The Portuguese religious procession went ahead Sunday in the Plateau as it has for many years, in silence – a fact that may have skirted the law against praying in public.
There was also a march against homophobia and transphobia Sunday downtown.
The Portuguese religious procession went ahead Sunday in the Plateau as it has for many years, in silence – a fact that may have skirted the law against praying in public.
There was also a march against homophobia and transphobia Sunday downtown.
A recent survey shows that Quebecers are still turning their backs on the U.S.A. and vacationing closer to home.
The Journal lists Montreal’s seven major attractions, the seven treasures of Quebec City, some curious places to stay and some quaint Quebec villages, although the huge banner promoting Air Canada flights to Japan is undermining the effect somewhat.
Two groups of people who became overebullient Saturday night – and not because of hockey – were suppressed by police after fireworks were set off. Nobody has been arrested.
Premier Fréchette is said to be trying to round up Emmanuel Macron in an effort to get that defense bank headquarters for Montreal. Le Devoir, on the other hand, was not sanguine about Fréchette’s visit to France.
Sunday, May 17, this city marks 384 years as a European‑style settlement established on the island of Montreal. Happy anniversary!
Quebec politics always offers possibilities, Côté poking fun at Québec solidaire, while both Ygreck and Chapleau spoof PSPP’s paranoia. Côté’s and Ygreck’s nervous fonctionnaires watch the launch of the digital health record, Côté’s horrified patient reading his chart.
Québec solidaire proposed a tax on the ultra rich, but the response of François Lambert was the thing that activated the cartoonists. Côté has a dry comment on the wiliness of the wealthy.
Trump in China was an inevitable target as he tried to eat a burger and open a fortune cookie. He also tried to part the Strait of Hormuz.
As Mark Carney approves pipelines, Steven Guilbeault sees the mask come off.
Rents in Montreal have risen by 70% over ten years. The Gazette blames “population growth, gentrification and a game of catch-up with other markets” in the deck to this piece, the first of a two‑parter, but it doesn’t note the utter failure of the TAL to keep rents reasonable.
Feels like they are setting up the next instalment in the series to deal with the public policy failure here (which includes, but is not limited, to the TAL’s conduct).
I find the mention of “markets” also tone deaf. If you live in Montreal it doesn’t help you if the “market” in some other city is “more competitive” or whatever. You work here, you live here, the rental situation is what it is, it isn’t a “market”. You can’t easily pick and choose between global cities like buying veg in the market. Must everything be seen in the language of business college?
At least the Montreal market comes with higher salaries…. right? right??
Yes, disposable income is higher in the Montreal area than it is in the rest of the province. Urban area agglomeration effects make this a standard pattern worldwide that big cities (and suburbs) have higher incomes than small cities and rural areas. Whether it’s enough to counteract higher housing costs varies, but it absolutely did not surprise me that incomes are higher here before actually checking.
Higher than the rest of Quebec maybe, but seen from a global point of view, not so much.
Wait, what? Montreal/Quebec/Canada absolutely have higher wages, income, wealth, and disposable income than the global average (or median). Surely I’ve misunderstood what you’re saying?
Context, Chris. Do you really think the Gazette was comparing Montreal’s market with Port‑au‑Prince or Lagos? If you look at our income levels compared to London, Paris, New York – even Toronto or Vancouver – they’re lagging, while our rents catch up to these bigger and more prosperous cities.
Kate, I see. But still, you can’t just exclude the places around the globe that are poorer, and point to the remaining and say ‘see, they’re all richer’.
If we’re “playing catch-up with other markets” – the direct quote I plucked from the Gazette – that isn’t going to mean poorer cities, is it. By implication it means places where things are more expensive.
A police car was set on fire downtown early Sunday, and the Canadiens hadn’t even won a game. Nobody got hurt in the blaze.
There were a lot of people downtown Saturday night, and there will be a lot of people for the watch party at the Bell Centre on Monday.
“hadn’t even won” is quite the understatement. 🙂
I was walking to the McGill REM around 9 pm…It was soooo quiet outside walking down McGill College. If you didn’t know it was a hockey game night…you would have thought there was nobody downtown….
La Presse has a possibly useful list of summer festivals.
The West Island branch of the REM opens for a free preview Saturday and Sunday till 6 pm.
Agitation for a branch to the east end of the island is only bound to grow now.
As someone who grew up in the South Shore, the idea of taking one train from Brossard to the West Island is pretty amazing
I think you do have to change trains at Bois-Franc, no?
No, you just need to board the right train from Brossard, so the A3 line rather than the A4. If you board the wrong line you can transfer at Bois-Franc. I have already taken the REM downtown and back from the Kirkland station twice, and it is fantastic (assuming it does not break down, I guess). Unlike taking the EXO commuter rail with its very limited schedule, we can now leave and return at any time from 5:30 AM to past 1 AM. A long-awaited game changer for those of us who prefer public transit to cars.
Excellent, LJ. Just as I had assumed you couldn’t take a single train all the way from Brossard to Deux‑Montagnes – I thought it meant changing at Central Station – I was mistaken here too. A3 to the West Island, A4 to Deux‑Montagnes, and – when completed – A2 to the airport.
Too bad I never need to go to these places, but I may have to take the REM as a jaunt this summer just to see it all.
Not much to see as the downtown portion runs underground and the rest is rather bland unless you like industrial rooftops. The stops from Sources to L’Anse a L’Orme are elevated so you can get an overview of that part of the island, but it is not exactly spectacular either. So useful transit but not very touristic. May be worthwhile to see a few stops once. At least it is quick, you can go from downtown to the end of A3 and back in about an hour.
I’ve only taken the REM for one stop – McGill to Édouard‑Montpetit. Basically a metro ride. But I do want to take it across the bridge sometime soon, since I have not been on the new Champlain yet. I’m also vaguely interested in walking around Île Bigras. So my idea was to take a day off this summer, buy an all-zones ticket, and just go have a look around.
As I’ve noted here before, if only from looking at the placing of stations and their surroundings, the majority are simply plunked down near a big parking lot, and not much else. They’re mostly not intended to be walked to and from, but rather driven. So – as you say – not very touristic, and no pressing reason to get off the train for a look around most of the stations.
Linda Gyulai has a long, well considered piece about the decline of Milton Park. As she reports, “the entire neighbourhood makes up just six per cent of the area of the Plateau and a tenth of its population [but] accounts for 24 per cent of all crimes reported in the borough.”
“But at some point in the last year or two — no one can seem to peg exactly when — the individual dealers that prey on unhoused people in the area turned into conspicuous groups of criminals that roam the neighbourhood.”
That’s the big difference. You feel it even if you’re just passing through. The crowd at Milton/Park was always relatively chill and it was usually the same people you’d see day in, day out. Then at some point there was an influx of dealers — really nasty-looking types — followed by a lot of strung-out people from outside the neighbourhood.
Looking at the situation coldly, how much profit can drug dealers make off the homeless?
“Force” the addict to steal something expensive in exchange for their fix. There are lots of valuable things to steal, then you sell those for profit.
One guy I knew who became a crack addict but managed to get out of it put it this way – crack is appealing not only because it’s a fast, intense high, but because it’s super cheap. Only 5 b bucks. Everyone has 5 bucks. Until all you want is more crack and you used up all your 5 bucks. Then you need to boost something you can sell to a fence or trade to a dealer. A lot of people turn to prostitution because if you look ok you can make some money fast as long as no pimps come after you and eventually when you look not so great even homeless people that aren’t on crack can scrape up 5 bucks for a screw, so it doesn’t really matter if you’re homeless or in decent condition or not.
This is also why you see so much petty crime like stealing copper or breaking car windows for loose change (for instance) … you just need a few 5 bucks, like, NOW.
La Presse investigated what it’s like for city workers to clean up after the crowd that watches a playoff match outside the Bell Centre. The strange part is how many workers choose to do the job. It’s a very optimistic story.
Two brothers were found guilty of murder in the second degree on Friday, in the stabbing of another young man two years ago. Details of their sentencing will be announced later.
Pleas were made this week for a safer Park Avenue for pedestrians and cyclists, eleven of whom have been killed on the street since 2013.
Until they normalize the intersections and get rid of the switch lane nothing is going to work, even bike paths.
Knowing this city though they will keep it all as-is including the switch lane and parking lanes and put a st-urbain style bike path on the southbound side.
FWIW right now there is a pothole at the NW corner of Parc and Bernard that actually has a piece of rebar from the road bed sticking out of it – Car, truck, bus or bike, if you hit that it’s going to cause damage. Yes, I called 311.
TVA talks to one of the women shot in the École Privé nightclub last weekend. She was competing at a high level in soccer and studying nursing; her leg injury will interfere with both. There have not yet been any arrests.
Nicholas 22:17 on 2026-05-17 Permalink
Gotta ban silent prayer by asking everyone what they’re thinking at all times.
PatrickC 22:23 on 2026-05-17 Permalink
The silent procession will be spun as proof that the law works. That the borough’s compliance may have been ironic will not have any shaming effect.
steph 23:06 on 2026-05-17 Permalink
Might be the best way to go about it -no permit but a wink and a nod.
What’s Quebec going to do – send in the SQ?