caucus.
A recent survey by the Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada identified only 15 Conservative MPs in favour of the right to abortion. According to that survey, incidentally, four of the nine Quebec Tory MPs are known to be pro-choice; three have unknown opinions and one is declared anti-abortion.
While we’re talking Quebec, what might be the cabinet reward for Charlesbourg–Haute-Saint-Charles MP Pierre Paul-Hus? He was the only Tory member from the province to endorse Poilievre’s leadership bid in 2022, for the perfectly understandable reason that Poilievre “needed to have someone from Quebec supporting him,” for the sake of party unity.
Paul-Hus’s current caucus duty is serving as Poilievre’s Quebec lieutenant, which seems appropriate considering he reached the rank of lieutenant colonel in his 22-year military career. Pencil in Paul-Hus for Conservative defence minister.
We could go on and on, of course, but the above are just a sampling of names to note for future Conservative cabinet fame – or notoriety.

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Meet some of the prospects for your future Poilievre government Read More »

Gatineau finalizes collaboration for first Scientific Council

Taylor Clark

LJI Reporter

Gatineau is officially the first city to acquire a Scientific Council after the signing of a memorandum of understanding with the Université du Québec en Outaouais on March 20.

“This is an important milestone, placing science and evidence at the foundation and heart of our decision-making processes,” wrote Murielle Laberge, rector of the Université du Québec en Outaouais, in a press release. “This scientific council represents a new bridge between the City and our educational establishment. Today, we are taking a further step in our partnership with this new common commitment to making decisions informed by science.”

The collaboration will allow the City to make informed and transparent decisions by supporting the Service de la performance organisationnelle et de l’intelligence d’affaires et scientifique. The Scientific Council will work in an advisory role to municipal services in project planning.

“I am delighted and proud that this partnership has been formalized today. Having the support of several independent experts is great news for our City,” wrote Gatineau’s interim mayor Daniel Champagne.

The council will be comprised of Gatineau’s executive director Andrée Loyer, incoming dean of research and creation Simon Beaudry, scientific director of Institut des Sciences de la Forêt Tempérée and professor of ecohydrology Audrey Maheu, professor in the social work department and member of the InterSectoral Flood Network of Quebec Nathalie St-Amour, professor of political science and regional development Guy Chiasson, professor at Institut des Sciences de la Forêt Tempérée in the natural sciences department Sylvain Delagrange, and full professor in the social sciences department and member of the scientific committee for the Observatoire du développement de l’Outaouais Mario Gauthier.

Gatineau and the Universitè du Québec en Outaouais are also working to develop a partnership with Mitacs, a non-profit national research organization, to improve the project. Mitacs’ contribution would allow the financing of student internships as part of its municipal support program.

Photo caption: Gatineau’s interim mayor Daniel Champagne finalizes the collaboration with the Université du Québec en Outaouais for the creation of a Scientific Council.

Photo credit: Ville de Gatineau

Gatineau finalizes collaboration for first Scientific Council Read More »

Mon Shack tenant testimonials draw standing ovations at annual benefit dinner

By William Crooks

Local Journalism Initiative

Two Mon Shack tenant testimonials elicited standing ovations at the organization’s annual fundraising dinner March 22. Carl Tremblay and David Patry extolled the virtues of Mon Shack in front of nearly 150 supporters in the large hall located in Sherbrooke’s Collège Mont Notre-Dame.

Michel Tardif, father of a current Mon Shack 2.0 resident, also spoke. Founder and Director Josée Parent presided over the event, which included a multiple course meal, a silent auction, and live music. Dignitaries in attendance included Sherbrooke MP Élisabeth Brière, Saint-François MNA Geneviève Hébert, Lennoxville Borough President Claude Charron, and Lennoxville Borough Councillor Jennifer Garfat.

Mon Shack, located in Lennoxville, offers supervised residential units and related bilingual services for young adults struggling with mental health issues. A resounding success, the organization expanded and opened nearby Mon Shack 2.0 in the fall of 2023.

Carl Tremblay

“I will try to be brief,” began Tremblay, “but I’ll put things in context.” He is 35 years old. He was put under the protection of the directeur de la protection de la jeunesse (DPJ) at the age of five because his mother was violent. His father, suffering from epilepsy, could not take care of him, and passed away when he was 14 years old.

Tremblay was institutionalized at the age of 18. He spent 10 years on the street and fell into periodic drug abuse. In his times of sobriety, he married and pursued personal projects such as rap music. He received therapy which gave him some tools to cope. “I think I’m a resilient person,” he said.

Later on, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. He was in Montreal at the time, living in an apartment, and was heavily abusing drugs, which put him into a state of psychosis. He decided then to “take his life into his own hands.”

He approached Parent to live at Mon Shack but was initially refused. He was eventually admitted under certain special conditions. Living at Mon Shack gave a stability to his life that he had never had before. He made friends there, where “everyone is treated equally.”

He is not ready to move to Mon Shack 2.0, a more autonomous living arrangement, because he still needs the security provided by Mon Shack. He is surrounded by qualified individuals trained to help him. He thanked Parent for giving him this opportunity.

His testimony finished, the crowd launched to their feet with cheers and applause.

David Patry

Patry thanked everyone for attending this important occasion. Mon Shack gave him a confidence he had never had before. Previously, he couldn’t look people in the eye and was very timid and reserved. But he had a dream to pursue his education. Mon Shack gave him the strength and a roof under which to do so.

“Without Mon Shack, I have no idea where I would be today,” he said. At the age of 20, he returned to school and finished Secondary 5. He then finished CEGEP and is now attending university. The crowd erupted into applause.

He is studying physics and hopes some day to teach. He is putting a lot of effort into it and it is going well. He said the world needs organizations like Mon Shack, because they help people to believe and invest in society. Living there has benefitted his life more than anything else.

Shouts of “Bravo!” could be heard as he finished his speech as crowd gave him a standing ovation.

Michel Tardif

“Are you happy?” Tardif asked the crowd. “Yes!” they responded. “To be happy you need a home,” he said. Without that security, it is much more difficult to be happy. His son has been living in Mon Shack for five and a half years.

“Mental health problems happen without warning,” he continued. He noted the treatment of mental health issues is not very advanced. Families do not know what to do when mental illness hits. Mon Shack is the missing solution.

When nothing else was working, Mon Shack gave his son the needed stability to improve and become more autonomous. He thanked Parent for everything she has done.

After the testimonies, Parent gave a few closing words and encouraged those gathered to enjoy the rest of their night.

More information about Mon Shack can be found at its website: monshack.ca

Mon Shack tenant testimonials draw standing ovations at annual benefit dinner Read More »

A closer look into Canada’s “Hollywood North” Industry

Graphic Adam Gibbard

Corinne Boyer
Local Journalism Initiative

Over the years, Canada gained the savvy nickname “Hollywood North” as the United States’ alternative destination for television and film production. The various scenic landscapes and 20 per cent tax credits in the province of Quebec attracted large studio companies to its doorstep.

According to a recent report from the Canadian Media Producers Association, in 2022, Canadian productions of television and film rose by 28 per cent, reaching an all-time high of $11.6 billion CAD, but the record was yet to be overshadowed by Hollywood’s imminent strike, which lasted nearly half a year.

Concerns over wage increases, better residuals and protection over artificial intelligence were at the forefront of negotiations between the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), which represents major studios such as Paramount, Warner Bros., Discovery, Amazon and Netflix.

On May 2, 2023, the WGA revealed in a press release that they were calling for a strike following six weeks of failed negotiations with the AMPTP. This failed negotiation led to the second-longest strike the WGA ever performed, picketing for nearly 150 days.

Almost two months after the WGA’s announcement, the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) joined Hollywood’s writers in protest, completely shutting down production in the world’s largest television and film industry.

It was the second time in nearly 65 years that both writers and actors came together in unanimity.

“Until the studios make a deal that addresses the needs of performers, WGA members will be on the picket lines, walking side-by-side with SAG-AFTRA in solidarity,” said WGAE President Lisa Takeuchi in a press release on Oct. 9, 2023, after the WGA had ratified their agreement.

The standstill on production remained in place until Nov. 9, when the actors’ guild finally reached an agreement.

Economic experts from the Milken Institute reported that a total economic loss of at least $5 billion USD was expected for production hubs in California, New Mexico, Georgia and New York. In Canada, the economic impact of the strike was mostly felt in service productions, which refer to films and television series that do not have Canadian stars, writers or directors but that are nonetheless filmed here in Canada.

Michael Prupas, the founder and executive chairman of Muse Entertainment, whose company has offices in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver, said that the revenue generated from service productions declined from about $250 million CAD in 2022 to only $50 million CAD in 2023.

“The Hollywood strike had a significant impact on these service productions,” said Prupas. “On the other hand – for us – our company which produces a lot of Canadian content movies we actually had a good year in 2023.”

Unpredictably, Prupas was not the only one who reported having a successful financial year in 2023, seeing as the Hollywood strike took more than half a year of profits. Casting directors like Victor Tremblay-Blouin, whose company focuses on the Quebec culture scene, also reported a positive outcome for the year 2023.

“On our end, we had more non-union productions coming into Montreal during the strike so it was positive for our business,” he said.

A look at filming permits authorized by the city of Montreal revealed that more than 275 were administered for filming from May to November 2023 during the period of the strike. Nearly as many as in 2022 during the same period, where almost 300 filming permits were reported by the city. Many of the productions listed on the permits were French productions, showing that the Hollywood strike had no effect on the total productions in motion for the year. This was a positive outcome for casting companies such as Tremblay-Blouin who were able to take advantage of ongoing productions.

Production companies in Canada aren’t the only ones who didn’t feel the effects of the Hollywood strike. For actors like Dave Campbell, entrenched in the industry for more than a decade, the strike had almost no impact on his livelihood. Having started his career as a background actor on sets such as Brick Mansions and X-Men, Campbell solidified his place in the industry, working full-time as an actor, stuntman, model and narrator on both Canadian and American film and television productions.

“During the strike, I did get affected because of the fact that there were series that were supposed to come from the states that ended up not making it here,” he said. “But in all honesty, for the people that work full-time (in the industry), it did not affect us that much.”

In general, Campbell said that most of his work comes from other Canadian or French productions. “I got a lot of silent roles in French and last year for the amount of roles that I had—I think I had 14—I would say 11 of them were French roles and the English ones I had were commercials,” he said.

He further explained  that the strike only caused him to lose one or two jobs a month as these large American productions do not guarantee long-term jobs on set. When X-Men came to film in Montreal, Campbell only worked on set for a day. Though, in some cases, those like Campbell can get lucky and get a silent role or a job as an extra that requires a few weeks of work on set. On the set of The Recruit, he was chosen as an extra to play the role of an office employee where he was needed for several weeks to film the office scenes for the entire season.

However, for those newer to the industry like Samuel Bernard, finding work during the strike proved harder.

Working as a background extra and actor, he started working in the industry and took advantage of the economic rebound the industry saw near the end of the winter season in 2022.

Bernard worked consistently on Canadian and American productions for more than a year and a half before whispers of an oncoming strike from Hollywood arose. However, the strike caused Bernard to re-evaluate his life, as the classic Hollywood side job as a waiter that he worked began to be his main source of income; the roles he auditioned for didn’t pan out. Luckily, his master’s degree in film history landed him a full-time job as a history teacher in a high school in Montreal.

“The irony of this is that now there’s the teacher’s strike,” said Bernard. “I left one strike to end up in another.”

But he doesn’t regret his decision to leave the industry full-time. “It’s the best of both worlds,” he said, explaining that his new job will allow him to focus on acting full-time during the summer break. 

Some have been facing challenges in the industry long before the strike. Zong Chen, who specializes in martial arts and stunt work in films,  has always been faced with limited opportunities in Montreal. Ten years ago, Chen started his career in films as a stuntman in Brick Mansions. Since then he has worked on bigger productions such as Quantico and The Recruit but in the last two years, Chen said he received only one contract for stunt work.

Bernard and Chen weren’t the only ones who struggled. For Tracy Vee, a professional makeup and hairstylist working predominantly in American films and series such as Transformers, The Recruit and Home Alone, the strike forced her to turn to French-Canadian productions, which she  had never done before.

But the strike isn’t necessarily to blame for all the difficulties faced by those working in the industry.Vee has been in the industry for seven years and said that every year she has noticed less and less American productions coming to Montreal. She says there are now only one to two American films or series shooting during the summer, which is normally the busiest time of the year as the hot weather resembles the American climate.

Additionally, Alberta’s introduction of the Film and Television Tax Credit has begun to slowly erode Quebec’s reputation as the go-to destination for American production companies. 

“Alberta has been very successful in getting quite a few productions to come there because of their ability to imitate the American prairies and the cowboy environment,” Prupas said.

The Motion Picture Association of Canada reported in November 2023 that the filming of the HBO series The Last of Us generated more than $140 million in production spending in the province of Alberta where season one was filmed.

On a positive note, the Hollywood strike has paved the way for Canadian unions to follow in its footsteps. The Alliance of Canadian Cinema Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) —the national union of professional performers working in recorded media in Canada—announced in a press release on Dec. 11, 2023 that after a year of turmoil caused by the inequities in the U.S., that they have also turned to the bargaining table. During negotiations, they plan to address concerns over AI and fair compensation, just as the WGA and SAG-AFTRA did in 2023.

“We all have similar interests and similar fights that we’re going to have for the benefit of our members,” said Anna Sikorski, branch manager at ACTRA.

A closer look into Canada’s “Hollywood North” Industry Read More »

TMR car dealership shot at

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

A car dealership was shot at in TMR early Friday morning. Montreal Police responded to 911 calls reporting gunfire around 1:30 a.m. on Côte-de-Liesse and arrived at the scene to find bullet holes in the front door of the Prime Leasing car dealership as well as shell casings on the ground.

The building near Devonshire was empty and no injuries were reported. Police erected a security perimeter and no suspects have been arrested. Police told reporters they have no indication that the owner has received threats recently. The SPVM says investigators are interviewing witnesses and examining area surveillance footage around the building just west of Devonshire.

TMR car dealership shot at Read More »

Local groups call for action on domestic violence and firearms

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

With each tragic death and case of domestic violence recorded, “we tell ourselves that this is another victim too many and that we must not have one more,” said Darlington councillor Stephanie Valenzuela, spokesperson for the Official Opposition on the status of women. “Today, we are calling on all levels of government to put words into action and strengthen their support, both for victims and for the resources that help them. Each of them has the capacity to act to fight against domestic violence.”

The PolySeSouvient group, the Halte-Femmes Montréal-Nord organization and elected officials from Ensemble Montréal met at Montreal City Hall to call for concrete actions from all levels of government to better protect women, particularly in relation to gun control, knowing that they are present in approximately 25% of cases of domestic violence recorded in the country.

To complete Bill C-21, adopted on December 14, PolySeSouvient representatives want the Trudeau government not only to put strong and comprehensive regulations to expand on C-21, but also to prohibit all assault weapons and large capacity magazines, which was his electoral pledge. In addition, the mandatory buyback program for assault weapons should be deployed as quickly as possible, they say, so that these weapons are removed from circulation and destroyed before the next elections in the fall of 2025. For its part, the provincial government must ensure that the weapons registration rate is higher, in compliance with the Quebec Firearms Registration Act. According to PolySeSouvient estimates, around 30% of long guns are not registered.

At the municipal level, the Plante administration is being called upon to implement the commitments proposed by Ensemble Montréal and unanimously adopted by council in March 2021 and then again in 2022, to alleviate the burden weighing on victims and community organizations. Among the measures that were expected to be implemented quickly include: free provision of available city premises to organizations supporting victims of domestic violence who must juggle a lack of space to offer their consultations due to the occupancy rate; launch of two periodic communications campaigns to encourage all those affected to obtain help, to disseminate contact details of available resources offered to victims and to share contact details for resources dedicated to people with violent behaviour.

“By fighting to protect victims of intimate violence against firearms, we not only ensure the safety of the population,” said Sophie Lemay, general director of the Halte-Femmes Montréal-Nord. “We are helping an entire system which also suffers from the damage caused by violence. The requests made today cover a broad field of action: what we can do to better protect victims of domestic violence and what we can do to support and disseminate the resources that help these victims.”

Firearms are the first or second most used weapon in crimes committed – depending on the year – in the context of domestic violence, says the group. In 2022, calls for service and cases of victimization in the context of domestic violence represented more than 23% of all crimes against the person recorded in Montreal. n

Local groups call for action on domestic violence and firearms Read More »

Monument to Isabella: monument to inaction?

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

How long does it take to remove a small slab of granite from a park?

(Not a trick question, but maybe a tricky one.)

For 65 years a small monument has stood at the southeast entrance to Macdonald Park, a dynamic green space at Snowdon’s western edge.

Alongside footpaths, swing sets and dogs, stands the tribute to the murderous Isabella I of Castille, who brought the inquisition to Spain, where hundreds of thousands of Jews and Muslims were tortured and expelled. “She was the Hitler of her day,” said resident David Engel. “Given the many religious and ethnic communities in the area, should she still be celebrated?”

It’s a while since 1958, when historical consciousness was less pervasive, but in 2024 begs the question: Is it appropriate to honor a medieval monarch who reigned over massacres and genocide in service to imperialism and Christian dominance in the heart of one of Canada’s most diverse neighbourhoods?

It was radio silence at Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante’s office, which had nothing to comment more than a year ago, other than suggesting a query to Montreal’s media relations department, which did not respond, even as Montreal’s recognition rules acknowledge times change: “as knowledge and values evolve in society, questions sometimes arise about people or events recognized in another era. Such situations may lead to requests for revision of certain acts of recognition that took place long ago, a process also covered in the framework.”

It’s been almost 18 months since Borough Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa, recently named Plante administration point-person on racism and discrimination, welcomed a suggestion by Engel and Snowdon councillor Sonny Moroz to remove it, and asked Moroz to follow up. Numerous residents have told The Suburban they could save city dollars and “take care of it.”

Moroz said he made his third official request to remove the statue in January, fully within the borough’s purview, but seems to be slowed by bureaucratic processes. “I asked that they just remove it and leave the flower bed because residents want to keep that.”

The stone was dedicated in October 1958 by 18 consuls in Montreal on the 466th anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ discovery of America, itself a few months after the Alhambra Decree expelled Spain’s practising Jews. Not only did Isabella oversee torture, massacre and forced conversion of hundreds of thousands, but survivors were given a deadline to convert or leave. Over half of Spain’s Jews were forcibly converted in the 14th century, with 40,000-100,000 expelled from Spain.

“Isabella was a monster,” said Engel, who brought the issue to the borough in 2022. “Given what’s going on around the world and here in Montreal and this borough with a huge spike in antisemitism, how is this still here? Wouldn’t the city and borough mayor want to look good?”

“We are fully aware of the unease of many citizens, including members of the Jewish community, about the presence of a tombstone of Queen Isabella in MacDonald Park” said Katahwa’s office, acknowledging the atrocities and the desire of many local residents to remove it, adding, “we prefer not to comment on the matter as we are in the process of fine-tuning the details with Councillor Sonny Moroz.”

Moroz wishes this “wasn’t a story, but residents want it removed and they need somebody to push to make it happen… This was about celebrating imperialism, and it no longer has a place here. It’s very simple.” n

Monument to Isabella: monument to inaction? Read More »

200 years of St-Patrick’s Day parades

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The 199th Montreal St-Patrick’s Day Parade — started in 1824 making it Canada’s oldest — attracted tens of thousands of Montrealers to DeMaissoneuve Boulevard from Fort Street to Jeanne Mance on Sunday.

The rain began to clear just as the parade began to march and roll and as the drums, horns, music and dancers uplifted the cheering crowd, the clouds began to open up for the sun to shine down, matching up with the bright energy on the ground.

“This is our first year back to a full scale parade for the first time since the pandemic,” Lauren Tracey, past princess and spokesperson for the United Irish Societies, told The Suburban. “It is so exciting to be back!”

Officers in training from John Abbott college police tech, led by Ile-Bizard Mayor Doug Hurley along with Montreal police officers ensured the safety of the crowd as the parade moved through the city’s downtown.

Amongst the 92 participating groups, long-established parade favorites like the Black Watch Regiment, the St. Patrick‘s Society, Erin Sports, the RCMP Band, Karnak Shriners, Bernadette Short’s School of Irish dance, Knights of Colombus and the Royal Canadian Navy enchanted spectators throughout the two hour long spectacle.

Parade Queen Chloe Miller sporting her diamond-cut custom Nike sneakers along with Princesses Madison Lalonde, Mia Simard, Julia Meikle Rochford and Shaeleigh Spracklin delighted their fans with royal waves and dazzling smiles.

The Queen‘s Band followed by its cheerleaders was last but definitely not least, generating the loudest cheers and whistles of all with an extraordinary performance.

Irishman of the year Ken Quinn encourages young people to join in on the parade. “There are so many local clubs (that participate in the parade) to choose from where many passions can be discovered,” Quinn told The Suburban. The Parade Grand Marshal was Mike Kennedy. n

200 years of St-Patrick’s Day parades Read More »

LGH nurse suspended following death of patient

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Kishore Baijoonauth, a Lakeshore General Hospital (LGH) nurse, received a five-month suspension following the death of an 81-year old patient that was in his care in 2022.

According to a Quebec Order of Nurses Disciplinary Council ruling issued on March 1, it was determined that Baijjoonauth was negligent in his professional duties towards the patient.

Baijoonauth pled guilty to the disciplinary complaint made against him on January 24 after information contradicting his notes were shared in discovery. Baijoonauth had noted that the elderly patient was calm and did not suffer from chest pains or palpitations, meanwhile, the patient contacted his partner and relatives over a dozen times in a state of panic. In another mention in Baijoonauth’s notes, it reads that the patient did report having chest pains for which he gave him a Tylenol.

The patient was known for having heart problems. He died on January 16, 2022 at 3:30 a.m. after being admitted to the emergency room a day prior.

According to the disciplinary report and his own admittance, the nurse did not carry out the assessment and follow-up required according to the patient’s state of health and did not inform the doctor of the change in the patient’s condition.

Baijoonauth pled guilty to the disciplinary complaint made against him and has been suspended and ordered to pay all of the expenses surrounding the complaint investigation. It was noted in the report that he was very remorseful and apologized to the patient’s family. Prior to the events that led to the disciplinary action taken against him, Baijoonauth practised as a nurse for two years before the incident and had no history of negligence.

Health reporter, Aaron Derfel, for the Montreal Gazette, broke the story of six patients, including the aforementioned, that triggered an investigation ordered by Quebec Health Minister Christian Dubé in 2023.

The report from the investigation listed 135 recommendations to improve the hospital, including better training and working conditions for hospital staff. It also includes building a new emergency and critical care unit. As of last fall, the construction of a modular building began and the new building is expected to be completed by 2025. n

LGH nurse suspended following death of patient Read More »

Cunninghams’s hosts St. Pat’s fundraiser for Nova WI

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Nova West Island hosted a St-Patrick’s Day fundraiser at Cunningham’s pub in Sainte-Anne de Bellevue offering a selection of traditional Irish dishes and entertainment. The Salty Dogs band played upbeat tunes and to the surprise of everyone in the pub, April Wine’s Brian Greenway joined the group to sing Danny Boy. The entire pub went silent  for the duration of the song. Even the kitchen staff took a break to gather near the bar to watch and listen.

Four Irish dancers, Addison Letemplier, Isabella Parent, Brooke Grant-Butler and Lily St-Pierre from the Costello Irish dance school, delighted the crowd with a performance on the sidewalk in front of the pub. The event was attended by the Queen and Grand Marshall of the Vaudreuil-Soulanges Irish Society, Veronica Gilmore and Brian Greenway, driving coordinator for Nova, Alphons Euers, Sainte-Anne de Bellevue mayor Paola Hawa, Pointe-Claire mayor Tim Thomas and the former mayor of Pointe-Claire, John Belvedere.

Tables were filled with groups gathered together to share a meal, a beer, good laughs and lots of glass clanking could be heard throughout as many cheers were made in honour of St-Patrick.

Cunninghams’s hosts St. Pat’s fundraiser for Nova WI Read More »

Mayors and MPs gather ar WIWC International Woman’s Day

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Elected officials joined many residents at the West Island Women’s Centre’s (WIWC) new and second location in Pierrefonds last week to hear the inspiring testimonies of women leaders in the community.

Among those in attendance were Kirkland Mayor Michel Gibson, Baie-D’Urfé Mayor Heidi Ektvedt, Dorval Mayor Marc Doret, Pointe-Claire Mayor Tim Thomas, MP for Pierrefonds-Dollard Sameer Zuberi and MP for Lac-St-Louis Francis Scarpaleggia.

Sixteen community organizations set up booths behind the seating arrangement in front of the stage to showcase their services and offer information during the coffee and snack breaks.

“International Women’s Day at the West Island Woman’s Centre is a very important event for us. It is an opportunity for us to highlight the contributions of our 900 members, to reach out to the community and to showcase other non-profit organizations which are making a difference,” WIWC board member Dipa Mehta said to The Suburban.

West Island Black Community Association (WIBCA), president Joan Lee shared a heartfelt testament to three special women whom she holds as role models, Gloria Baylis, Gloria Johnson and her mother, who to her surprise was asked to stand for a round of applause. “It is not easy to be a woman, much less a woman of colour. We need to be the change that we seek. Women do the work that they do, not for the income, but for the outcome.”

Attendees listened intently as Thi Be Nguyen, Executive Director in Canada for the Canada-ASEAN business council, told her personal story of how her family fled Vietnam in 1980. For three nights through forests and two nights by boat to leave that country and seek a better life in Canada after being imprisoned for two months. She told the tale of herself as a young girl growing up in Canada, with the challenges of becoming a woman and reaching her goals with the limitations set on her both from home and in society. She explained how she managed to break down those barriers and become the accomplished person that she is today. “Today there are networks and organizations that help women overcome these challenges and promote change,” she said. “We have come a long way with a long way to go.”

“Our goal here (WIWC) is to provide a safe space for women to interact and support each other,” WIWC board of directors member Lisa Gertsman told The Suburbann

Mayors and MPs gather ar WIWC International Woman’s Day Read More »

PCSM stages major Pierrefonds mental health event

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

A Yoga activity followed by a luncheon, roundtable discussion and conference on mental health, organized by the Community Perspective on Mental Health organization (PCSM) took place at the Gerry Robertson community centre in Pierrefonds. Special guests included Pierrefonds-Roxboro mayor Jim Beis, Pierrefonds-Roxboro city councilor Benoit Langevin, Centre Bienvenue and Residence Bienvenue director Christian Dubois, social worker and family counsellor Veronique Belanger, Bell Let’s Talk spokesperson Audley Coley, CIUSSS assistant regional director for mental health Amine Saadi, PCSM board member Marc Walford, Montreal comedian Erich Preech and SPVM officers.

During the lunch hour, a roundtable discussion took place with the event panelists who later presented their perspectives on positive mental health. “Here we are once again trying to recognize the mental health needs in our community. Mental illness is not what we once believed. Everyone goes through bouts of mental health crisis from time to time. It is important that we raise awareness of the community organizations available to the community at large,” Pierrefonds-Roxboro Mayor Jim Beis told The Suburban.

“Today is an important day, it is a day to speak about mental health in a positive way. There is too much stigma around mental health and the reality is that most of us go through a period in our lives where we experience issues with our mental health. I think that every politician, every public personality and citizens have to engage in a conversation today and every day to open up and share our realities and the stress that we are living in this fast paced society that we live in in order to be able to sustain a good quality of life,” Pierrefonds-Roxboro city councillor Benoit Langevin told The Suburban.

“The importance of this day is to get all the actors in the field of mental health together to discuss issues and look forward to the future because we have a lot of work ahead of us for many years to come,” Centre Bienvenue and Residence Bienvenue director Christian Dubois said.

Celebrating his 25 years last month out of acute care, Bell Let’s Talk spokesperson Audley Coley shared his personal journey with mental health, living with bipolar disorder and the trials and tribulations he faced prior to and following his diagnosis and treatment. Following the launch of his book entitled Audley Enough, Bell Canada offered him a platform with Bell Let’s Talk to speak on mental health issues across the nation.

“I am here to help bring awareness to people my age and people who can recognize themselves through me when discussing mental health. Being a Haitian and being a man, I want to help set the table for us to open up. With so many people in the Haitian community in healthcare, it is ironic that mental health is still taboo in our culture and it is just as taboo for men to open up about their feelings as it is for women to open up about their sexuality. I want to help influence and represent changes where I can,” Montreal comedian Erich Preech said.

CIUSSS assistant regional director for mental health Amine Saadi stressed the importance of collaboration between the Quebec health authority and grassroots community organizations serving the local communities’ mental health needs. “They are advocating for mental health and we are advocating for mental health and it is important that we work together. Today, we are celebrating the positive aspect of mental health. I’ve been working in mental health personally for the last 20 years and it was always promoted as a negative impact on society, but today we are recognizing the positive aspects of mental health such as wellness activities like Yoga for example and employee retention initiatives. The positive aspect is that today represents hope for the future,” he told The Suburban.

“Being able to communicate how we feel and manage the outcome through introspection is something we can learn. If we can connect to ourselves, we can connect better to others. Taking a moment each day like we did today with the Yoga activity is a daily essential,” social worker and family counsellor Veronique Belanger explained. n

PCSM stages major Pierrefonds mental health event Read More »

Judge extends injunction against anti-Israel protests

By Beryl Wajsman, Editor
The Suburban

Superior Court Justice Chantal Masse extended the injunction against pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel protests near Jewish institutions until April 10. The injunction was originally granted by Justice Serge Gaudet. Attorney Neil Oberman, Spiegel Sohmer senior partner, had originally obtained a 10-day provisional injunction.

The proceedings before Justice Masse March 15 were attended by a dozen political and community leaders including Amb. Deborah Lyons,Canada’s Special Envoy on Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism, Mount Royal MP Anthony Housefather, D’Arcy McGee MNA Elizabeth Prass, Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi, City Councillor Sonny Moroz, Federation CJA CEO Yair Szlak and CIJA Quebec Vice-President Eta Yudin.

The extension maintains the ban on protests within 50 metres of the sidewalks in front of the Spanish & Portuguese Synagogue on St. Kevin Ave., the Federation CJA building on Côte Ste. Catherine Rd., the YM-YWHA building on Westbury Ave., Herzliah High School on Mountain Sights Ave. and United Talmud Torahs of Montreal on St. Kevin.

The injunction is against Montréal4Palestine, Palestinian Youth Movement Montreal, Alliance4Palestine.QC and Independent Jewish Voices, and Bara Iyad Abuhamed. The latter faces charges of assaulting a police officer during a trespassing protest by an anti-Israel mob inside Carrefour Laval.

On March 5 an anti-Israel mob of some 100 protested in front of the Spanish & Portuguese Synagogue of Montreal against the synagogue hosting a trade fair called The Great Israeli Real Estate Event. The day before, some 60 anti-Israel protesters barred the doors to Cummings House on Côte Ste. Catherine Rd. for four hours during an event with three Israeli speakers. Audience attendees were yelled at, spat on and shoved while the mob blocked the entrance, yelling antisemitic threats.

Federation CJA CEO Yair Szlak said he was pleased with the extension. “Justice was done once again,” he said. “We’re very happy that the court recognized the urgency and importance of protecting the Jewish community. While freedom of speech and protests are part of our democratic rights, doing so while seizing a Jewish building and preventing Jews from living a free Jewish life is not acceptable in this country.” n

Judge extends injunction against anti-Israel protests Read More »

Pro-Hamas mob attacks Hillel Concordia

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Hillel Concordia was targeted by a pro-Hamas mob that trapped members in its club office, in relation to a speech at the university that had no connection with Hillel.

“Masked cowards banged on the walls, trying to intimidate them through the window by using the fire escape stairs, and chanted ‘all Zionists are racists, all Zionists are terrorists’ outside,” the club’s statement explained. “This came shortly after protesters blocked access to a talk at Concordia by a Tel Aviv University professor, something to which the students had no connection.”

Hillel Concordia added that “these acts of cowardly intimidation are only the latest examples of what Jewish students on campus have to face regularly.

“While Jewish students are resilient and strong, it is incumbent on the Concordia administration to hold those responsible to account and ensure that these acts of bullying and harassment are not tolerated on campus. If Concordia truly values the Jewish students at the university, then the administration must act swiftly and unequivocally to ensure these bullies have consequences. The Concordia student code of conduct demands the administration do so, and the Jewish students expect as much.”

Vannina Maestracci of the university’s media office told The Suburban that “we are alarmed about what took place yesterday and do not tolerate intimidation on our campus. Campus Safety and Prevention Services responded to this incident and is following up, according to our procedures and complaint mechanisms.” n

Pro-Hamas mob attacks Hillel Concordia Read More »

CSL residents demand action on potential renovictions

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

The March Côte St. Luc council meeting was nearly filled to capacity, mostly with tenants from 5755, 5765 and 5775 Sir Walter Scott and 6565 and 6575 Kildare Road who are concerned about their mysterious new owners.

Councillor Mike Cohen wrote on his www.mikecohen.ca blog that the five residential buildings were recently sold by CLV Group for $40 million to new ownership, listed as Immeubles Galleons S.E.C., located in Laval.

“It is unclear who actually heads this enterprise,” the councillor added. “One name kept coming up; a developer I have worked with in my day job. When I reached him he insisted that he was originally a prospective buyer. ‘I flipped the offer to another investor prior to closing,’ he said.” Cohen confirmed to The Suburban that the developer he was referring to was Henry Zavriyev, a well-known owner of numerous properties in Montreal.

Cohen also said the tenants fear the new owners will proceed with renovictions — evicting tenants to renovate units. This prompted many of the tenants to attend the council meeting.

Kildare resident Alexander Errore told council that in the three weeks following the change of ownership, dramatic changes have taken place for the tenants, such as “confusing and inaccurate information via memos posted in hallways. Emails and calls regarding rent payment, emergency contacts and service to two private cell phone numbers provided have been sporadically answered or not answered at all.”

Errore said that two onsite building managers, identified as Mr. Avi and Mr. David, “have been knocking on doors, attempting to get tenants to vacate their apartments with offers and manipulation instead of concentrating on properly transitioning from the former owners.”

The resident alleged that the two men are employed by Zavriyev, “who the media has dubbed the ‘king of renovictions.’

“His battles with seniors residences and apartment buildings are well documented in the media over the last several years. We have already created an informal tenants association and have received legal consultation.” The Suburban has contacted Zavriyev and we await his reply.

Errore added that “we are not convinced that the City of Côte St. Luc wants the next well-publicized battle against renovictions to happen within their quarters.

“Other than the amendment to the construction permits regarding renovictions, is CSL planning any other safeguards against the practice of renovictions?”

Errore was referring to a bylaw amendment passed by CSL late last year, saying “prior to the issuance of a permit for major works that require evacuation, written documentation must be provided demonstrating the fact the tenants have agreed, in writing, to either temporally relocate or voluntarily vacate their dwellings during the work. Tenants who have agreed to temporarily relocate must have been presented with a clear expected timeline for their return. The contact information of each affected tenant must be provided.” The bylaw also says “the building permit shall become null and void if any documentation or information provided during the permit application process is found to be misleading, untruthful, or inaccurate.”

Deputy Mayor Dida Berku, who was a longtime tenants lawyer, said she has “lived through this experience with many other tenants associations” in other areas of the city.

“We’re very sensitive to this issue, we understand the dynamics. But there’s a role for the courts and the Rental Board, and there’s a role for the city. The city applies bylaws in a fair and regulated fashion. We are not going to intervene in relations between landlords and tenants. You as tenants have to protect and fight for your rights. I understand you have a tenants association and you hired a lawyer, and that’s what you need to do.”

Cohen said the residents did not come to the meeting “in vain. I am sure that, whoever the owners are, they’re going to be well aware of the fact that, unlike other buildings where people have woken up when it’s too late, you have woken up before anything has officially started….We’re going to do everything in our power to back you up, and if that means sending our building inspector over there on a weekly basis, because there’s a problem, we’ll do it.”

Other residents called on CSL to take some type of action, but Berku reiterated that they should mobilize. n

CSL residents demand action on potential renovictions Read More »

First-ever injunction issued protecting Jewish institutions from antisemitic mobs

By Joel Goldenberg and

Beryl Wajsman,Editor
The Suburban

Another anti-Israel and anti-Jewish demonstration, this time outside the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, had a surprise ending as bailiffs arrived serving injunctions against the mob and dispersing it with the help of the SPVM riot squad. Some legal observers consider this precedent the first injunctive relief granted to protect Jewish institutions since the Hamas atrocities of Oct.7.

The 10-day injunction, which can be extended upon application, established the necessity of an urgent intervention and was granted by Quebec Superior Court Justice Serge Gaudet. It was filed on behalf of Federation CJA and the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue by senior partner at Spiegel Sohmer Neil Oberman against Independent Jewish Voices, Montreal4Palestine, the Palestinian Youth Movement, Alliance4Palestine.QC and Bara Iyad Abuhamed, who was arrested by Laval police for unlawful assembly and assaulting a peace officer following a Dec. 26 Boxing Day pro-Hamas demonstration within the private property of Carrefour Laval.

The legal document prevents the named organizations and individuals from protesting within 50 metres of the sidewalks bordering Federation CJA, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, the Cummings Centre, the Sylvan Adams YM-YWHA, Herzliah High School and United Talmud Torah, mostly located at what’s known as the Jewish community campus in Snowdon. Federation CJA and CIJA are also considering a permanent injunction, and are also calling on the Quebec government to “prevent disturbances by enforcing laws that prohibit disruptive gatherings and face coverings in public spaces.” Community members are being encouraged to e-mail Leader.SJB@assnat.qc.ca to press for such legislation.

Oberman has over the past several months also sent legal notices to McGill and Concordia universities, and the City of Montreal, charging they have failed to effectively counter antisemitism.

Notably, after the injunction was served on the mob numbering some 150, the pro-Hamas crowd, which was protesting an Israel real estate event for which the synagogue space was rented, switched from denouncing Zionism and calling for an end to the State of Israel, to chanting “no justice, no peace, no racist police!”

The pro-Hamas protesters, unlike the previous night at Federation CJA, were not allowed by police to venture onto private property and were confined to St. Kevin west of Lemieux. They were countered by numerous Israel supporters, who sang songs and heckled the anti-Israel crowd — they stood on St. Kevin east of Lemieux and when they left, applauded the many Montreal police officers on hand for their work from 3 p.m. to after 8 p.m.

During the protest and counter-protest, the pro-Hamas side, at one point, shouted “death to Israel, death to the Jews” in Arabic, and in English, continually shouted the violence-inspiring “Viva Intifada,” and the genocidal “from the river to the sea, Palestine is almost free,” claimed Israel’s days were numbered, and said the Israel supporters had low IQs, accusing them of acting indecently and, as a result, not being real Jews. One of their group was arrested for uttering threats, police said.

Israeli supporters played music to drown out the pro-Hamas speakers, chanted “bring them home” in relation to the hostages held by Hamas since Oct.7, laughed with derision at their historical claims, called the protesters “terrorists” and danced and waved the Israeli flag, sang several songs and chanted loudly “Am Yisrael Chai!” Community leaders asked the supporters to leave at 7:30 p.m. to respect the neighbourhood, prompting the pro-Hamas side to say they left out of weakness. But the reality is they were asked to leave before the injunction was to be handed out.

Federation CJA and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs stated that the protest represented “another day, another angry mob chanting hatred directed at Jewish Montrealers.We will not stand by while an angry mob targets, and tries to threaten and intimidate our community.”They also praised the police response, saying that the SPVM “was out in full force to ensure effective buffer zones, access to institutions and the safety of our community.”

On hand at the protest were Federation CJA CEO Yair Szlak, CIJA Quebec vice-president Eta Yudin, D’Arcy McGee MNA Elisabeth Prass, Côte St. Luc councillor Dida Berku, former CSL councillor Glenn Nashen, Spanish and Portuguese Rabbi Yehoshua Ellis and Cantor Daniel Benlolo, Rabbi Reuben Poupko, Snowdon councillor Sonny Moroz, and Cantor Adam Stotland of Shaare Zion Beth-El, amongst many others. n

First-ever injunction issued protecting Jewish institutions from antisemitic mobs Read More »

Hampstead Mayor leads tax protest

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi said he proposed, and the other mayors of demerged cities discussed, the possibility of all of them withholding their annual contributions to the agglomeration for such services as public transit, fire and police.

Levi was responding to Sharon Freedman, a regular at several council meetings. The CSL resident said demerged cities are paying a great deal to the agglomeration, “and getting very few services,” and she also brought up the ongoing delays of the Cavendish Blvd. extension between CSL and St. Laurent.

“Cannot the cities get together — I need some leadership here — and withhold their [agglomeration portions] until we can get services done and put the money in a trust fund — we’re not stealing the money. Why are we paying out this money when we’re getting bupkis? (Yiddish for absolutely nothing).”

Levi replied that all 16 demerged municipalities agree with Freedman’s sentiment.

“Last year, we had a private meeting of the mayors of the demerged municipalities and I proposed something similar to what you were saying,” the Mayor added. “I said if one of us refuses to pay the agglomeration, we will immediately be put under provincial trusteeship. We can’t do it.”

However, “I said if all 16 of us do it simultaneously and we just refuse to pay the absurd increase in the agglomeration fee, the province of Quebec would not have the administrative capacity to put 16 demerged municipalities under trusteeship — it would create a crisis. There were some mayors who liked the idea, and some that didn’t have the….What we’ve seen in the past two months is a resurgence for that passion for the first time that I’ve been at the agglomeration council meetings.We are now vocally voting against the increase.”

Regarding that latter point, at the February Montreal West council meeting, Mayor Beny Masella, also president of the Association of Suburban Municipalities, said that the organization has “taken a firmer position with the City of Montreal.

“Faced with the failure of our efforts to reach a new agreement on the sharing of the expenses of the Montreal agglomeration, we, the mayors of the Association of Suburban Municipalities (ASM) must now take a firm position. From now on, we will systematically oppose any expenditure or financial measure proposed by the Agglomeration, unless a direct, tangible, and equitable benefit is clearly established for one, several, or all the demerged municipalities. This decision, taken unanimously by the mayors of the ASM, is in line with the opposition already expressed last December regarding the adoption of the Agglomeration’s 2024 budget.”

Masella pointed out that at the previous agglomeration meeting, “the mayors of the ASM unanimously expressed their opposition to nine objects of expenditure deemed inequitable, representing more than $63M.

“For us, the situation is even more unacceptable considering that, in the fall of 2023, the City of Montreal itself acknowledged, through its Executive Committee Chair, that the current expense distribution system and the resulting municipal shares had reached their limits.”

Levi acknowledged that the dissenting votes from the ASM members are symbolic as the City of Montreal has 88 percent of the vote on the agglomeration council.

“It’s an unfair system. It’s taxation without representation. Last year, Hampstead paid more than 51 percent toward the agglomeration and we’re fed up.” n

Hampstead Mayor leads tax protest Read More »

Murder, fatal accident in St. Laurent

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

A murder of a senior and a fatal accident involving a bus and a pedestrian took place last week in St. Laurent, within three hours of each other and in close proximity.

The shooting of a 71-year-old man happened in the parking lot of a restaurant on Marcel-Laurin and Thimens Blvd. The area has previously been the scene of Molotov cocktail attacks. Police received several 911 calls following the latest incident.

Police say the man was found unconscious and injured in the upper body, and he died later in hospital. There could be one or several suspects.

Just two hours prior to the shooting, a pedestrian was hit nearby by a public transit bus as it was turning from Décarie Blvd. onto westbound Edouard-Laurin. Police spokesperson Caroline Chevrefils said, “When police arrived at the scene, they found the pedestrian on the ground. Unfortunately, the man’s death was pronounced at the scene.”

The bus driver was uninjured, but was treated for shock in hospital. Part of Décarie was closed as police investigated and witnesses were interviewed.

Murder, fatal accident in St. Laurent Read More »

Standing Watch: NDG school crossing guard Joanne Herbut

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

Joanne Herbut is chill, in the chill. Smart, layered, and always on the move, the 58-year-old NDG resident stands watch at Girouard and N.D.G. Avenue. The school crossing guard (brigadier scolaire) outside the district’s busiest school steps off the curb, eyes darting back and forth, head on a pivot, STOP sign raised, and marches briskly into the intersection of bike and car lanes, where hundreds of kids, parents, pets and strollers make their way through the carrefour while buses, bikes, cars and trucks idle in the cold morning air.

“This is my fifth year at the corner,” Herbut told The Suburban on a frigid Wednesday morning, amid dozens of ‘bonjours,’ ‘good mornings’ and little grins peeking through scarves outside École Notre-Dame-de-Grâce.

She moves fast so people can move slow, and like many full-time guards, does four hours in three shifts per day: before school, lunchtime and after school. She began on call at Décarie and N.D.G. and after six weeks moved over to this permanent spot.

Herbut has watched kids swathed in strollers go to walking with parents, then walking alone. “They are great, but when they start walking on their own it can be challenging. Like, they don’t understand the consequences, so they take chances, but still need some reminders. And they test you,” she laughs.

For 25 years Herbut worked in special needs education and after taking some time off, decided to get back into the workforce when a friend suggested crossing guard. “I never thought about it but one day I was doing some errands and stopped to speak to a crossing guard and asked some questions.” The job suited her to a ‘T’. “I love working with the community, meeting people and being outside. I’m not the type that can sit at a desk inside all day.”

There are 525 permanent and 134 surplus guards in the city, says SPVM communications agent Caroline Labelle, and 538 active school crossings, “but as our personnel are not evenly distributed across the island, we are always recruiting to ensure maximum coverage of each area and safety for all children.”

Future crossing guards receive a one-day training course given by the SPVM, consisting of theoretical and practical components, based on the SAAQ (Société de l’assurance automobile du Québec) guide. Candidates undergo a medical exam and security check. Starting salary is $20.52 per hour and guards work about 20 hours a week. (On-call may vary.) All gear is supplied, summers and spring break are off, and schedules vary depending on crossing.

Station 9 Commander Stéphane Desroches says the shortage of guards “affects this district, where we have 21 pedestrian school crossings and 50 schools, but there is always someone staffing a crossing,” he told The Suburban. “Always.” That may mean bringing in patrol cops, “or calling in our cadre of cadets or reservists (retired officers).”

Herbut says the important skills are “being friendly, very diligent and observant,” and channels her patience that’s served her for years. “Some days are more challenging than others, but the community is amazing.” She smiles at a family with an exuberant dog in tow. “A mini bonus of this job is all the beautiful dogs I get to meet.” Local city councillor Peter McQueen says Herbut “is a great brigadier and all the parents and students at N.D.G. school appreciate her.”

The toughest thing working outside a school with some 900 young students on a busy artery “is dealing with drivers with a sense of entitlement. I’m sorry to have to say that.” She’s never had a dangerous interaction, but she has had to be assertive, and received some rather rude comments. “Sometimes I think my patience is my salvation and I don’t know why I’m surprised, but I am still surprised.” n

Standing Watch: NDG school crossing guard Joanne Herbut Read More »

School bus drivers settle

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

Montreal parents and students are getting a long-awaited reprieve after nearly 70% of the Transco-CSN Workers union voted to accept a settlement proposed by a conciliator. The strike had affected many schools boards including the English Montreal and the Pearson.

In a secret vote, 69.4% of members approved the settlement which contains total increases of 43% over the duration of the new collective agreement of six years and retroactive to July 1, 2022. During this period, weekly salaries will rise from $634 to $907 on July 1, 2027. Drivers also obtained an increase in the scale of their vacation pay which will reach 10% after 15 years of service as well as a sixth day of sick leave in 2025.

The STTT-CSN has nearly 350 members responsible for as many school transportation routes, and threw school and family schedules into chaos for many. “Standing up and keeping your head held high between parents, their children and the cavalier and intransigent attitude of their employer has not been easy,” said CSN president Caroline Senneville, a sentiment echoed by interim president of the Federation of Public Service Employees Stéphanie Gratton. “We salute the exemplary struggle led by the union workers who stood up to a multinational for a little over four months in order to obtain these improvements to their working conditions. All other carriers will have to take into account the effect of these gains on the job market and that too, the union can be proud of.” n

School bus drivers settle Read More »

LBPSB encourages measles vaccine for students

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The Lester B. Pearson School Board (LBPSB) sent out a letter of recommendation issued by the regional public health authority (CIUSSS), urging parents and students to be vaccinated against measles as two cases have been reported recently in Montreal. In the event of an outbreak at school, unvaccinated students may be sent home for several weeks, the letter warns.

Children are not required to be vaccinated to have access to public schools in Quebec, except in the event of an outbreak of a contagious disease in which case access to school may be denied until the outbreak subsides. For children under the age of 14, vaccines can only be administered with parental consent. Over the age of 14, the child may consent or refuse to be vaccinated, however a court order can be issued obligating them to be vaccinated if it is required for their state of health as determined by a healthcare professional.

Measles is an airborne virus that is highly contagious. According to the regional health authority, an unvaccinated person who comes into contact with an infected person has a 90% chance of catching the disease and one in 10 people with measles will require hospital care.

LBPSB encourages measles vaccine for students Read More »

Ile-Aux-Tourtes bridge to close for the weekend

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The Île-aux-Tourtes bridge, linking Senneville and Vaudreuil-Dorion along the axis of Highway 40, will be completely closed to traffic from Friday evening the 15th to Monday morning the 18th. Despite the complete closure of exit 41 – Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue/boul. des Anciens-Combattants and the entrance from Saint-Charles Avenue in Vaudreuil — there will be westbound access to Senneville Road from the 40.

According to a statement issued by the Quebec Ministry of Transport (MTQ) the temporary closure is required in order to conduct preparatory work for the construction of the approaches to the new Île-aux-Tourtes bridge.

The ramp leading from Highway 40 to the Île-aux-Tourtes bridge will be closed in the interchange with Highway 30. Drivers can use Highways 20 and 30.

On Monday, March 18 at 5 a.m., two lanes towards Vaudreuil-Dorion and one lane towards Montreal will be re-opened, matching the current configuration on the bridge. n

Ile-Aux-Tourtes bridge to close for the weekend Read More »

DDO’s Bar B Barn is closed after 44 years

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Bar B Barn owner, Tom McQueen, announced at the beginning of March that he had decided to close the West Island’s iconic restaurant after 44 years in business in Dollard-des-Ormeaux. After a week-long non stop line up, following the announcement, McQueen was forced to close earlier than planned as the restaurant ran out of ribs.

McQueen said that as an Irishman, he chose St. Patrick’s Day as the restaurant’s last day of operation to go out with a “bang”. Reservations filled up almost every table and time slot leading to St-Patrick’s day, but with pick up orders still available for one “last supper” just a few weeks before the Easter holidays, the restaurant’s inventory was cleaned out a week early.

Not all visitors could even make their full pilgrimage down the line up’s memory lane into the Barn as sentimental clients wanting a last visit were sent home each evening because not all could be served by closing hour.

Bar B Barn was founded by Manny Barnoff in 1967. The downtown location closed in 2020 after 53 years in business due to the financial effects of COVID-19 restrictions.

The West Island location had at least five employees who have been employed at the restaurant for 20 years or more. The family friendly atmosphere was always a hit in the West Island.

The iconic yellow barn sits on an ideal commercial corner lot, owned by the McQueen family on Sources Boulevard facing the Sources mega center. McQueen told said that he is not sure what the future of the lot and Barn holds. For the time being, it will remain a memorial edifice for multi-generational passersby. n

DDO’s Bar B Barn is closed after 44 years Read More »

Robert-Baldwin MNA says “youth protection system protects itself, not children’s rights”

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Brigitte Garceau, Liberal MNA for Robert-Baldwin and official opposition critic for youth protection, says the sense of urgency to repair the broad array of youth protection system failures by Minister Lionel Carmant and Deputy Minister and National Director of Youth Protection Catherine Lemay is virtually non-existent.

Garceau’s view is shared by journalist and author of two books on youth protection, Nancy Audet, who recently additionally denounced the fact that 20% of the establishments that house children under youth protection in the province are dilapidated. “Nobody should be living in establishments like Mont St-Antoine which are totally uninhabitable, and it is also reprehensible that any establishment have isolation cells as was recently discovered at the Cartier facility in Laval,”Garceau said.

Garceau has hammered home the fundamental issue of mothers losing custody of their children to violent fathers due to inadequate training of social workers in conjugal violence cases where social workers mistakenly and unilaterally accuse mothers of parental alienation. She has asked Minister Lionel Carmant to launch an investigation. “There was a motion that the government did not support. It is obvious that this issue is not a priority to the Minister nor to the government.”

In 2016, nearly 52% of reports to the Department of Youth Protection concerned children exposed to conjugal violence. Following the Laurent Commission report, Regine Laurent stated to media that parental alienation findings by unqualified social workers and other matters related to conjugal violence was the subject, by far, that generated the greatest number of calls and emails to the Commission.

Garceau told The Suburban that,”I don’t understand the logic of maintaining a dysfunctional ‘status quo’. The efforts are placed on protecting the system instead of protecting the rights of the children. One of the main recommendation’s of The Laurent Commission was the creation of an independent Commissioner for the Welfare and Rights of Children. The government in its proposed Bill 37 has failed to integrate all of those powers and responsibilities recommended into the position of the Commissioner. This call for change is fundamental and necessary if we are to reform the system so that it is fully accountable. It is imperative that a commissioner has the ability to investigate and to intervene with watchdog powers. The DPJ must be under supervision and held accountable and exercise its duties with full transparency.”

Almost three years after she was appointed, Lemay was quoted defending youth protection and her mandate saying, “The attacks on youth protection certainly affect me. It is an essential sector for our society. When things are bad, I tell myself that I am in the right place to make changes.”

Garceau insists that it is high time to see some concrete action, investigation and reform. n

Robert-Baldwin MNA says “youth protection system protects itself, not children’s rights” Read More »

Dorval teen heads to Kenya to build wells

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Dorval resident Joshua Morin Surette, 18, is packing his bags to go to Kakamenga in Kenya to visit the community he has been serving from afar for over a decade. The village now has three wells, that they call “Joshua wells” as a result of Surette’s efforts in collaboration with Suitcases for Africa, a grassroots organization formed in memory of Dr. Ebi Kiminani.

Joshua and his mother, Cori-Ann Surette, are longstanding members of St-Veronica’s Church in Dorval, where Joshua says he learned at an early age about community service and volunteerism. As early as age 3, Joshua helped to serve meals at local homeless shelters alongside his family and church community.

“It opened my eyes to how divided the world is. When I heard about the drought in Kenya at age five, I could not ignore it. I started to collect cans and sell lemonade and ask for donations from members of my community,” Joshua told The Suburban.

Joshua’s reaction was unusual for a typical five year old. His mother told The Suburban that his desire to help was easily piqued. “It was innate,” she said. At every birthday party, he decided to forgo gifts and ask for donations towards the well project instead.

By the time Joshua reached 9 years of age, the efforts he had already spent half his lifetime on, finally brought his dream to life across the ocean as the first well was built in Kakamenga, providing clean water to locals.

Today, there are three wells and Joshua hopes to raise funds to add two more to the network. He says that his visit will give him the opportunity to assess the needs of the community firsthand and devise a plan to tackle those issues upon his return.

“It will be an ongoing project. A little town in Montreal can help an entire village in Kenya,” Joshua explained.

On this first trip, Joshua is bringing donations of soccer balls, school supplies and clothes on his trip that he received from the community. n

Dorval teen heads to Kenya to build wells Read More »

CSL’s Berku urges participation in Living Lab project

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Côte St. Luc councillor Dida Berku made an appeal for vulnerable and isolated older adults to take part in the The Living Lab of the City of Côte Saint-Luc,” a Smart Homes program done in collaboration with the CIUSS West-Central Montreal healthcare network.

“This project is to try to help seniors living alone to monitor their daily pattern and see if they’re okay, and to, with technology, let people know — family, friends, our organizations — if something seems amiss, the right people can come to help them, not only for medical purposes but to improve their quality of life on a daily basis,” CSL Mayor Mitchell Brownstein explained at the project’s 2022 launch. Berku pointed out that this is the last year of the subsidized project.

“I’m addressing this to everyone out there and any person who knows someone who can benefit from this,” she said. “If you live alone and have your routine, if you’re willing to try something new, the Living Lab project may be for you. Over the next six months, we’ll be installing smart sensors inside the homes and apartments of seniors. You can install it on your front door, on your stove or wherever you choose.”

The councillor said the motion sensors will detect when there is a break in the resident’s daily routine, and that they are not cameras.

“If you don’t open the fridge in 24 hours or leave your bedroom or apartment over a period of days, the sensors will send out an alert to the person of your choice — it could be a family member living near or far, a neighbour or even your doctor or pharmacist.”

Berku said people are being signed up now to participate.

“If you or your family are interested, please contact me at dberku@cotesaintluc.org or call city hall and leave a message for me. We’re looking for all types of candidates.”

CSL’s Berku urges participation in Living Lab project Read More »

SPVM responds to The Suburban on hate crimes after Rotrand letter

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Marvin Rotrand, formerly head of B’nai Brith Canada’s League for Human Rights, and now interim director of the new United Against Hate organization, is calling for clarity from the SPVM on hate crimes committed against the Montreal Jewish community.

Rotrand, whose new organization’s goal is to “promote dialogue and understanding within our diverse population to strengthen anti-hate efforts,” wrote to Montreal police chief Fady Dagher, pointing out that there has been a major increase in hate crime incidents in Canada in general, especially against Jewish communities since the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel.

“Montreal was not spared from the wave of hatred targeting Jews,” Rotrand wrote. “Jewish schools were shot at and arson attempts were perpetrated against Jewish community buildings. Hateful gatherings openly incited violence against the Jewish community, Jewish students were attacked at Concordia University and calls for boycotts of businesses were launched simply because their owners are Jewish.”

Rotrand wrote that even after all of these incidents and the concerns expressed by the Jewish community, “there have been very few arrests.

“The lack of application of our laws gives the feeling that the authorities have not allocated the necessary resources to solve the major crimes we have witnessed in our city.”

Rotrand asked Dagher:

• “How many hate crimes and incidents have been recorded by the SPVM since Oct. 7, 2023? Of these, how many specifically targeted the Jewish community?”

• “With regard to incidents occurring since Oct. 7, 2023, when shots were fired at Jewish schools, and there were arson attempts against Jewish community buildings and acts of vandalism, are these incidents being investigated as probable hate crimes?”

• “What is the role of the SPVM’s Hate Crimes unit in these investigations? Does the unit lead the investigations? If not, what is its role?

• “On Nov. 24, Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw said that his department’s hate crimes unit had increased from a team from six people to 32. He said that since Oct. 7, the expanded unit made 22 arrests and laid 58 charges. What is the current number of police officers assigned to the hate crimes unit of the SPVM?

• Are there plans to increase the unit’s capacity to deal with the current epidemic of antisemitic incidents?

Rotrand wrote Dagher that the Montreal Jewish community “appreciates the statements you have made in recent months that anti-Semitism is unacceptable, and the increased visibility near Jewish institutions last October and November.

“However, the fact that there have been no arrests for these major crimes fuels a strong feeling that the SPVM must allocate many more resources so that investigations result in arrests and indictments of criminals.”

Contacted by The Suburban, the SPVM’s media representative said Dagher will respond to Rotrand in due course. They also provided the most recent statistics regarding hate crimes and incidents against members of the Jewish and Arab-Muslim communities from Oct. 7 to Feb. 24 — 42 hate crimes against Jewish individuals, 19 against Arab-Muslims; 32 hate crimes against Jewish properties, seven against Arab-Muslim properties; 56 antisemitic hate incidents, and 17 anti-Arab-Muslim incidents, for a total of 173 incidents — 130 against the Jewish community and 43 against the Arab-Muslim community.

The SPVM added that “there is no offence identified as a ‘hate crime’ in the Criminal Code.

“The hateful character is in fact a constitutive and aggravating factor of a given criminal act, a factor which must be nuanced depending on the context. For example, if a person is the victim of an assault motivated by hatred towards their religion, the suspect will be charged with assault and the hateful nature will be taken into consideration when determining the sentence, if convicted.”

The police added that although the SPVM’s hate crimes unit (MICH) processes them, hate incidents “do not lead to arrests or charges, because they are not criminal offences. The MICH takes care of this in order to prevent these incidents from potentially becoming hate crimes.” n

SPVM responds to The Suburban on hate crimes after Rotrand letter Read More »

Artgate parents launch lawsuit; LBPSB silent

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The families of some Westwood junior high school students launched a lawsuit against art teacher Mario Perron and the Lester B. Pearson School Board (LBPSB) as it continues to remain silent and fails to respond to the demand letter sent on behalf of eight parents on Feb. 13.

According to the demand letter, the families requested an apology and the removal of all artwork online as well as statutory damages in the amount of $1.4 million claimed against the art teacher Mario Perron and the school board. Both parties failed to address the contents of the demand letter.

“One would seem to think that the school board is condoning the actions of Mario Perron as they are choosing to continue to remain defiant and silent on this egregious abuse and historical copyright infringement by the art teacher, that made headlines around the world,” Joel DeBellefeuille, the parent who launched the initial lawsuit, told The Suburban.

There are now 9 families attached to the lawsuit, bringing the total demand of damages to just over $1.5 million. n

Artgate parents launch lawsuit; LBPSB silent Read More »

DDO man who killed neighbour granted parole

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Michel Langlois, 62, a man serving a life sentence after he brutally stabbed and killed his neighbour in Dollard-des-Ormeaux, was granted day parole. The victim, 27-year old Justyna Kozyra, was stabbed fourteen times near her residence in an apartment complex on Brunswick Boulevard in September, 2011.

A dispute between the janitor of the two-building apartment complex and Kozyra began in 2010 over her failure to pick up her dog’s poop on the property. The dispute continued until her death, in 2011. Langlois was the janitor’s boyfriend at that time and decided to involved himself in the argument with Kozyra, confronting her about the issue on multiple occasions.

The couple made several complaints to the city of Dollard-des-Ormeaux’s public security service. On September 8, 2011, while Langlois was gardening on the grounds of the apartment complex in the company of a public security agent and his boyfriend, Kozyra approached them to confront them about their meeting. Langlois had a knife in his hand when she approached them and he assaulted and repeatedly stabbed the victim in front of witnesses while his boyfriend and the security agent tried to stop him.

Langlois was arrested and the victim was taken to the hospital in critical condition where she was later declared dead. Langlois was convicted of second-degree murder with a minimum of 10 years imprisonment before he could apply for parole.

Following a lengthy psychiatric evaluation and the decision in his favour by the parole board, he will be released to a halfway house in Laval where he will reside for the next six months. n

DDO man who killed neighbour granted parole Read More »

18-year old charged with arson in Vaudreuil Walmart fire

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

An 18-year-old Hudson man is facing charges of arson following the fire that closed the Walmart on Boulevard de la Gare in Vaudreuil-Dorion indefinitely on February 20.

Following a psychological evaluation at the Philippe-Pinel institute, Luciano Minisini-Burke was deemed fit to stand trial. He is facing charges of arson and disregard for human life, as there were workers and shoppers inside the building at the time of the fire.

Minisini-Burke was arrested by Quebec provincial police officers shortly after the fire was reported at the Walmart. The store remains closed indefinitely while efforts to repair the damages are underway. Following repairs and cleaning, MAPAQ – the ministry that oversees hygiene and food safety in Montreal and surrounding areas – will conduct a thorough investigation before the store can reopen to the public.

The reopening date has not been established.

18-year old charged with arson in Vaudreuil Walmart fire Read More »

West Island activist invited to UN Women’s Commission

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Beaconsfield local Linda Sestock, known throughout the West Island for her far reach in community service, has graduated from local initiatives to international efforts as she was invited to attend the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women.

As a longstanding member of the Montreal Lakeshore University Women’s Club, Sestock moved on to become president of the club for a time and is currently the vice president and deputy president of the Canadian Federation of University Women (CFUW) which includes six clubs in Quebec. She was invited along with a delegation of 20 CFUW women from across Canada to New York for the UN Commission on the Status of Women 68 (UNCSW68).

From March 11-22, Sestock will join forces with policy makers, government officials and activists from around the world to weigh in on proposed changes to improve the lives of women worldwide. “My mom came from a family of nine. She left school at age 14 and worked as a bell operator. Thanks to her mother’s efforts, Sestock became the first woman in her family to attend university. “I want to help other women have equal opportunity. Women represent fifty per cent of the population yet we are still fighting for basic things.”

The mission of the UNCSW68 is to accelerate the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls by addressing poverty and strengthening institutions and financing with gender perspective.

Sestock advocates that the improvement of women’s conditions contributes to the overall health of a society. “Better conditions for women, means better conditions for the community.” n

West Island activist invited to UN Women’s Commission Read More »

Province, borough can’t fix Sherbrooke exit on Decarie North

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

It can be maddening, as anyone who has spent more than a few minutes in gridlock will tell you.

The Sherbrooke exit on northbound Décarie is often much worse at rush hour, where the entire area’s fluidity is further complicated by the barricaded U-turn circling back south to Addington for those wanting to head west via de Maisonneuve.

Provincial highway infrastructure joins with arterial and residential streets across the city, but the concrete barrier and pylons dropped here each winter for more than a decade forces commuters to wait while trying to exit the highway, then inch their way up and onto Sherbrooke, through jams going west to circle south. It’s a slow route creating more traffic, more idling, more headaches, and more costly intervention with occasional SPVM officers managing traffic.

The obstruction of the 70-metre roadway does not appear on the city’s obstruction map, but it does show as “route fermée” on the province’s Info-Travaux.

NDG councillor Peter McQueen told The Suburban the roadway has been blocked by Transports Québec because MTQ snowplows that clear the U are too wide to drive down Addington ever since they built a sound wall. Asked why the U loop cannot be cleared with the same equipment used on Addington or bike paths and sidewalks, McQueen said “they cannot plow the U with a city of Montreal plow because the only way to access it is by coming off the highway. It has been like that since they built the exit and wall on Addington about 15 years ago.”

The ministry can clear snow from its ramp and turnaround, but the issue is with exiting onto the municipal road network, MTQ spokesperson Sarah Bensadoun confirmed to The Suburban. “The street is too narrow, due in part to the presence of vehicles parked on both sides,” she told The Suburban. “This is especially difficult after accumulations of snow, which shrinks the space even further.”

The department had previously cleared snow in this area, says Bensadoun, but after several episodes of plows being blocked, “the Ministry offered the borough two solutions to keep the U-turn open in winter”: prohibit parking on one side of the street in winter or take over clearing the U-turn, since the borough already has small snow removal equipment. “Since the borough had refused both proposals, the Ministry had no choice but to close this section each winter.” McQueen says removing parking on Addington was something that neither local residents or local businesses want.

Indeed, borough communications director Étienne brunet told The Suburban the borough does not take care of this small turn “because there is no other access than by highway. To get there, our teams would have to take the highway and take a very long detour. Secondly, it is not part of the public domain for which we are responsible.”

Brunet added that the detour is only a few meters to get to Sherbrooke and go back down through Addington at the second light or to make the right turn on Sherbrooke and take Prud’homme to reach de Maisonneuve. “This is certainly an additional travel time, but it is safe to do so.”

The Transport ministry does not have small trucks, said Bensadoun, as they are not suitable for clearing snow from highways which represents the vast majority of their operations, and what small vehicles they do possess don’t have the equipment or power to clear highway roadbeds.

So in the meantime, the traffic infrastructure remains off limits to… traffic, but there is hope, as winter’s worst days seem behind us.

Province, borough can’t fix Sherbrooke exit on Decarie North Read More »

Hydro plan to cut outages might help CDN/NDG

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

Hydro-Québec is launching the first part of its 2035 Action Plan, which aims to boost service quality by reducing outages by about a third within 10 years.

Job one is reducing outages caused by vegetation by about 30% within five years, which means trimming branches and felling trees as contacts between vegetation and power lines are the main cause of breakdowns on the network, Hydro Chief Operating and Infrastructure Officer Claudine Bouchard told reporters Wednesday.

The utility plans to nearly double expenditures to more than $45 billion over a decade and will spend $130 million this year alone on trimming and cutting, clearing 220,000 spans representing some 22,000 km of lines, and felling about 75,000 trees deemed a risk. That will require new collaboration between municipalities and customers to carry out more preventive work, including cutting down trees likely to cause breakdowns. (Outages represent significant costs for Hydro-Québec: From 2016 to 2021, the utility spent between $144 million and $202 million per year on corrective maintenance following outages, even though preventing failure is generally less expensive than corrective intervention during or after outages.)

The utility will also boost network resilience by inspecting 17,000 km of overhead lines, 200,000 poles and 10,000 civil engineering structures and strategic equipment. It will carry out 7,500 equipment maintenance interventions, replace more than 28,000 wooden posts and install more than 500 composite posts; add 12.5 km of covered wires and bury 7 km of lines in the Outaouais and North Shore.

The borough of Côte des Neiges—Notre Dame de Grace just unveiled a plan to plant 5,000 new trees over five years. The borough canopy was hard hit during recent storms, including last April’s ice storm and the area is plagued by power outages year-round. Despite Hydro-Québec operating outside the city’s direct control, Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa is in regular contact with Hydro-Québec and NDG MNA Désirée McGraw, said a statement from her office, “effectively voicing the frustration and dismay felt by CDN-NDG regarding the all-too-recurrent power outages. We are pleased to see that Hydro-Québec is finally taking steps to reduce the number of outages.”

The borough is cautiously optimistic “subject to further evaluation,” that their planting activities are unlikely to significantly impact power supply because the city selected species from a roster pre-approved by Hydro-Quebec to ensure compatibility with their infrastructure. Hydro-Québec and the city have also established a collaborative forum to facilitate ongoing dialogue and cooperation.

The announcement comes 14 months after Quebec Auditor-General Guylaine Leclerc slammed the crown corporation in a stunning, unprecedented 51-page report over Hydro’s laggard service, maintenance and replacement of aging equipment, poor data and reducing frequency and duration of power outages. That report noted Hydro-Québec’s reliability declined markedly, with average outage time per powered customer increasing by 63% between 2012 and 2021, excluding outages due to major weather events. n

Hydro plan to cut outages might help CDN/NDG Read More »

Fencing Cavendish

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

Cavendish is getting a fence.

Côte-des-Neiges—Notre Dame de Grâce borough council approved a motion to install 287 metres of fencing on the Cavendish median between Sherbrooke and the de Maisonneuve overpass this year.

Cavendish is a major axis with two lanes of traffic in a north/south direction and this is a section with dense vehicle and pedestrian traffic. There are also bus stops on both sides of the boulevard as well as businesses and several apartment buildings with many pedestrians needing to cross east/west and vice versa.

In December 2022, a teenage girl was seriously injured after she was struck by a vehicle while illegally crossing opposite Place Cavendish. It was determined that a fence could improve the safety of pedestrians on the block by encouraging them to cross at the Sherbrooke intersection or using the de Maisonneuve overpass.

The project consists of installing new fences of approximately 287 linear metres; and if required, reconstruction of sections of the central concrete median, repair of water works and interventions on urban technical networks.

The borough will design and execute the work and the central city, responsible for the Cavendish artery, will assume the estimated $495,000 cost. A call for tenders is expected in March with a contract awarded in April and completion of work this summer. n

Fencing Cavendish Read More »

Plante is “out of order” CDN/NDG council told

By Joel Ceausu
The Suburban

CDN-NDG council question period is often a tame affair but at times spirited and animated, as when council regular Sharon Freedman didn’t mince words taking Projet Montréal’s borough and center city administrations to task over housing, anti-Semitism and mobility.

“In six years neither this council nor Mayor Plante has achieved anything our community wants or needs” Freedman told February council. “Plante has done nothing for social housing, but will spend $1.8 billion to renew downtown… She refuses to allow cars at Blue Bonnets, Hotel Dieu has not been built and you have not renovated Walkley, Project Chance (a property housing young single mothers that closed after flooding but was never repaired sits vacant), Somerled, Fielding, Queen Mary, all these streets. You have done nothing with the Empress Theatre but allow it to rot.”

“We want freedom of choice for mobility, we don’t only want bike paths. Our community drives cars and that’s not going to change. Where is the promised Cavendish?” (where millions are already set aside) she said. “Plante promised it and you (Borough Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa) have not advocated to alleviate the congestion.”

“When will you start to build housing and Cavendish as promised, and you have the money…” she asked, sporting a t-shirt emblazoned with “When will Walkley be renovated?”, a reference to a vacant, city-owned building in disrepair for years in the heart of CDN-NDG amid the worst housing crisis in recent memory. Snowdon councillor Sonny Moroz pointed out “If we were to be sincere about the list of projects that CDN-NDG hasn’t accomplished over the last 6-7 years, then you might be wearing a very long dress.” He said Freedman’s points “need to also be made at City Hall. We need to do a better job in CDN-NDG of showing that we’re paying attention and that we care about these issues because when people bring issues to downtown, they get addressed.”

Freedman continued, slamming the Projet Montréal administration and Plante over the repeated flaunting of Agglomeration council rules on display last month, when activists harangued Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi after being encouraged to attend by Plante at a previous city council meeting.

“My community stands with Israel and Jeremy Levi” she said. “Neither you nor Plante have any jurisdiction over Israel. Israel has a right to defend itself as per the International Criminal Court. The agglomeration council is supposed to deal with money, transportation and housing, and not foreign affairs, and not in the way they did it. Mayor Plante was out of order” she said, allowing people to make numerous anti-Israel speeches, and attack the only Jewish mayor present with repeated, aggressive questioning with zero relevance to agglomeration business.

Plante was recently served with legal notice on behalf of some Jewish Montrealers alleging her failure to intervene and enforce all laws, by-laws and regulations governing unlawful assemblies, and allowing Montreal “to become a territory for extreme groups who assemble with the view of spreading hate and interfering with the daily lives of Montrealers under the guise of freedom for terrorism.”

Freedman says Plante allows “anti-Jewish rhetoric” and asked council to ensure security for the community by allowing off-duty or retired armed police officers at all Jewish institutions as threats to Montreal’s Jewish community have hit record highs since the terrorist massacre of Israelis on October 7. “Please, we need your help because this is not going to go away!”

Moroz said that specific request was made by all local Jewish institutions dealing with security, and a community action plan is in the works with “a group of elected officials in the western part of Montreal that is growing, so if there’s anyone here on council wants to add their name to that list, we’re working on it.” He says after a draft version of the plan was leaked last month, Quebec Public Security Minister François Bonnardel gave that measure “an unequivocal ‘no’, adding “all representatives must articulate the concerns of our community, especially the most vulnerable,” and it is not only the Jewish community that needs more protection.

Plante is “out of order” CDN/NDG council told Read More »

Court of Appeal rejects CSL bid to dismiss Meadowbrook case

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Quebec Court of Appeal Judge Benoît Moore has upheld a December 2023 Quebec Superior Court decision to reject the City of Côte St. Luc’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit against them by the owners of the Meadowbrook Golf Course. CSL will, instead, have to argue the case on the merits.

Meadowbrook Groupe Pacifique and the site’s previous owner have wanted to develop the golf course, which is located in Côte St. Luc and the City of Montreal borough of Lachine, for housing for decades. Legal actions have been taken by Meadowbrook contesting Montreal’s refusal to enable the course to be developed. Legal action was also taken in 2002, against CSL’s rezoning in 2000 of its part of the land from residential to recreational, which Meadowbrook’s owner calls a “disguised expropriation.”

In 2022, as reported by The Suburban, Quebec Superior Court Judge Babak Barin rejected two June 2021 bids by Montreal and Côte St. Luc to dismiss then-new legal action against them by Meadowbrook Groupe Pacific. There were previous amendments to the original case by MGP.

Last November, Councillor Dida Berku introduced a resolution at council calling on the firm of Belanger Sauvé to file a motion to dismiss the case. She told The Suburban that “our attorney uncovered [a technical irregularity], that they declare one owner to be the owner of the Lachine side, and another owner to be the owner of the Côte St. Luc side.”

Berku provided an update at the Feb. 12 council meeting, saying the longstanding case is continuing.

“There’s no end to it,” she added. “It’s another motion in the saga of who is the real owner of the golf course. We will soon find out the result of that.”

Two days later, the Court of Appeal made its decision to uphold the Superior Court’s rejection of CSL’s motion to dismiss the golf course owner’s case.

Asked about the latest decision, Berku explained to The Suburban Feb. 22 that there is one plaintiff in the CSL case, and another in the case against Montreal.

The owner “says it’s the same company and our lawyer’s position was that you can’t have the owner on title suing in one case and then the owner who’s not on title, but who has a counter-letter, suing in the other case.

“Basically, the court said it’s a legal issue that can be debated at trial. So we will do that.” n

Court of Appeal rejects CSL bid to dismiss Meadowbrook case Read More »

Plante confronted at Agglo on failure to deal with antisemitism

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

After agglomeration meetings in December and January in which 16 anti-Israel questioners were allowed to attack Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi for his support of Israel in its conflict with Hamas since its Oct. 7 terrorist attack, Montrealers confronted Mayor Valérie Plante at the Agglo meeting on the city’s allowance of hateful anti-Israel demonstrations. Attorney Neil Oberman, senior partner at Spiegel Sohmer, recently served Plante with a formal demand letter by bailiff that the City of Montreal immediately intervene and enforce all laws, by-laws and regulations governing unlawful assemblies.

Before the question period began, agglomeration council meeting chair Nancy Blanchet explained that a meeting took place between the City of Montreal and the Association of Suburban Municipalities following the January meeting regarding the rules of question period. At the December and January meetings, Blanchet allowed more than the three permitted questions on a specific subject, a subject of two complaints to the Quebec Municipal Commission by B’nai Brith Canada. At the February meeting, she employed the three-question limit. As it turned out, there was only one anti-Israel question.

(Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi posted on X that “the initial minutes from the January agglo meeting failed to mention the ASM’s preference for addressing only agglo-related questions. I contested this and successfully prompted a revision of the minutes. Additionally, I’m pleased to report that Valérie Plante has now implemented the longstanding three-question limit on similar queries.”)

This time, the three allowed questions regarded what is seen as lack of action by Montreal and Plante against antisemitism, particularly at anti-Israel demonstration that include placards with the genocidal slogan “from the river to the sea.” Some questioners wore clothing with the message “Bring Them Home,” referring to hostages held by Hamas since Oct. 7.

Juran Tel Aziza, speaking in English, asked Plante if she asked Montreal police to report to her “…the hateful words that incite violence and the total destruction of the entire Jewish people…That’s their solution, from the river to the sea. You, Madame Plante and the police, let them go week after week until words turn into action! Look at what’s happening in London, Toronto, Paris, Belgium and now Montreal! How come there haven’t been any arrests for the attacks on schools, institutions and incitement to hatred that is heard on our streets, week after week?!”

Plante declined to answer in English, instead doing so in French. She said it is important for the SPVM to provide security “and we’re working very hard to do that.” She also said demonstrations are allowed under the Canadian and Quebec Charter, and that the SPVM is on hand to maintain the peace.

Georgette Bensimon brought up the letter sent by leaders from numerous ethnic communities demanding the resignation of Bochra Manaï, the city’s Anti-Racism Commissioner who attended anti-Israel rallies where antisemitic chants were heard.

François Limoges, the new Projét Montréal majority leader replacing Alex Norris, repeated the message Plante said last November, when the controversy first arose, that Manaï will meet with all of the affected communities, and that there is “clearly a bond of trust to be strengthened.” Bensimon said, to her knowledge, Manaï has not yet met with the Jewish community, “at all.

“She should be neutral and open to all communities.”

Later, Côte St. Luc resident Sharon Freedman told Plante that demonstrations must be peaceful, respectful and obey the law, but that the ones that have taken place since Oct. 7 “spew out horrible, hateful language and they usually incite violence. Mayor Plante, our community has asked you often to protect our Jewish community against the violence, the gunshots [at Jewish schools], but you have not done much about that. What are you prepared to do to stop those kinds of demonstrations?”

Instead of Plante, Freedman received a response, this time in English, from Alain Vaillancourt, the Montreal executive committee member in charge of public security. He claimed that the anti-Israel demonstrations have been peaceful.”We understand it’s been difficult, we understand that people need to express themselves on both sides, and they choose to do so through demonstrations in different forms.” Vaillancourt repeated Plante’s point that the Canadian and Quebec Charters allow demonstrations.

“They need to do it peacefully and in the correct way. I frequently speak with police chief Fady Dagher about everything that’s going on, and the demonstrations have been relatively peaceful, have been well balanced as far as protection and safety. When there’s a criminal or hate incident, the police are there to intervene. We ask people, if you’re witness or are subjected to a [crime or hate], call 911. We’ve increased the resources for people to investigate the situations, and the police are serious about it. We’re serious about it. It’s zero tolerance….Both communities are [demonstrating] in the right way.”

Freedman, who wore clothing expressing her support for Mayor Levi, directly asked Plante “and nobody else” why she “continues to remains silent when questions of hatred, totally inappropriate for this wonderful chamber, are hurled at Mayor Levi. When are you going to take a stand, Mayor Plante?!”

Plante refused to answer. n

Plante confronted at Agglo on failure to deal with antisemitism Read More »

Potential daycare strike looms as workers leave

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The Fédération des Intervenantes en Petite Enfance du Quebec (FIPEQ) started a series of demonstrations across the province with the possibility of a coming strike should the provincial government continue to show a lack of interest in negotiating. March 31 will mark one year since FIPEQ handed in its request explaining the urgency in its demands.

For the moment, there is no strike mandate, however FIPEQ president Valerie Gagnon told The Suburban that the possibility is not off the table. “We are mobilizing our members (in demonstrations) to put pressure on the government, however we won’t wait forever if they continue to remain silent.”

The primary demands include improved salaries in consideration of inflation and staff retention. Some CPE workers are paid as low as $18 an hour — with a medium annual salary of $45,000 for CPE educators. “This is not acceptable,” Gagnon said.

“The government announced its intention to build more CPE centres. They can invest millions in concrete buildings but there is no personnel to fill those spaces. They are approaching this from the wrong angle,” Gagnon explained.

Currently there are 32,000 children on the waitlist and the system is short 18,000 educators, according to Gagnon. She said educators are walking off the job as salaries do not correspond to their cost of living. “Those who stay are under a lot of pressure as they become irreplaceable due to the shortage of staff.” In 2022, 3,000 educators left their posts while 3,200 vacant spots were already unfilled.

According to those statistics, the existing establishments are operating with nearly a 20 per cent staff shortage. “What good will it do to open more establishments without first resolving the underlying cause of these issues? The government’s plan is to build a bunch of empty buildings?” Gagnon said.

According to Gagnon, home daycares have also taken a particular hit as the caregivers are responsible for providing meals. “When food prices go up, they have to fork the bill. It’s not like a family who can choose to downgrade to frozen pizza to save some cash, these people have strict nutritional guidelines to follow.” n

Potential daycare strike looms as workers leave Read More »

WIBCA to build new community centre

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The West Island Black Community Association (WIBCA) announced that it will build a new community centre to accommodate growing needs. To complete the project that it hopes to break ground on in 2025, WIBCA is aiming to raise $4 million.

With over 400 members, WIBCA is a well established community resource. With the expansion of activities offered, it relies at the moment on the accommodations offered at the Dollard-des-Ormeaux Civic Centre.

“We decided we have to make space for the needs of everyone in the community, especially for the youth,” WIBCA president Joan Lee said.

Lee says the expansion will allow WIBCA to offer its services under one roof. Some of those services include the Maasai Boys mentoring program, tutoring on Saturday mornings, fitness classes for seniors, a pro bono legal clinic and the award-winning robotics club.

The new building will house shared spaces for group activities, as well as a robotics lab.

Grade 8 student Makayla Ayitey-Armah, who attends the robotics program at WIBCA. says she wants to become an astronaut. “Thanks to WIBCA, I’ve visited the Canadian Space Agency.”

“Anybody that’s come to any event at WIBCA knows that this building is vibrant and it’s a reflection of the community here,” WIBCA vice president Frank Baylis said.

WIBCA has already raised a portion of the money needed with the help of private companies to realize its new development and has been promised support from neighbouring municipalities as well as the Quebec government. n

WIBCA to build new community centre Read More »

Puglisi deemed unfit to stand trial in Vaudreuil double murder

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Fabio Puglisi has been deemed unfit to stand trial following his arrest last week at the crime scene where two women were stabbed to death in a residential condo building in Vaudreuil-Dorion. The 44-year old accused underwent a psychiatric assessment at the Philippe-Pinel institute that was made public Thursday at the Salaberry-de-Valleyfield courthouse. Puglisi will remain detained at the institute where he will receive pharmacological treatment for 30 days.

“This 30-day treatment aims to stabilize Puglisi’s mental state,” Judge Bertrand St-Arnaud stated. Puglisi is scheduled to return to court on March 25. He faces two counts of second degree murder in the death of his mother Elisabetta Caucci-Puglisi, 68, and a neighbour, Manon Blanchard, 53 as well as one count of attempted murder and aggravated assault for the alleged attack on an elderly neighbour who was rushed to the hospital in critical condition and has since stabilized.

The accused has been found not criminally responsible on two previous occasions due to his mental health condition. He was also accused of assaulting a complete stranger in front of his residence last fall and was scheduled to face charges one week prior to the most recent attack.

Puglisi deemed unfit to stand trial in Vaudreuil double murder Read More »

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