An op-ed written by two urbanists in Le Devoir pleads for unifying urban planning and public transit at the ministry level, instead of treating them like separate domains.
Updates from October, 2018 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts
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Kate
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Kate
A waitress at the Blanche-Neige on Côte-des-Neiges has been awarded $52,000 after a complaint of sexual harassment by her boss.
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Kate
The Centre d’histoire this weekend has a piece about the Lachine Canal and the Irish workers who lived in the area for decades.
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Kate
A criminologist’s study found what most Montrealers on the qui-vive already knew: SPVM cops use Twitter during protests.
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Kate
Longshoremen at the Port of Montreal are mad as hell at management over what’s felt to be high-handed changes in scheduling and other rules. They have the right to strike as of the new year.
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Kate
Just saw a few snowflakes. Early when it’s still ten days to Halloween.
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Kate
A second apartment building belonging to the same owner as the Plateau building evacuated last week has been condemned as unsafe by the city and the remaining tenants told they will have to leave. The landlord simply turned the water and heating off after a long period of other forms of neglect, and waited for the city to do the deed. See, getting rid of your low-grade tenants is easy.
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Kate
Urbania has an amusingly snarky visit to the Underground City, with lots of photos.
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Kate
TVA asks who’s consuming cannabis in Montreal and provides an infographic based on a survey from 2014-2015, not from the recent legalization as the lede implies.
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Kate
Aside from a short squib about a car bursting into flame on the 40 Saturday evening, I’m not finding any police blotter items for Sunday morning. Skimming world news makes me realize: we are a fortunate tribe, even with the tribulations of the climate and the CAQ.
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Kate
CBC profiles a man who’s been giving vegetables away for free once a week beside the Lachine Canal.
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