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  • Kate 12:57 on 2025-01-19 Permalink | Reply  

    CBC has a brief profile of a master tailor who’s been doing business in Hochelaga for 50 years, but the story is a little confused. Is the man closing up shop and retiring, or is he seeking an apprentice? I can’t see how he can do both.

     
    • Blork 18:22 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

      I think he just wants to pass on his knowledge to someone, which is not related to closing the store (aside from not wanting to see the finality of the store closing AND his decades of experience and knowledge just go ZAP into the ether).

    • Kate 20:04 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

      But apprenticeship is a practical thing. You can’t teach someone a concrete skill like tailoring unless you have materials, space and tools to work with.

  • Kate 11:34 on 2025-01-19 Permalink | Reply  

    Radio-Canada has a feature on historical predictions for 2025 including a 1975 vision of Mirabel as the busiest airport in the world.

     
    • yasymbologist 16:50 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

      Maybe Mirabel will be busy again in 2050, when YUL and YUH are both saturated.

  • Kate 10:15 on 2025-01-19 Permalink | Reply  

    Denis Coderre has applied to compete for leadership of the Quebec Liberal party, and also threatens to sue Revenu Québec for revealing details of his tax woes.

    It’s a long haul for the candidates. The new PLQ leader will only be announced on June 14. Three others have declared an interest so far.

    Westmount mayor Christina Smith joins the growing list of Quebec mayors declining to seek re‑election this fall.

     
    • walkerp 13:32 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

      This guy is like the Terminator of politics.

    • Kate 18:14 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

      “I’ll be back”?

  • Kate 14:06 on 2025-01-18 Permalink | Reply  

    Shelters are preparing for frigid temperatures expected in town overnight Sunday and into the week.

    Hydro-Quebec is going to be asking us to turn down the heat.

     
    • Kate 10:56 on 2025-01-18 Permalink | Reply  

      Several media are covering the story that Hershey Canada is discontinuing the Cherry Blossom, a candy with history in Montreal, where it was produced at the Lowney factory in Griffintown. The Gazette says fans are buying up the last stock. Wikipedia.

      24 heures ran the story with the clickbait front page headline Les adeptes disent adieu au chocolat controversé. Not to everyone’s taste, maybe, but not exactly controversial.

      At left, a photo I took in 2006 when the Lowney factory was being turned into condos.

      Adding: Taylor Noakes thinks the company ought to make the recipe public domain.

       
      • Janet 13:16 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        Love your photo, Kate!

      • Kate 14:02 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        : )

      • GC 14:32 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        Me, too. I’ve only seen it since it became condos. I know some people who live in that building. There’s a giant cherry statue in the courtyard and I knew it had been a factory before. I never made the connection that it produced those specific candies.

      • GC 14:34 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        I personally didn’t like them, but I agree that “controversial” is perhaps a bit melodramatic. “Polarizing” perhaps. It’s not the headline I see when I click on it now, though. Was it updated?

      • GC 14:35 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        Oh, never mind. You said “front page” and it IS still there. #readingcomprehension

      • Kate 18:57 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        GC, I linked to the article rather than the front page, because that’s likely to be changed quickly, so it’s not surprising you didn’t see it. I’ve screenshotted that bit here. Sorry about that!

      • Uatu 18:59 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        Immediately thought of this whenever Cherry Blossom is mentioned

        https://youtu.be/xgawtIMv39s?si=IkDpnQOJ2vzFZK55

        Remember seeing it as a kid and later on only realized that whoever made it was high AF. Lol

      • Taylor 20:45 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

        Makes me think of when General Mills torpedoed Liberte cream cheese in 2022. An American company can simply decide to stop making a given product, irrespective of its cultural significance, without even attempting to find someone else to produce it.

        The Europeans, by contrast, go to considerable lengths to protect their culturally significant foods. If France can define and protect champagne and Italy can define and protect pizza or pasta, why aren’t we doing the same for our home grown foods?

        The irony here is that, if the Lowney Cherry Blossoms recipe was public domain and there were certain guidelines governing what a Cherry Blossom candy is, that could actually stimulate competition – think of how many kinds of champagne there are.

        Food for thought (no pun intended): the cherry blossom candy is roughly as old professional hockey in Canada.

      • JP 00:25 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

        I think Cadbury has a version, which I actually prefer.

      • JaneyB 08:32 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

        @Uatu – Oh my! I remember that jingle. It takes me right back.

      • DeWolf 14:12 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

        @Taylor AOC-style protections are for artisanal products, not ultra-processed industrial foods. They’re meant to protect regional origins and methods of production. The goal isn’t to make industrial recipes public domain.

        There’s nothing unique to Montreal about cherry chocolates – it’s a standard treat made by any chocolatier.

      • dhomas 14:14 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

        Queen Anne Cordial Cherries are similar, but not quite the same as Cherry Blossoms. Funnily, I saw a stack of the Queen Annes at a store yesterday, before reading this story.

      • DeWolf 19:13 on 2025-01-19 Permalink

        That’s the thing. Liberté cream cheese tasted unique, but every cream cheese tastes different. Even with a controlled designation, there would still be natural variation because nobody makes things exactly the same way even if they’re using the same general method and ingredients.

        I probably gave the impression that I’m dismissing Cherry Blossoms. That’s not my intention. They have a long history and are a distinct take on a classic style of candy. But we know the ingredients, so if someone was motivated they could make a better version that didn’t have nasty stuff like palm oil and preservatives. They could even call it something similar like a cherry bloom. It could be the start of something that actually made it a real Montreal treat.

    • Kate 10:47 on 2025-01-18 Permalink | Reply  

      The Quebec government’s decision to delay its plans for returnable bottles for two years is threatening 400 jobs at the Owens-Illinois glass factory on Wellington Street in lower Point St Charles, probably the last remnant of the Point’s industrial history.

       
      • Kate 21:01 on 2025-01-17 Permalink | Reply  

        Quebec’s population is rising, and half the increase is in Montreal. An estimated 9.1 million people now call Quebec home.

        But we now have more deaths than births in Quebec for the first time.

         
        • Kate 13:44 on 2025-01-17 Permalink | Reply  

          The Gazette is on the story about the prices of non‑dairy milk options in cafés.

          I still don’t get it. Where does the assumption come from that businesses must sell a product at a set price because you want them to? Nobody gave consumers the “right” to buy alternative ingredients at the same price as a more familiar ingredient.

           
          • Mark Côté 14:27 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Apparently the lawsuit is calling it an “abusive charge under the Quebec Consumer Protection Act”. I opened that Act and scanned quickly for “abusive” but didn’t find anything so must be a different specific legalese term… maybe H John can weigh in. 🙂

            (Completely off topic, this blog always saves my name as “Mark Côté” so I have to rewrite it every time… something you can fix in WordPress maybe? My name is an interesting test case for many applications…)

          • Joey 14:39 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            That’s a pretty long article to not feature anyone making an actual case for lowering the price of non-dairy milk, aside from Sylvain Charlebois (about whom the less said the better, but it should be noted that this genius university prof didn’t even bother to distinguish between retail and wholesale prices, as we discussed ad nauseam here last time).

          • Blork not Côté 15:21 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            I agree with Kate. While I understand that paying more for alternative milks is annoying, I don’t see this as a LEGAL issue. Since when is it the government’s job to step in and set prices for retailers on everyday items like this? It annoys me that people so quickly jump to the legal/legistative way to resolve their annoyances, without thinking about what that says about the role of the law and of governments in our society. We’re not China (yet) so we shouldn’t act like we are.

            Plant-based milks are a different product. The retailer can charge a different price if they want. Case closed.

            To me it sounds like self-entitled children crying to their parents to solve their problems.

            (BTW, adding “Côté” to my name here as a test to see if Mark’s problem happens with me too.)

          • Blork not Côté 15:22 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Follow-up on the Côté test. Problem does not happen with me. I’m using FF on a Mac. Mark, maybe the problem is your browser, or something in the settings?

          • Mark Côté 15:42 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Huh weird, it happens to me on multiple machines and multiple browsers. Thanks for testing it out for me; I’m even more confused now! 😀

          • Meezly 15:50 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            “Since when is it the government’s job to step in and set prices for retailers on everyday items like this?”

            Extracts from some recent articles:

            In 2024, Loblaw Cos. Ltd. and its parent company George Weston Ltd. agreed to pay $500 million to settle a class-action lawsuit regarding their involvement in an “industry-wide price-fixing arrangement” to raise the price of packaged bread for over ten year span. The class-action case was brought against a group of companies that includes Loblaw and the Weston companies, Metro, Walmart Canada, Giant Tiger, and Sobeys and its owner, Empire Co. Ltd.

            In June 2023, Canada Bread was fined $50 million after pleading guilty to four counts of price-fixing bread products under the Competition Act. The Competition Bureau called it the highest price-fixing fine ever imposed by a Canadian court.

            Earlier this month, CBC investigation uncovered grocers overcharging customers by selling underweighted meat. Under federal regulations, posted net weights for packaged food — and prices based on that weight — can’t include the packaging. Worried the problem could be widespread, a customer complained to the federal food regulator, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), which alerted Loblaw.

            CBC’s findings are no surprise to Terri Lee, who worked as a CFIA inspector for 24 years until her retirement in 2021. She said grocers need to better monitor their weighing systems, and the CFIA needs to do more in-store inspections.
            “The cost of food has really increased,” Lee said. “It’s extremely important now to protect the consumer.”

          • bob 16:12 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            @Meezly – cartel pricing is not the same as setting a price according to the market. What Loblows et al. did (and continue to do) is to use their effective monopoly to steal from people. Charging a premium on a niche product is not in any way the same. A café setting prices is not at all the same as an industry cartel fixing prices. One is natural competition, the other is fraud. One affects some bougie latte-drinker’s price slightly, the other has an impact on whether poor people can eat. The moral difference is stark.

          • Meezly 17:15 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Is there really a moral difference or is it just one of degrees? These are not individual coffee shops we’re talking about, but major coffee chains like Starbucks, Tim Hortons, and Second Cup. As I had previously stated, plant-based milk is no longer a niche nor bougie product for precious snowflakes (as many of you seem to keep thinking despite the evidence saying otherwise) as it can account for 30-80% of sales depending on where you live. It is a valid alternative to dairy milk for health and environmental reasons and for those who are lactose-intolerant.

            The difference is that plant-based milk historically was a niche product, which was why coffee chains charged a higher price. Fair enough, but this is no longer the case. The plant-based milk industry has grown exponentially in recent years and has even overtaken the dairy industry in some cases. So there is no longer any real reason to charge extra other than to continue making a profit at the customer’s expense.

          • Joey 17:24 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            @Meezly one is about sellers colluding to artificially inflate the price of bread, the other is about the price of a niche good not dropping fast enough, in the opinion of some – I don’t see how they are meaningfully comparable (also those evil major corps you mentioned have already stopped charging extra for non-dairy milk, so what are we even talking about? That the price of oat milk lattes two years ago was immorally high compared to dairy milk lattes, even if the difference was under a dollar?).

            Government does set price caps all the time – e.g., pharmaceutical products, for which not only is the price set, but the related fees and uncharges for others throughout the supply chain. Your local pharmacist cannot set their dispensing fee at whatever amount they want, nor can their distributor charge more than a few percentage points for the cost of acquiring, storing and delivering your medication. Obviously, it’s. in the general interest to not allow the free market to run wild when it comes to essentials, like prescription drugs; I don’t think we can make the case that the same logic must apply – on moral/ethical grounds – to lattes.

          • Joey 17:26 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            But also, and most importantly, the article makes clear that the market is working here – it includes examples of large, medium and small coffee retailers opting to reduce or eliminate the surcharges for non-dairy milk, given that it’s less and less a niche product (with economies of scale coming on board throughout the manufacturing and supply chain). In other words, oat milk is more popular, it’s therefore getting cheaper for retailers to acquire, and they are in turn reducing their prices. Why would we want government policymakers or the courts to intervene when the desired outcome is already happening?

          • Tim S. 18:28 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            The lawsuit has certainly worked as a tactic for drawing attention to this issue, judging by the conversation here, even if it might not get far as a court case. If I were one of the people behind it, I would be very, very pleased right now.

          • Kate 20:27 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Mark Côté: You have a character encoding problem. Different browsers bury this stuff in different places, but you want to make sure French is selected as one of your language options, for starters.

          • MarcG 23:34 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            Mark, if you tell me what operating system and version, and which browser and version you’re using I can look into it.

        • Kate 11:14 on 2025-01-17 Permalink | Reply  

          Weekend notes from CultMTL, CityCrunch, La Presse.

          Also when not to drive in the tunnel.

           
          • Kate 10:30 on 2025-01-17 Permalink | Reply  

            La Presse is predicting a record 6% rent hike when the guideline increase is announced next week. A bar graph shows the leap from 1.2% in 2020 to 4% last year.

             
            • DeWolf 10:53 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              That is insane. Last year’s 4% increase was based on large property tax hikes and high inflation. But inflation has dropped and at least in Montreal, tax hikes were minimal. What could possibly justify 6%?

            • jeather 10:57 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              Landlords want more money.

            • Kate 11:03 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              I think it’s an Overton window type of scenario. Everyone who has an ongoing lease will have seen how their rent compares to rent for a new place, and may be prepared to give the landlord a bit more cash now rather than tempt them to an eviction. It can even be subconscious.

            • bob 12:14 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              No, it is the government permitting landlords to rig the market in the middle of an artificially produced housing crisis. Pure rich boy cash grab.

            • Blork 12:43 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              At the risk of sounding like some “pro landlord” slob, it could also be related to the issue that in a housing crisis we need more rental units, but if rents are kept too low there is no incentive to create new rental units or to not sell off existing ones as condos and co-ops. So by making the prospect of “landlording” somewhat less unappealing, it might encourage more landlording.

              Or not. What do I know? I’m not a landlord.

            • jeather 13:38 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              A new building is not limited in rent increases for the first 5 years, so you’ve got quite a while to set rental prices high enough before you need to follow the guidelines.

            • CE 14:11 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              There’s also the fact that buildings cost quite a bit more than they did even 5 years ago. There’s a certain expectation that rental income is going to cover X amount of the mortgage. Eventually, the market rate (ie, the amount charged for an apartment in a new building) and the amount charged on an established lease is not going to line up at all. It would all work itself out if wages increased at the same rate as cost of living but that’s not happening for most people.

              I increasingly feel like our current rent prices are simply going back to “normal.” We look back at the 70s to early 2000s as a time when rents were affordable and that’s how it’s supposed to be. In fact, rents have always been very expensive and working people have always had trouble paying them. Just look back at the literature of the time, Bonheur D’occasion is mostly a book about trying to find an affordable apartment, Many of Michel Tremblay’s books detail how families crushed as many people into apartments as possible to be able to pay the rent. I don’t see a path to how we’re going to go back to post-industrialization, post-referundum, post-suburbanization rental prices in the city again, at least not in the near future.

            • Kate 14:37 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              CE: but is there a normal? One of the best things the old PQ did for Quebec was to establish the old Régie du logement. (Well, that and pass laws and call referendums that persuaded people to leave Quebec, thus lowering property values for a generation.) They passed the law that banned deposits on apartments: I can only vaguely remember older relatives talking about a time when getting apartments involved having to pay key money to get access. This kind of thing was made illegal and it was all good.

              This whole thing is adjustable by policy, as bob suggests above. There are benefits to capitalism in having the working class worried and scared. We’re living them.

            • Ian 15:02 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              Landlords and rent-seeking are nothing new. Just look at the Monopoly board game … and know that it was in fact stolen by Parker Brothers from Georgists.

              What are Georgists?

              “Georgism is concerned with the distribution of economic rent caused by land ownership, natural monopolies, pollution rights, and control of the commons, including title of ownership for natural resources and other contrived privileges (e.g., intellectual property). Any natural resource that is inherently limited in supply can generate economic rent, but the classical and most significant example of land monopoly involves the extraction of common ground rent from valuable urban locations. Georgists argue that taxing economic rent is efficient, fair, and equitable. The main Georgist policy recommendation is a tax assessed on land value, arguing that revenues from a land value tax (LVT) can be used to reduce or eliminate existing taxes (such as on income, trade, or purchases) that are unfair and inefficient. Some Georgists also advocate for the return of surplus public revenue to the people by means of a basic income or citizen’s dividend.”

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgism

              In my opinion, shared by some others, rent-seeking behaviour like subscriptions replacing purchases, landlords engaging in price-fixing, and property speculation in all forms are the core basis of many of the economic evils of modern western society.

            • Bert 15:16 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              “Where does the assumption come from that businesses must sell a product at a set price because you want them to?”

              Real estate and construction costs rise as the market dictates. Rents, who depend on real estate and construction costs rise by a relation to inflation.

            • CE 15:36 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              @Kate: I don’t think there’s ever a “normal” in the real estate market, it fluctuates in weird ways but I’d say that rents have been “unaffordable” for a longer time than they’ve been “affordable” so unaffordable seems to be the natural (albeit undesirable for much of the population) state of things.

            • Ian 09:41 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

              Gender equality is “historically abnormal”. Most children living to adulthood is “historically abnormal”. Having most of your teeth past 30 years old is “historically abnormal”.

              You can see where U’m going with this, I hope.

            • Chris 12:26 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

              Bert, that exact quote from the other thread came to my mind too!

              I can’t imagine any mom & pop wanting to be a landlord these days, so many constraints, so much risk, so much hassle. People will just put their money elsewhere instead of being a landlord. So we’ll end up with only corporate landlords, like Blackrock. Be careful what you wish for, as they say.

            • Kate 19:11 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

              Chris, my landlords are a mom and pop, and by virtue of being careful who they rent to, and looking after the building (maintenance, not radical renovations), they seem to be doing OK. As far as I know, they own one other building, a few blocks away, where they live, so they’re not slumlords. There must be a lot of people like this, around here.

            • Chris 20:26 on 2025-01-18 Permalink

              Kate, how long have they been doing it? Ask them it they would start today.

          • Kate 21:33 on 2025-01-16 Permalink | Reply  

            The TAL, which replaced the old Régie du logement too long ago, is described as an eviction machine by Cédric Dussault of the RCLALQ (Regroupement de comités logement et associations de locataires du Québec).

             
            • su 09:24 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              What year did this tribunal thing replace the Regie?

            • MarcG 09:29 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

            • Ian 15:05 on 2025-01-17 Permalink

              As long as France-Élaine Duranceau, a known property speculator with ties to the real estate industry is Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, the fix is in. That Legault even thought this was ok and nobody would care lets you know just how deep the corruption goes.

          • Kate 20:00 on 2025-01-16 Permalink | Reply  

            Quebec’s chief coroner wants a better tally of the deaths of homeless people, a statistic that hasn’t been tracked properly till now. But we do know there were 72 such deaths in 2023, compared to only 20 between 2019 and 2021. And we can be pretty sure the number isn’t declining.

             
            • Kate 18:16 on 2025-01-16 Permalink | Reply  

              A major real estate report says that office tower occupancy continues to fall in the Montreal and Quebec City areas, while other Canadian cities are seeing their offices fill up again as employers crack the whip.

               
              • Kate 16:28 on 2025-01-16 Permalink | Reply  

                The Supreme Court has refused to hear the appeal by the Mohawk Mothers for close archaeological surveillance of any excavations done by McGill at the old Royal Vic site as it refurbishes it for the university’s use.

                 
                • Kate 13:00 on 2025-01-16 Permalink | Reply  

                  Quebec has cut 1,000 health-care jobs over the last month.

                  Where does it think those workers will go? Surely they’ll apply for employment in the private sector?

                  I foresee a cycle where the public system finds itself short of hands, and is forced to hire more people from private agencies – essentially hiring back the people they laid off, but at a higher rate, sieving more public cash into private hands. Am I mistaken?

                   
                  • steph 14:17 on 2025-01-16 Permalink

                    It`s not a bug, it`s a feature! The only thing the private sector brings to the table, is the `profit tax`.

                  • carswell 15:11 on 2025-01-16 Permalink

                    I absolutely think that’s the plan, Kate, and it’s the main reason why Dubé put private-sector darling Brion in charge of Santé Québec.

                  • Tee Owe 15:34 on 2025-01-16 Permalink

                    Kate, I think it’s not that the public system will hire back these workers, as much as the public system will find itself unable to provide services and will contract them out to the private sector – paid for by the taxpayer of course. This also happens in other public healthcare systems, not just Quebec – doctors and nurses work extra hours in private hospitals/clinics where they provide what should have been provided in the public system.

                  • Joey 16:18 on 2025-01-16 Permalink

                    I think the cynical (also correct) interpretation is that the public system is losing public sector jobs, which include all kinds of union-won salary and other conditions, so that these jobs can be outsourced to private sector agencies that don’t have to provide the same compensation. The theory is that the savings will make it worthwhile to the public purse (remember, this is a right-wing theory); in practice, we’ll just wind up passing on the savings to private-sector healthcare employment agencies – the ‘profit tax,’ as steph put it. But at least we’ll get administrative headaches and worse health outcomes!

                  • Uatu 17:55 on 2025-01-16 Permalink

                    The new positions would have to be permanent part time because full time evening and weekend would mean getting premiums for those shifts. But that’s moot because nobody wants to work them because the hours suck and if someone is bumped into them then they will have no problem calling in sick whenever they want just out of contempt and that means overtime for whoever wants it. What savings! (Just like when they cut housekeeping positions and then paid crazy overtime when they had to control the MRSA outbreak. Save now, pay later!) They aren’t supposed to be using private agencies anymore too so we’ll see how that works out. I think we should just abolish the Health Minister position since he’s basically an overpaid mouthpiece now and the real work is done by Top Guns! Lol What a load of crap.

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