Updates from November, 2020 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 16:18 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    Police are at Ubisoft on the Main where, allegedly, an armed man has hostages on the roof.

    I was out doing a few errands in Villeray a few minutes ago when half a dozen police vehicles screamed past going southward. Now I know why.

    (One of my errands was getting a flu shot. As she administered it, the nurse emphasized to me that this was a flu shot, and I said – politely, but with a query in my voice – oui, je sais? And she said an awful lot of people who came in seemed to think they would be getting a Covid vaccine.)

    Update: All reports say the hostage call was a hoax.

    Later, CTV adds that the Montreal General was put on pre-Code Orange and told to get ready for incoming wounded. One nurse is quoted as saying the last time a Code Orange was called was during the Dawson shooting.

     
    • Meezly 16:30 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      I heard it might be a swat attempt.

    • Bill Binns 16:37 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Smells like swat as Meezly said. Ubi is in the middle of a big game release. They may have caused nerd rage regarding that. Hopefully the guys in the armored assault wagon are considering that as one of the possibilities.

      I read that the people on the roof are just employees who are hiding there by barricading the one door that leads up there, not hostages.

    • walkerp 16:51 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      What’s the game release?

    • Kate 16:52 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      TVA is saying it was a prank.

      Apparently some guys are mad that the latest Assassin’s Creed (Valhalla) has a female character option?

    • Hamza 18:03 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      If you know anything about gamergate you know it’s totally within the parameters of a really obsessive, hateful, vengeance-driven gamer to call in a fake-SWAT (it’s such a common tactic that they’ve given it the name Swatting) .

      What really annoys me is that the SPVM was so slow with re-assuring the public . Half the city and even internationally ALOT of people were freaked out before they finally bothered confirming it was a hoax.

      I guess the lack of ambulances should’ve been a giveaway

    • Kate 18:14 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Hamza, two ambulances were among the emergency vehicles I noticed.

    • Tim S. 19:16 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Ubisoft people can’t work from home? I suppose they need powerful computers and are paranoid about secure connections, but I hope this isn’t another example of them abusing their employees and being above the rules everybody else is playing by.

    • dhomas 19:21 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      I have a friend who works at Ubisoft. I checked in with her when I heard the news to make sure she was ok. She is indeed working from home, so not everyone has to go into the office all the time.
      Also, regarding police communication, it’s pretty difficult to confirm it to be a hoax. It’s a big building that they likely needed to search in its entirety before confirming without a doubt that there was no one armed inside. Takes time.

    • CE 20:22 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      My high school used to get bomb scares all the time. Like 20 a year, once we even had two in one day. This happened year after year. Even though the school admin and all the students knew it was a hoax, we’d all have to evacuate and wait for the bomb squad and fire department to sweep the entire building. Usually took about 2 1/2 hours.

    • Kevin 21:40 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      There are also lots of people upset about the sexual harassment at Ubisoft.

    • Blork 22:59 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      I suspect the kind of people who are upset about sexual harassment are not the kind of people who would phone in bomb threats. Rather, the kind of people who phone in bomb threats are ones who have affinity with the people who conduct sexual harassment. #gamergate

    • Kate 23:49 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      The Guardian piece about the incident says normally 4000 people are working there. That must mean all of Ubisoft. Four thousand people couldn’t possibly all work at the Peck building.

    • A 00:03 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      They have a few buildings around the mile end, there are about 4000 staff in Montreal. Nearly all the staff are work from home but some can use the office under strict hygiene conditions if they need / want to

    • JS 08:16 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      I live around the corner and watched all afternoon through binoculars. By a little before 5 pm they were still releasing employees in dribs and drabs, and some of them weren’t wearing coats, and only a couple of the 30 or so army-looking & swat-style cops had come out. A few hours later some streets were still blocks and the Mad Max vehicle that brought the army-looking cops was still parked out front. This was all hours after it was declared a hoax.

    • DeWolf 13:03 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      4,000 employees in Mile End is why half the neighbourhood feels like the Ubisoft staff cafeteria (or at least it did before Covid).

    • CE 13:13 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      I had that same feeling during a summer night when I was looking for a dep on St-Viateur before meeting with a friend nearby. There’s only one tiny dep left, the rest of the street felt like a high-end outdoor food court for the tech worker lunch crowd.

  • Kate 13:09 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    Daily Hive has a rather confusing report on a city plan to preserve 19 signs as heritage landmarks. It’s not clear, comparing their report to the city’s own press release, what Ville-Marie has to do with saving signs outside its borders. Plateau borough has already announced a plan to preserve some of its signs.

     
    • azrhey 13:54 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      (( Oh! New banner! I like it a lot! Also happy 19th bday! sorry for digression ))

    • Kate 16:24 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Thank you!

    • John B 23:47 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Here’s the actual list from Ville-Marie: https://montreal.ca/articles/enseignes-dinteret-patrimonial-dans-ville-marie

      (Club Super-Sexe is not one of the signs to be preserved).

    • Bill Binns 12:59 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      The Place Bonaventure sign? Seriously? Oh well. Very happy to see the Northeast Lunch sign on this list. I noticed and photographed that sign shortly after the fire.

      I always thought the signs at the Ritz looked cheap and plastic considering they were at the Ritz.

      The milk bottle will have to be moved if they want people to actually be able to see it. The last I checked, the only place you could get a good look at it was from the parking lot of the Esso on Mountain St and I believe that station has been recently shuttered.

    • Chris 14:18 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      Yeah, seriously, Super-Sexe should be on that list.

    • Uatu 14:28 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      Hunter Thompson wrote about his visit to club super sexe when he came to Montreal so there’s cultural relevance, right?

    • Michael Black 15:34 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      What year was that?

      He spoke at the Student Union building at McGill sometime in the seventies.

    • dhomas 20:52 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      @Michael Black: 1985 seems likely. He gave a lecture at Concordia that year (https://thelinknewspaper.ca/blogs/entry/fear-and-loathing-at-concordia1) and wrote about his experience at Super Sexe in his 1988 book “Generation of Swine” (see here).

  • Kate 10:27 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    QMI maintains that half the establishments downtown can’t serve you in French and even that a worker at the new Uniqlo store said outright she doesn’t speak French. With a footnote explaining how to denounce businesses to the journalist.

     
    • Blork 12:03 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Actually, the story says that in half the establishments they made an initial greeting in English (“Hi”). That doesn’t mean they couldn’t switch to French, although it says “in some cases” they couldn’t.

      By front-end loading that “half” statement it does make it appear that half of the stores were unable to provide service in French, which is completely false.

      What a city. Colloquially we all love to brag about how multi-lingual we are and how people switch languages with each other back and forth in conversation, etc. and wow, doesn’t that make us sexy and sophisticated. Until you let a few words of English slip out in a store and then here come the pitchforks.

    • Kate 12:56 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      I doubt Mathieu Bock-Côté and Richard Martineau are among those who brag about our cosmopolitan sexy sophistication. They would’ve fit in here 80 years ago as grim pastors of Roman Catholic churches, enforcing the commandments, grilling young mothers on why they hadn’t done their duty and had another baby this year, and demanding their flock vote Union Nationale. Except those two are among those who “do not have the faith, but will not have the fun.”

    • Ex Herb 12:59 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      Perhaps “a backyard to play in” isn’t enough for kids, and it isn’t enough for the French language either?

    • Jack 13:47 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      We are being set up for Simon Jolin-Barette’s legislation. This media campaign is in full swing in the French language press. In my view this has little to nothing to do with the French language, it is about politicians using wedge issues to maintain electoral edges. I’m guessing that some punitive measures against English or English institutions are in order. Why because it makes CAQ’s base feel good.

    • Uatu 14:45 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

      It also distracts from 1000 avg cases of covid in the past few weeks

    • Jack 15:34 on 2020-11-13 Permalink

    • Kevin 11:33 on 2020-11-14 Permalink

      They’ll play off the public’s ignorance.
      I just don’t know if they plan to ban francophones from English establishments, or if they will cut funding by two-thirds to match the bigot’s definition of anglophone.

    • Douglas 01:46 on 2020-11-15 Permalink

      It’s like the scene in Mad Men. The separatists walk into the elevator, say a few things about the french language, and the anglos turn to them and say “we don’t think about you at all”.

  • Kate 10:09 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    La Presse says that a petition on change.org has collected more than 28,000 signatures asking Longueuil not to kill half the deer in Michel-Chartrand park. On change.org I see one petition in English currently with 957 signatures and one in French with 80, but not the thousands mentioned in the article. Maybe my search words – Longueuil, cerfs – are not sufficient?

     
  • Kate 10:05 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    Notes on where not to drive over the weekend.

     
  • Kate 10:04 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

    Although the university has denied it, CTV found a McGill student who was witness to a fight club meeting Monday night.

     
    • Kate 09:53 on 2020-11-13 Permalink | Reply  

      Radio-Canada sent a journalist to look at the REV on St-Denis and talk to a few people about why a bike path has focused so much bad feeling this year. Text, but mostly video.

       
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