Shannon

Bruce Kirkwood is the Grand Marshal of the 2025 Défilé de la Saint-Patrick de Québec

Bruce Kirkwood is the Grand Marshal of the 2025 Défilé de la Saint-Patrick de Québec

Cassandra Kerwin, Local Journalism Initiative reporter

cassandra@qctonline.com

Green season is in full swing in Quebec City and around the region. Green, white and orange flags are being raised everywhere. Irish jigs and reels are heard loud and clear. Traditional emblems decorate Quebec City in preparation for the 2025 Défilé de la Saint- Patrick de Québec (DPSQ).

The organizers of the annual parade traditionally choose a grand marshal who has been deeply involved in the local Irish community. This year, the selection committee chose Bruce Kirkwood, a career volunteer.

“[When I was told that I was this year’s Grand Marshal], I didn’t believe it. I thought it was a joke or that someone was pulling my leg,” said Kirkwood. “But when I saw the seriousness in the president of the committee, Félix-Antoine Paradis’s face, I realized that the time was now. It is big. When you are named grand marshal, you are walking in some big shoes, following Dennis Dawson, Pauline Bigaouette McCarthy and the original [grand marshal], Marianna O’Gallagher, to name a few.

“Having been on the committee for a number of years, I have the list, but I did not consult it to see how I’d fit in,” said Kirkwood. “It is interesting to know that being a professional volunteer gets recognized. That is what is appreciated.”

Kirkwood is everywhere and involved in almost everything in the Irish community. He is a handyman, musician, photographer, sound engineer, driver, genealogist and more, known for his intelligence, quick wit and diplomacy. He has lent a hand at Shannon Irish Shows, Irish dancing shows and com- petitions, parades and a multitude of other events over the years. He was on the board of the DSPQ until 2023, when he stepped down as vice-president of operations.

“It is a wonderful recognition of all I have done for the Irish community and the DSPQ,” said Kirkwood. “I re- tired because I felt that I had done my part, and my role had run its course after 10 years. I had been part of the committee during the pandemic, which was a little rough, to say the least. Should I mention that [Terry Kerwin’s] passing cut my legs out from under me?”

Kerwin*, as president of the DSPQ, and Kirkwood, as vice-president of operations, complemented each other. Kirkwood said they had hit their stride to bring the DSPQ to its full potential when Kerwin died in January 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic hit a few weeks later, and the parade didn’t return until 2023.

Kirkwood and Kerwin were behind one of the parade’s most cherished traditions – the visit of five police pipe- and-drum bands from Chicago, New York City, Boston, Philadelphia and Toronto, as well as the civilian Montreal Pipes and Drums, to Quebec City. The Quebec City parade is always held a week after St. Patrick’s Day, to allow all bands to march in their respective hometown parades.

Kirkwood was born and raised in Quebec City and baptized at St. Patrick’s Church. He has been volunteering since the age of 12, starting as an “in-house” DJ at the original Shannon Hall for weekend dances and events. In 1974, his family settled in Shannon, “a move that helped forge a sense of community spirit and belonging,” he wrote. “It takes a village – in this case, two: Shannon and Valcartier – to raise a passionate volunteer.” Having felt at home in Shannon, he built a home in neighbouring Saint-Gabriel- de-Valcartier, where he resides with his family and continues to volunteer.

*Disclosure: The late Terry Kerwin, former president of the Défilé de la Saint-Patrick de Québec committee, is the author’s father.

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Caire resigns as minister over SAAQClic debacle

Caire resigns as minister over SAAQClic debacle

Caire resigns over SAAQClic fiasco

Kevin Dougherty

kevindougherty@qctonline.com

Cybersecurity minister Éric Caire has stepped down in the wake of the scandal engulfing Quebec’s public auto insurance agency. The Société d’assurance auto- mobile du Québec (SAAQ), which manages the province’s no-fault car insurance and issues drivers’ licences and vehicle registrations, has been under fire since a failed transition to a new online platform two years ago caused chaos at service centres. In a report released Feb. 20, Auditor General Guylaine Leclerc found a planned $638-million update to the online system ultimately cost taxpayers over $1 billion. Opposition MNAs were outraged, calling for an investigation.

When asked if government ministers were aware of the overrun before the new SAAQclic system crashed two years ago, resulting in some Quebec motorists still without metal licence plates, Leclerc said she could not answer that. However, in an interview with Le Devoir, Karl Malenfant, then SAAQ vice-president in charge of the project, said he did inform Caire in June 2022. Caire denied Malenfant’s version of events, but ultimately resigned as minister on Feb. 27. On March 2, as this newspaper was being prepared for publication, Premier François Legault said an independent public inquiry would be launched in the coming days. “When there are failures in government, even if it is within a Crown corporation, at the end of the day we are the ones accountable to the population and we must assume this responsibility. I want us to get to the bottom of things and there are several issues that we must clarify,” the premier wrote on social media.

Caire has said he plans to stay on as MNA for the riding of La Peltrie, which includes Shannon and Sainte-Catherine de la Jacques-Cartier. Gilles Bélanger, MNA for the riding of Orford in the Eastern Townships, until recently the government’s point person on expanding access to high-speed internet, will succeed Caire as minister.

With files from Ruby Pratka, LJI reporter

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