Earth Day

Earth Day event in Île-Perrot brings community and green solutions together

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

The hum of shovels scraping compost and the chatter of neighbours sharing gardening tips filled the east-side lot at Michel-Martin park on Saturday as Île-Perrot marked its annual Earth Day. Residents lined up with bins and buckets, ready to collect the compost produced by the city’s year-round organic waste program. The annual event is a spring ritual that signals the unofficial start of planting season in the community.

City staff, easy to spot in their bright orange safety vests, kept things running smoothly, filling each container for residents as they made their way through the distribution points. Proof of residence was required, and each household could take home up to 100 litres of compost or mulch – enough to give backyard gardens a solid boost. By midday, supplies were running low, a testament to the event’s popularity.

The event, running from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., offered much more than just free compost and mulch. With Mother’s Day on the horizon, many left with potted plants, while others browsed the new lineup of kiosks focused on sustainable living. This year, the city added more ways to get involved, including advice on urban agriculture, a bike tune-up clinic, and hands-on activities for both children and families.

The Société d’horticulture environnementale des villes de l’île Perrot manned the first kiosk, distributing vegetable seeds—beans, chard, spinach, lettuce—and herb plants like basil, chives, and oregano, all in limited quantities. Over at the Vélo Québec tent, residents who signed up ahead of time rolled in their bikes for personalized tune-ups and advice on cycling safely around town.

For those interested in local biodiversity, Prollifora’s team offered honey tastings and handed out milkweed “seed bombs,” hoping to encourage more pollinator-friendly gardens. Meanwhile, the city’s own booth focused on urban forestry and waste management, with tree saplings including birch, spruce, maple, and pine available for planting in neighbourhood yards.

Raffles and prize draws added a festive touch, with semi-mature trees and children’s books among the prizes. For many, the real reward was a sense of community and shared environmental purpose. Earth Day in Île-Perrot continues to highlight collective action, making the city a little greener, one bucket of compost at a time.

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Climate activists form Earth Day human chain around National Assembly

Climate activists form Earth Day human chain around National Assembly

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

On April 22, Earth Day, thousands of Quebecers, including members of the Coalition régionale pour la justice climatique et sociale (CRJCS), formed a human chain around the National Assembly to send a message about climate change, the importance of implementing environmentally friendly strategies, and the need to hold governments and corporations accountable.

“The climate is warming faster than expected, with 2024 being the hottest year in recorded history. Last year, average land and ocean tempera- tures rose 1.3 degrees Celsius. The consequences are already being felt across the planet with increasingly extreme weather events, thawing permafrost and the rampant loss of ecosystems. These consequences have an impact on our food, our health, our income and our quality of life,” said Naélie Bouchard-Sylvain of the Regroupement d’éducation populaire en action communautaire des régions de Québec et Chaudière-Appalaches. “This puts us on a trajectory where the human and social costs will be catastrophic in the next two decades.

“Meanwhile, our governments are backtracking on several climate measures,” said Bouchard-Sylvain. “While the majority of the population sees their living conditions worsen, one per cent continue their luxurious lifestyles thanks to their portfolio of polluting stocks and political influence. On this Earth Day, we demand an acceleration of the fight against the climate and biodiversity crises, such as phasing out fossil fuels, and a massive reinvestment in environmentally friendly public and social services.”

Organizers presented a seven-foot-long by three-foot-wide “ticket” to the government for their perceived inaction on climate, which was hung from the ramparts and quickly pulled down by police officers.

Fighting deforestation and pesticide overuse

At the municipal level, Quebec City is encouraging “no-mow May” and pesticide- free movements on most municipal lawns. In addition, the city will distribute free trees on May 1.

In a joint effort with the federal government through a $440-million investment, Quebec aims to plant 100 million trees in public and private forests by 2030-31. The Quebec government restricts deforestation to 278,000 square kilometres of its 834,000 square kilometres of forests. It also requires the forestry industry to rotate lots by continuously replanting. However, environmentalists argue the government is not doing enough and not acting fast enough.

Quebec’s Bill 97, An Act mainly to modernize the for- est regime, was introduced on April 23. Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry Maïté Blanchette Vézina presented amendments to the bill that aim to create “priority forest management zones.” Environmentalists fear that the forest industry, with the government’s support, is going too far. “In priority forest management zones, the plan even goes so far as to ban protected areas, which means banning conservation. It’s as if the Ministry of Forests is trying to protect itself legally against the Ministry of the Environment,” said Alice-Anne Simard, director general of Nature Québec. “These amendments could be compromising the achievements of our conservation objectives.”

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