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  • Kate 14:43 on 2026-05-04 Permalink | Reply  

    A McKinsey study shows that rents in Montreal rose 35% between 2018 and 2023 and I’d bet another 15% to 20% from 2023 till now.

     
    • Ian 19:59 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

      The CAQ has a lot to answer for, but so do greedy landlords.

  • Kate 14:41 on 2026-05-04 Permalink | Reply  

    Plans are afoot to mark the 50th anniversary of the Montreal Olympics, including a return visit by Nadia Comaneci.

    Photos from CBC.

     
    • Kate 12:10 on 2026-05-04 Permalink | Reply  

      Mayor Martinez Ferrada is giving herself three years to make the city more efficient.

       
      • Kate 09:25 on 2026-05-04 Permalink | Reply  

        Quebec has a minister of relations with Ottawa who promises there will be less confrontation during this short‑lived government.

         
        • Kate 09:06 on 2026-05-04 Permalink | Reply  

          The federal 2026 census begins Monday.

          …And the code sent on my form doesn’t work. I suppose the servers could be overloaded.

          …and now it’s working.

           
          • Kate 18:34 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

            The Bell Centre is sold out for the watch party as the Canadiens face the Lightning in the decisive last match of the quarter finals.

            ….And the Habs are through to the semifinals. Bar owners are celebrating and cops are bracing for overexuberance.

             
            • Nicholas 23:54 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

              The terminology is confusing, but they’re through to the conference semifinals, followed by the conference finals and the Stanley Cup finals. To most people who don’t think it makes sense to call it the finals twice, they’re actually through to the quarterfinals.

            • Kate 08:35 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              Thank you, Nicholas.

          • Kate 16:23 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

            Astronauts come to Montreal to train on operating the Canadarm 2.

             
            • Steve 10:01 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              They can also get a feel for the lunar surface by using our roads!

          • Kate 16:18 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

            The city is giving out more fines for trash, ticketing the adjacent address to where the mess is found.

             
            • Joey 17:07 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

              Just yesterday we picked up a filthy pillow (not in a garbage bag) and some long tracks (like for a sliding door or something) that someone left for garbage next to our place – we are adjacent to an alley so we get a lot of dumped trash near us. I suppose we were prescient, though it hardly seems fair to penalize people who live near where others dump their trash…

            • Kate 18:42 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

              Maybe email or call 311 and alert them to this dumping, so if you’re unlucky enough to be fined, you’ll have established an attempt to deal with it responsibly?

            • Joey 09:16 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              Honestly that seems like overkill, since this kind of thing happens frequently. It’s more the idea that the city will be a-ok fining people for garbage dumped adjacent to their homes without any proof that they were the dumpers. If the garbage is equidistant between two homes, will they issue two fines? If it’s a dense block will everyone in the plex get a ticket or just the ground floor?

            • dhomas 11:00 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              About the “who gets the ticket” part, I’m pretty sure I have the answer. I got a warning a couple of years ago because my tenant threw out compostable items in his regular garbage (it was a whole, stale baguette that poked a hole out of his garbage bag). From what the warning said, the fine goes to the building owner, who needs to sort it out with his tenants.
              It can be difficult managing this sort of thing. One of my tenants separates nothing at all: garbage, recycling compost, they all go in the same bag for him. I at least got him to only put out his garbage bags on pickup day; previously, he would leave his bags on my front lawn, regardless of the day. It would leave yellow spots on my lawn unless I would pick it up and put it in my bin, which was annoying Small victories, I guess.

            • Joey 11:41 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              “Depuis quelques mois, la méthode des inspecteurs n’est plus tout à fait la même dans certains arrondissements montréalais. Avant, pour donner une amende, il leur fallait fouiller dans un sac de poubelle pour trouver une facture ou un document permettant d’identifier la personne. La tâche était non seulement fastidieuse, mais surtout longue et très peu efficace la plupart du temps. Dorénavant, s’ils jugent qu’il y a infraction, les employés municipaux peuvent directement donner un constat au propriétaire de la maison ou du commerce. Dans certains cas, plus d’une amende peut même être donnée afin de sensibiliser les voisins immédiats à la nécessité de nettoyer un minimum les trottoirs et le devant de leur résidence.”

              So we have a somewhat vague rule that is being interpreted differently by different inspectors, potentially even within a single borough – literally ‘deux poids, deux mesures’. You could take off for a weekend and come home to find that (a) someone dumped their trash in front of your house and (b) you have to pay a fine for it.

              Anyway, the city and the boroughs need to be a little more attentive to the rhythm of public life – everyone knows that many out-of-town McGill students move out at the end of April. Maybe Ville-Marie could deploy some extra resources to Milton-Parc during the first week of May rather than bemoan the asshole students who have already left the city. Maybe the first street-sweeping operation of the spring does more than just pass the useless vacuum and instead picks up all the dead leaves left to rot since fall. Maybe we send people with sticks to clear storm drains during the winter/spring thaw so there aren’t huge puddles all over the place (since we missed the leaves).

            • Mozai 12:18 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              Not looking forward to getting tickets because there’s a fire hydrant in front of my house: that means no parked cars, so it seems like a good idea leave trash bags there for pick-up. If only my neighbours could remember which day is trash day, and to put bags out not before 19h00 the preceding night. Also in the evening after trash day I end up finding other people’s bins in front of my place so I have to read them to see if they wrote an address, then walk the bins back to where they were thismorning, so it’s not just residents putting stuff in front of my house but city workers too.

            • Kevin 16:09 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

              Whenever I get new tenants I go through all the city rules, bit by bit, in writing with a book that is kept in their apartment. I tell them about composting, recyling, trash, breaking down boxes and cartons, etc… I send them reminder emails with links to the city’s website if I’m putting stuff on the sidewalk and I can tell it’s not sorted properly.

              About two-thirds of my tenants have correctly handled trash.

              The other third easily produce 10 times as much waste as the larger group, and they don’t understand or don’t care about sorting it. They just fill all the bins (and more) with whatever is closest. Plastic bags and styrofoam in compost. Food in recycling bins. Garbage can lids go hiding.

              I’m going to have to add a clause to my lease agreement that the tenant is responsible for any fines.

          • Kate 11:26 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

            Blinked at this La Presse headline about a Quebec mayor calling him L’ancien roi du pick‑up. The first thing that came to mind wasn’t a vehicle. Had he been a notorious PUA? No, the environmentally minded mayor of Prévost used to drive a truck.

             
            • Kate 09:15 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

              Affordable apartments in the east end are being left empty and in some cases boarded up, even while people are still living in other parts of the buildings, and homeless people are camping nearby.

              Nobody likes these signs of dilapidation. NB these are privately owned properties, not social housing.

               
              • Mozai 13:02 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

                There’s a three-bedroom unit next to me in Plateau. It used to have new tenants every 6-8 months, always young so very likely students. Before covid-19 it was renovated and it’s been empty since, for years, not even AirBnB’d. No idea why.

              • Kate 14:23 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

                Even with today’s inflated rents, managing tenants must be too much trouble for the financial return.

                I find that amazing, but with so many empty flats and apartments around town, it has to be a major reason. I know there’s an advantage to leaving a place empty for one year because then you can charge more, but we’re talking about more than a year in most cases.

              • Kevin 08:16 on 2026-05-04 Permalink

                Some owners are far too hopeful when it comes to setting prices.

            • Kate 09:12 on 2026-05-03 Permalink | Reply  

              woman reading newspaperThe visit of the King to the United States turned up this week, Côté giving Charles comedy British teeth and Ygreck submitting him to a brutal Trump handshake.

              The federal Liberals’ economic plans inspired Côté, Ygreck and Godin to cynical sallies.

              Godin on May Day, Côté on the Canadiens.

              Trump never leaves the scene. Côté sees him with the Pope in one scene, and Chapleau in another. Godin has an American passport holder making a request.

              And Godin with a relevant piece on Gaza.

               
              • Kate 18:19 on 2026-05-02 Permalink | Reply  

                Thousands marched Saturday in the union‑led demonstration that included students and community groups.

                A mock guillotine carried by some participants is causing a bit of a fuss… and has even sparked a police investigation.

                 
                • Kate 17:34 on 2026-05-02 Permalink | Reply  

                  A proposed bike path on St‑Laurent in Ahuntsic is unlikely to happen; this piece lists other bike path plans that are likely to die on the drawing board under an Ensemble administration.

                   
                  • Kate 10:13 on 2026-05-02 Permalink | Reply  

                    A masked group robbed the Mamie Clafoutis bakery on St‑Denis on Friday morning, in protest of an automated payment system the bakery is experimenting with – a 24/7 store with no cashiers, which they’re calling BASIQ.

                     
                    • Mozai 10:56 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I was a regular but after the renovation they wouldn’t take money. The staff weren’t apologetic nor snobby, just a neutral “that’s not a thing anymore.” I checked in about a year later and still wouldn’t take money. The place used to be crowded and now it isn’t, but it’s still there so they must be able to pay rent.

                    • Kevin 11:08 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it.
                      In all seriousness, what did they think would happen if they opened a store relying on the honour system to make payments?

                    • Kate 11:12 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Is it even legal not to accept legal tender?

                    • Chris 11:15 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Kate: it is.

                    • R T 11:52 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Multiple shops in the United States are using automated technology without widespread shoplifting, even in cities where you’d expect to see it, but many of them rely on turnstiles and cameras, rather than trusting you to scan things on your phone.

                      Some of those shops have non-cashiers on site to help customers and deal with other tasks—but so did Mamie Clafoutis at the time of the theft:
                      “Selon ce que ses employés ont pu observer, M. Delourmel explique que deux membres du groupe bloquaient les portes pendant qu’un troisième criait des slogans. C’est un pâtissier qui a finalement mis fin à l’intrusion, en moins de deux minutes.”

                    • jeather 11:52 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I know a few other places that only accept credit or debit.

                      I admit I don’t care because I think Mamie Clafoutis is overrated at best, not sure I ever had anything from there I thought even hit adequate.

                    • Joey 13:15 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Unlike the vigilanteism at the Maxi store (which, as we saw, only early affects Loblaw’s bottom line, and at $5K is basically meaningless), you really need to twist yourself into a pretzel to plausibly justify this – you may disapprove of their going cashless or turning your bakery into a giant vending machine but you have the option of simply… not shopping there.

                    • Nicholas 13:31 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      There just seems to be a lot of sympathy lately for theft and it’s in the same category as the other anti-social behaviour like smoking on the metro. It’s ok being you’re doing it for a cause or to stick it to the man.

                      Often ignored in these situations is the employee, and it often sucks for them. I’ve had to call cops on people who got violent or made threats and it’s not fun. Even if there’s no physical altercation, this stuff is not something to be cheered.

                    • Blork 15:57 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I confess this seems like another example of the dumbness of people living in the mirror world where thought and nuance don’t exist. They’re basically living a meme without any sense of what it really means. They hear about vigilante food store theft on social media, they cheer because it jabs them in the righteous indignation part of their lizard brains, and they jump at the chance to do it for themselves without giving any thought to what or the why of it.

                    • MarcG 15:58 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Re-posting part of the anonymous statement:

                      “En collaboration avec Leav, une start-up spécialisée dans les technologies de commerce de détail, Mamie Clafoutis se targue d’être « la pionnière d’une nouvelle ère de magasins intelligents automatisés. » Cela signe l’arrivée d’un modèle similaire à celui de Amazon Go, lequel a déjà infecté d’autres villes, en plus d’être salué par les médias comme une nouvelle innovation. Vous enregistrer au moyen de la reconnaissance faciale sur leur application peut vous offrir le « privilège » d’acheter du pain 24h/24, 7 jours sur 7, dans leurs boulangeries automatisées et sans caisse.

                      Toujours activé et ne nécessitant aucun employé·e, le système de Scan & Go de Mamie Clafoutis vous pousse à participer à votre propre surveillance. Nous n’accepterons pas ce mécanisme de contrôle et d’enfermement au prétexte de quelques instants de confort. Il doit être coupé à la racine, avant que ce mode de vie technophile se répande non pas seulement dans chaque boulangerie, chaque marché, mais aussi dans chaque moment d’échange de temps, d’attention, et de consentement dans nos vies…

                      Ces actions ne sont pas des exploits héroïques, au contraire elles sont simples, accessibles à quiconque souhaite s’y mettre, et il nous appartient de les reproduire encore et encore. Notre subsistance n’est pas un produit à scanner. Nous souhaitons inspirer celles et ceux qui se sentent écrasé·e·s par la botte du capital à prendre tout ce que leurs mains, leurs sacs et leurs esprits peuvent transporter.”

                    • Nicholas 16:41 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Idk man if you don’t want to shop somewhere then don’t. I ain’t downloading an app to shop, but also ain’t stealing bread as a political point. Just go protest, we know how to do that in Quebec.

                    • Blork 17:24 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      One evening last year I was in Quebec City, west end (near Laval U.), and I was in need of a depanneur. I couldn’t find one, but Google pointed me to a 24-hour market called “Aisle24” on the ground floor of a condo building nearby, so off I went. When I got there it was all locked up. After a minute of poking around I realized it’s an “automated self-service” store. In order to use it you need to download an app (QR code was on the door) and register. You need that in order to even get the door to open. Then you shop, pay, and leave, all under the watchful eye of multiple cameras.

                      I did not download the app. (I found an Avril store across the street that was still open.)

                      I was a bit surprised to find it there, since it seems like something right out of Japan. But the building it was in is a new condo complex that seems to be oriented towards students and other non-permanent residents, with a bunch of common spaces and whatnot. (I could see in some windows, and it looked like a student residence with a large common kitchen and an open dining and social area. Lots of people sitting around doing homework and eating UberEats and whatnot.) So I suppose for a 20-year-old looking for a microwaveable dinner to eat in the common dining area it probably doesn’t seem like such an odd thing. Certainly doesn’t seem like something to get all “social justice warrior” over.

                    • Marc 18:02 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Regarding “Legal Tender,” probably one of the most misunderstood phrases out there: it simply means that the government (under the auspices of the Bank of Canada), or a federally chartered bank (eg. TD) guarantees to honour it. That’s all. As outlined in the federal Currency Act, the method of payment to settle a debt can be anything so long as both parties agree. The Act also outlines limits on the use of currency. For example, you may not pay for a basket of goods at the checkout in a store by handing the clerk a bag of loose nickels and dimes.

                    • Chris 21:55 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Another thought: in the context of trying to reduce dependency on the USA and its companies: all the App Stores are American and Visa & Mastercard are American. If we are not careful, our country could end up a place where you can’t even buy anything at all without foreigners’ permission.

                    • dhomas 09:21 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

                      I’m a little conflicted on this one. On the one hand, I think if you don’t like it, just don’t shop there. If it’s unpopular, it will close and the business model will fail. Hopefully, other companies trying the same model will think twice.
                      On the other hand, it normalizes constant surveillance. People who don’t realize how important that is might still shop there and appreciate the convenience they have traded their privacy for.
                      The police and government will 100% use these systems in the future and will likely enable AI face recognition on them.
                      One would hope the government, who is supposed to act in the best interest of its citizens, would intervene to regulate these types of systems so not every part of our lives is spent under the watchful eye of cameras. However, those in power likely want these types of systems to proliferate as they see how useful they can be to them.

                    • mare 11:47 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

                      I also think that if you don’t want the surveillance it’s easy, just don’t shop there.

                      On the other hand it might be a beginning of the normalization of this kind of technology.

                      We saw it with self-checkout terminals — although they still need at least one cashier to help because they easily malfunction, for example when your 10 gram makeup pencil isn’t registered by the scale, or for alcohol purchases. In the beginning they were completely ignored by people but now they’re almost everywhere and in some shops they don’t even have a normal cashier anymore. (I personally hate them because of the cacophony of voices, but I’m very sensitive to spoken language. The translation engine in my brain is very active, want to hear everything and gets easily overwhelmed.)

                      It seems inevitable that, in a few years, we will have these smart stores everywhere, combined with doors that won’t open and won’t let you leave when the AI tech thinks you haven’t paid for something. They are cheap to run because wages are a large percentage of the cost of retail. Another category of low income jobs eliminated by AI. They could theoretically also offer lower prices, which would make them less controversial, but I doubt that will happen. More profit is too enticing, grocery tycoons like to complain about their low margins.

                    • Bert 12:51 on 2026-05-03 Permalink

                  • Kate 09:44 on 2026-05-02 Permalink | Reply  

                    It would be nearly impossible to live here and not know that the Canadiens lost the Friday night match against the Lightning, pushing the series to a seventh game on Sunday. Tickets for a viewing party at the Bell Centre go on sale Saturday at 10 am; Sunday’s game starts at 6 pm.

                     
                    • Nicholas 13:21 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I used to spend a lot of time around people who like hockey and thought like you, but a friend said no you just ignore it it’s very easy, she hadn’t heard about hockey in years. And now that I don’t spend time around those people it is very easy to ignore, even though I still spend time with some new people who like hockey.

                      I was talking the other day to someone about the transit strikes last year and he was barely aware of it. He doesn’t even own a car! Maybe people who spend a lot of time on a blog about news are a little skewed.

                    • Kate 14:13 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Even doing this blog, I’m fairly oblivious to most local sports stuff. I can’t make myself give a damn about the Alouettes or CF Montreal, or the Roses or the Victoire, let alone the various tennis stars.

                      But the Canadiens are so woven into the fabric of this city – even now, after 30 years without a Cup – that I’d have to be living somewhere else entirely not to pick up on it.

                      As for last year’s transit strikes, they hardly affected me either, even with no car. Transit strikes used to be real, no service for days or weeks, thumbing rides to get to or from school or work. Now they’ve been so defanged by Essential Services, and now that I work entirely from home, I really only know about them because of doing the blog.

                      It’s one reason I keep blogging. I feel a need to know wtf is going on. And while I’m finding out, I might as well let others know.

                    • Daisy 14:51 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I just found that out just now by reading this here. I guess I am in the “nearly impossible” category. I don’t follow hockey or know anyone who does, nor am I on social media. I only figured out that the Canadiens were in the playoffs in the first place because of the “Go Habs Go” on the buses and the metro announcements at the stations near the Bell Centre.

                    • Nicholas 15:21 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      Go Habs Go happens basically year-round, as do Habs flags on cars, so while I know a team is there it could be the team is doing well or lost.

                      I remember it was June 30 one year. Playoffs were over, the summer sports were in full swing, school was out. And these two people I knew were still talking hockey. I said couldn’t we get a break, training camp starts in like a month! Oh, the draft was today and free agency was tomorrow. It’s pervasive in some circles and completely off the radar in others. “Why are people honking everywhere?” “Must be a sportsball.”

                    • R T 18:41 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      My vague awareness of the playoffs came mostly from people in Habs jerseys travelling the “wrong way” (towards downtown) in the afternoon/early evening.

                    • Joey 21:12 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      @Nicholas Something like 800,000+ people attended the NFL *draft* in Pittsburgh last week…

                    • JP 23:03 on 2026-05-02 Permalink

                      I only stay in the loop because I’m often downtown and if there’s a home game, I want to avoid the influx of people on the orange lines or the REM, so I try to come home before the game ends. Literally the only reason I look up the schedule.

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