Updates from February, 2022 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 11:46 on 2022-02-28 Permalink | Reply  

    Editorial from La Presse restates the story from last week about hybrid work models cutting down on pre‑pandemic levels of downtown traffic.

    I’m getting thoroughly annoyed by this line – by the idea it’s our duty to slog back downtown and get to buying. Bad enough that we have to give our lives over to incessant labour, do we really need to then turn around and fritter money on unnecessary purchases to keep the wheel of commerce turning? Did the pandemic teach us nothing about how there are other ways to structure our efforts and time, and avoid wastefulness?

    The cycle of endless buying and spending is a fundamental motor of worsening global warming and climate change. Container ship after container ship, burning bunker fuel, bring an endless stream of stuff to our shores, and we waste our lives striving to acquire items many of which are unnecessary and futile. And now we’re ordered to get back to consuming. It would be laughable if the consequences were not so deadly.

     
    • DeWolf 12:27 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      Is shopping the only thing to do downtown?

      Given that it’s the symbolic heart of our city, the one place with a critical mass of museums, concert halls, universities, festivals, lively plazas and lots of interesting historic architecture, I’m always mystified by the anti-downtown attitudes I often encounter from people who live in triplexland. I know a lot of people for whom it is almost a point of pride to never go downtown and I really don’t get it. And these aren’t suburbanites – they’re granola bike-riding types. They just don’t like downtown. And yet downtown is where Montreal comes together as a place, and it’s the easiest place in the metropolitan area to reach without a car.

      Before the pandemic, a little under 2/3 of all downtown commuters got there by public transit. If there’s one place in the city where work-from-office is not destroying the planet, it’s downtown. In terms of the environmental impact of commuting, it’s the suburban office parks that are the real problem.

      Just before Omicron, traffic volume had reached 2019 levels even though the vast majority of office workers were still at home. Many people who previously commuted by transit bought cars during the pandemic, and now they’re driving around every day instead of taking the metro. That’s not good, and the hollowing out of the downtown office population is partly to blame.

    • Kate 12:53 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      By shopping I mean spending money generally – not just acquiring goods, but eating in restaurants, buying coffees to go, entertainment costs and so on.

      DeWolf, you yourself said last year: “Montreal has never had a one-dimensional downtown. Unless you think the universities and colleges will shut down, 150,000 people will abandon their downtown apartments, all festivals will be cancelled forever, and nobody is ever going to take public transit again, downtown will be just fine.” You were right. People do not have to be shooed back down to their office jobs to keep downtown alive.

      I don’t know what will happen with transit. Obviously some people have been scared away from the human proximity of buses and metros forever.

    • Ian 13:06 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      I usually just walk downtown, but I took the 55 bus from Laurier to downtown for the first time in over a year on Saturday and I was frankly appalled at how many people on that short ride had their masks pulled down. I walked home.

      If I had to take the bus to work I would definitely still be staying home as much as possible.

    • Kevin 13:39 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      it’s been a running joke about how many times the Chamber of commerce and the Mayor have announced plans to relaunch downtown over the past few years and get people to come back and go shopping.

      On one hand I sympathize with the store owners and restaurateurs who were depending on the commuting office workers for their custom. The pandemic accelerated trends that were already in existence, and pointed out flaws in business models.

      On the other hand, the latest UN report into climate change says the world needs to accelerate actions to limit the rise of greenhouse gases, and pushing people into commuting when it’s not necessary to get work done is short-term thinking.

      Spend the big bucks to make neighbourhoods even better, and to convert vacant office space into housing where people want to live and raise families and grow old.

      But bringing in 200,000 people a day to support the core? That’s an idea that should be banished.

    • Patrick 16:09 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      Went for a walk downtown Saturday. I took the subway to go and see the free exposition on Henning Wagenbreth at the Centre de deisgn. Walked around the new Esplanade Tranquille to see the skating rink and building. Ended up buying a gift for someone in a local store instead of ordering it on Amazon. #DidMyPart

    • Ephraim 16:17 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      I wouldn’t trust the Montreal Chamber of Commerce with a wooden nickel, never mind trust anything that they say. They have ripped the city of Montreal off so many times and in some many ways, that they should just rename themselves ConMontreal…. of course they already renamed themselves from the BoToMM already. Remember, these are the people that ripped off the city with BIXI, took over the parking meters and paid the city 30c on the dollar, tax tourist accommodations 3.5% as a “tax” and run Tourisme Montreal but won’t give them any say, unless they pay more.. and handed out a golden parachute of close to 3/4 of a million dollars when the CEO of Tourisme Montreal stepped down. It’s probably my biggest bugaboos

    • Kate 19:22 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      It’s not just the Chamber of Commerce, Ephraim. CBC radio had a guy from the Conseil du Patronat saying exactly the same thing.

    • Ephraim 19:36 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      @Kate – Understood. Still don’t trust ANYTHING the Chamber of Commerce says or does. They are always on the lookout for a way to grift the public purse.

    • Meezly 10:33 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      My family took the 55 to downtown to check out the new ice rink last Saturday afternoon. With Nuit Blanche and Lumiere going on, it was hopping in that area. For us being holed up in our homes for most of the winter, it was nice to get out and rub shoulders with people (and I’m saying this as an unrepentent introverted homebody).

      In terms of injecting life in the city, the new ice rink is awesome. Of course, it’s nothing compared to LaFontaine in terms of space but it sure is nice to have an even outdoor skating surface. There were families, groups of friends, couples, all having a great time. We were remarking what a perfect place it’d be for a romantic date.

      The facilities were nice too with skate rentals, locker storage and benches for changing footwear. But if you bring your own skates and locks like we did, it’s all free!

      Consuming is unavoidable. I mean, in a capitalist society, pretty much anything we do has a monetary cost to it. It’s a matter of how conscientiously you spend your money that matters.

    • Tee Owe 15:00 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      @ Meezly – thanks for this positive comment – so nice to read – I look forward to visiting there soon

    • Kate 15:42 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      Sorry, have I been grumpy?

      I may have been grumpy. My apologies.

    • MarcG 16:32 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      It seemed like fair criticism to me.

    • Kate 17:00 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      Again, I apologize. Maybe the pandemic and the long winter and the neo‑nazis and global warming and the war have been getting me down.

      I am sorry. I will try to post more feel-good stuff.

    • Meezly 17:06 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      No apologies needed, Kate, was just trying to provide a counterpoint.

      I even lost my Opus Card in the changing area and was bummed because I had just charged it with 10 rides. Not long after someone left a message on my phone saying they found my card and left it with the skate rental folks. So nice!

      I had written my number on the card with a sharpie pen. This is the 2nd time my opus card has been found.

    • MarcG 18:19 on 2022-03-01 Permalink

      @Kate: In case it wasn’t clear I meant that I agree with the observations in your original post.

    • Kate 00:03 on 2022-03-02 Permalink

      Understood, MarcG

  • Kate 10:33 on 2022-02-28 Permalink | Reply  

    A meteorologist, not a groundhog, is predicting that we’re in for another five to six weeks of winter. It should start lightening up around Easter weekend, April 17.

     
    • DeWolf 11:06 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      I’m still dreaming of last year when a beautiful winter — just enough snow, cold but not too cold — slid effortlessly into a warm spring that lasted for two months instead of the usual two weeks.

    • Kevin 11:29 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      Some years I’d be itching to be on my motorcycle already.
      This year I’ll think myself lucky if I’m riding by May 1.

    • walkerp 15:42 on 2022-02-28 Permalink

      It’s been cold, but the snow has been pretty good.

  • Kate 10:31 on 2022-02-28 Permalink | Reply  

    Alleged neo-Nazi Gabriel Sohier-Chaput will be in court this week facing a single charge of wilfully promoting hate propaganda, a charge notoriously difficult to prove beyond doubt.

    I’m grateful to CBC for covering this, because it feels like our mainstream media has generally been unwilling to report on the hate elements in Canada, even as they boiled to the surface in Ottawa and elsewhere. I realize these are unpleasant and dangerous people, but they’re part of the Canadian polity we need to get a handle on.

     
    • Kate 08:54 on 2022-02-28 Permalink | Reply  

      I’ve said in the past that I wished the St Patrick’s parade would give up using motorized floats. Seems I’ve got my wish. The parade is back this year on March 20 but in a modified form, with people simply walking.

       
      • Kate 08:46 on 2022-02-28 Permalink | Reply  

        Bars can reopen Monday as pandemic measures continue to be lifted.

         
        • Kate 10:22 on 2022-02-27 Permalink | Reply  

          Radio-Canada profiles a Black dancer who brought tap dancing to Montreal, and her granddaughter who teaches it today.

          CBC discusses a Black community newspaper and interviews the Montreal choreographer who helped create a gold medal routine for two French skaters in the recent Olympics, part of its Black Changemakers series for Black history month. I haven’t linked all the pieces but they’re all on the CBC site.

           
          • Kate 09:27 on 2022-02-27 Permalink | Reply  

            There’s to be a rally in support of Ukraine, Sunday at 2 pm at Place du Canada.

             
          • Kate 17:38 on 2022-02-26 Permalink | Reply  

            The new Champlain bridge is to be lit up blue and yellow Saturday night to show solidarity with Ukraine.

            Update: Photo in the Gazette.

             
          • Kate 17:36 on 2022-02-26 Permalink | Reply  

            The STM is honouring its first Black bus driver, who started work in 1973.

             
            • Kate 12:17 on 2022-02-26 Permalink | Reply  

              The city collected 25 cm of snow on Friday and removal operations begin Saturday morning.

               
              • Kate 11:09 on 2022-02-26 Permalink | Reply  

                The Grande Roue is reopening, and the family of the young man killed at the site in December is looking for answers.

                The family of the woman who was found dead on the floor in the Lakeshore General emergency room a year ago is also looking for answers.

                With due respect to the feelings of these people, “looking for answers” is a euphemism for trying to place blame. But incidents often have complex causes, and human life is fragile. In the second case, it’s clear that an overworked nursing staff and a negative-pressure room with poor visibility is the answer. Will that family feel better if someone is hauled up and fired? Or even charged with negligence and jailed?

                The matter of the Ferris wheel is different. Were the owners pressuring workers to do something hazardous, or failing to train operators properly? That would be worth looking into.

                 
                • PO 12:13 on 2022-02-26 Permalink

                  The thing about Lakeshore General is that they probably do need to investigate the ER there. I don’t mean to be euphemistic, but it’s not OK how they run that place. It’s chaotic and it’s dangerous as far as I’m concerned. My heart goes out to the nurse and doctors who try to make it work, but the whole wing needs to be shut down (burned down) and started from scratch. I’ve been to a few hospitals on the island, and sure they’re all a bit hectic. But Lakeshore General’s ER truly makes you feel like they might accidentally harm you because there is no order and no sense to it.

                • Kate 12:16 on 2022-02-26 Permalink

                  If the Lakeshore hasn’t fixed it in the year since that woman died, as the CBC item alleges, it may be true in a sense that they do need to burn it down and rethink it from scratch.

              • Kate 11:00 on 2022-02-26 Permalink | Reply  

                François Legault has given Simon Jolin‑Barrette the job of writing a constitution for Quebec.

                 
                • ant6n 13:22 on 2022-02-26 Permalink

                  Was there some successful independence referendum I missed?

                • qatzelok 17:02 on 2022-02-26 Permalink

                  ant6n, I think the media is censoring a lot of important stories where you are.

                  It was 80% Yes this time. Even Westmount voted 51% Yes.

                • ant6n 14:45 on 2022-02-27 Permalink

                  True. They just censored RT as well here. Need more love for freedom of speech and democracy.

              • Kate 23:29 on 2022-02-25 Permalink | Reply  

                Urbania’s Jacob Khayat “infiltrated” the John Molson School of Business – which turns out not to be a beer-making school.

                 
                • Kate 23:22 on 2022-02-25 Permalink | Reply  

                  Paramedics demonstrated outside SAQ warehouses on Friday to draw attention to their strike. It’s not made clear why they chose that location, as they don’t seem to have any beef with the SAQ.

                  Saturday, Radio-Canada says these demonstrations are over.

                   
                  • SMD 00:47 on 2022-02-26 Permalink

                    I talked to a paramedic about it today. He agreed that they have no beef with them, rather he said it was a way to draw attention to the fact that when the SAQ workers went on strike in December they were able to negotiate a new contract with the state within 24h. Paramedics have been waiting much longer despite being, I think we can all agree, more essential to society. (I suggested to him that next time the ambulances could block the ministers’ limousines, like 500 nurses did in 2015.)

                  • MarcG 11:34 on 2022-02-27 Permalink

                    SMD’s link is broken

                  • Kate 22:18 on 2022-02-27 Permalink

                    Yes, and I’m not sure what story he was looking at, because the entire link disappeared.

                • Kate 16:51 on 2022-02-25 Permalink | Reply  

                  François Legault is considering having the SAQ boycott products from Russia, but only ten vodkas and one beer are listed. I was surprised to learn that Stolichnaya and Moskovskaya come from Latvia, not the Russian Federation.

                  It would be a gesture, but gestures can be powerful. The LCBO is already doing it.

                  There are only two Ukrainian products at the SAQ, two vodkas, and one is out of stock.

                  Update: SAQ is now under orders to remove Russian products. Sunday night, only two Russian products remain at the SAQ link above, and neither is available.

                   
                  • Blork 17:59 on 2022-02-25 Permalink

                    Unfortunately, public opinion counts for nothing in Russia. This would only make a difference if Putin owned those distilleries, and even then it would only matter if it represented a large part of his income and the Quebec boycott represented a significant loss of that income.

                    IOW, hurting Russia doesn’t do much. You need to hurt Putin personally.

                c
                Compose new post
                j
                Next post/Next comment
                k
                Previous post/Previous comment
                r
                Reply
                e
                Edit
                o
                Show/Hide comments
                t
                Go to top
                l
                Go to login
                h
                Show/Hide help
                shift + esc
                Cancel