Updates from March, 2022 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 12:06 on 2022-03-22 Permalink | Reply  

    Papineau between Sherbrooke and de Maisonneuve has been closed to fix a sinkhole on this well-travelled road that’s the main route to the Jacques-Cartier bridge.

     
    • NataliaKi 12:34 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      Неllo аll, guуs! Ι know, mу meѕsage mау bе tоo ѕpеcifiс,
      Вut mу siѕtеr fоund nіcе mаn hеre and thеy marrіed, so how about me?! 🙂
      I am 27 yеars old, Nаtalіa, frоm Ukrаіnе, Ι knоw Еnglіѕh аnd Gеrmаn lаnguages alѕo
      Αnd… I hаvе sрecifіс diѕeaѕe, named nуmphomanіа. Ԝho know what is thіs, cаn undеrѕtand mе (bеttеr to sаy іt immеdiatеly)
      Αh yes, Ι сook vеrу taѕtуǃ and I lоvе not only cоok ;))
      Ιm rеаl gіrl, not рrоstіtutе, and looking fоr ѕеriоuѕ аnd hоt rеlаtiоnshiр…
      Αnyway, уоu сan find mу рrоfіlе herе: http://lieditmarovali.ml/user/35356/

    • PO 12:38 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      The above comment better make it in this year’s calendar.

    • carswell 12:47 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      A recent post to the March 3rd “Threat in Mexico means layoffs here” thread looks like spam too.

    • Meezly 13:43 on 2022-03-23 Permalink

      Didn’t realize this blog also doubled as an unofficial dating site. I’d like to find nice man here too!

  • Kate 10:39 on 2022-03-22 Permalink | Reply  

    Some of you may have noticed that the site was pretty sluggish this morning. I need to do some updating in the background which may cause some outages, or may not.

     
    • carswell 12:09 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      Definitely sluggish since my first attempt to check in at around 6 a.m. Failed to load on several occasions and once gave me a 503 error.

  • Kate 09:20 on 2022-03-22 Permalink | Reply  

    Chastened Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau apologized in French on Monday for his airy comments in November on not needing French in Montreal, but that may not be enough.

     
    • Kevin 11:07 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      As a former co-worker used to say: never a pat on the back, but always a boot up the ass.

      Too many powerful people in this province want to make sure the correct people are getting hurt.

  • Kate 09:11 on 2022-03-22 Permalink | Reply  

    Six more of the passengers on the infamous party plane have been fined as much as $5,000 each.

     
    • steph 10:02 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      “up to $5,000”, so maybe actually just 10$?

    • MarcG 10:24 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      That’s like, $5 per new follower…

  • Kate 21:16 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

    TVA reports that as of 7:04 pm Monday, the Old Port fox was still at large.

     
    • thomas 21:44 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

      If this story has a happy ending, “Le Renard du Vieux-Port ” is a great name for a bar.

    • Meezly 09:14 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      I’m confused now. I thought the fox was marooned on floating ice, which was why they were trying to rescue ‘him’, now they have discovered his den, so I assume this den is on solid ground, so why are they still trying to ‘rescue’ him…? Now I’m starting to agree with the biologist and think the fox knows what he’s doing and the dumb humans should just leave him be.

    • mare 10:10 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

      The fox is spoiled. They now know what ice floes are and will go back for a ride every year, over and over again. Just like bears and trash cans.

      Leave the fox alone.

      (Coop café Le Renard, on Bellechasse and De Normanville, unfortunately didn’t survive the pandemic. Maybe they can restart in the Vieux-Port?)

  • Kate 17:17 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

    The Mayor is promising to add 17,500 more trees this year at a cost of $3.5 million. It sounded like a lot till I did the calculation: the trees cost $200 each to buy and plant, which is not unreasonable.

     
    • Kate 17:10 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

      Le Devoir visited the Village with two of its agents d’accueil, part of a six‑person team that tries to make peace among the homeless living in the Hôtel Dupuis, the merchants along that part of Ste‑Catherine, and the people living in the area – not always, as noted here, easy to do.

       
      • DeWolf 19:05 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

        I thought this was a nicely written article. And the project it describes is particularly interesting given that it’s an initiative of the SDC. Merchant-funded social work, basically.

    • Kate 16:42 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

      The STM says its ridership is inching up towards pre‑pandemic levels, with 85% of its previous ridership expected back by next fall.

       
      • Kate 15:37 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

        The city’s inspector general is so dissatisfied with the city’s contract with Ricova that she’d like to see it cancelled, and also wants it investigated by the UPAC. But she recognizes that services must continue, so Ricova will go on operating the recycling centres in Lachine and St‑Michel for now.

        The allegation is that Ricova, which has a virtual monopoly over the city’s recycling, is not remitting the required revenue to the city from selling recycled materials abroad.

        Update: CBC news on Tuesday clarified that there seems to be some shady stuff where different branches of Ricova are selling recycled materials to each other while not conveying any profits back to the city.

         
        • Bert 18:07 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

          Isn’t there a compound phenomena going on?

          we don’t separate our recycling much, so secondary separation is required. Be it that the recycler does it, or gives less favourable prices.
          since this is getting shipped off-shore, recent increases in shipping prices can’t be helping
          many recycling processing countries are fed up being the dumping ground of the world, this includes e-waste processing and heavy equipment (ships and the like) processing

        • Kate 21:30 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

          I imagine that will be the basis of Ricova’s defence.

      • Kate 15:30 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

        A man has been arrested and charged with attempted murder in that stabbing in Westmount early Sunday. The Gazette says Curtis Jonas has a long criminal record and will be sent for a mental health assessment.

         
        • Kate 15:23 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

          Quebec has announced just over a billion dollars over two years to redo highways and overpasses in Montreal, with a list of the locations.

           
          • Kate 10:13 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

            There are a cascade of stories lately about labour actions of various kinds. Urgences‑Santé is on strike and managers are now at the wheel for the first time ever in response to a judge’s order.

             
            • Maxim Baru 13:44 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              Interesting decision. I wonder what the inside baseball was the led to this new ruling. In the US there’s quite a few people tracking changes at the NLRB with a fine tooth comb. Any readers here know of some nerdy sources to track changes in policy and leadership at tribunal administratif du travail?

          • Kate 10:10 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

            Thousands of students plan to strike Tuesday, reviving the printemps érable call of ten years ago for free university tuition. It’s UQÀM, UdeM and CEGEPs that will be out.

             
            • Ephraim 11:03 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              We should set up a system that rebates over 10 years the tuition, but only if you are a tax-paying Quebecois. And in fact, if you learn outside the province and come back, you get the same rebate amount, over 10 years. So you stay in Quebec after university, you get free education. You leave, you don’t.

              Even better, charge the same $5K they charge in other provinces and rebate that over the 10 years of being a taxpayer… My guess is that it won’t cost all that much in the end, but it will incentivise staying in Quebec and keeping the investment in their education here.

            • Kate 13:53 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              What if they made university free – but only in French?

            • walkerp 14:02 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              Both innovative and interesting ideas!

            • Kevin 16:26 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              It’s kinda de rigueur for people to do Masters and PhDs and post-docs to head to a different school, usually out of province… sometimes out of country.

          • Kate 09:45 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

            The city banned glyphosate as of January 1, but Radio‑Canada found it still for sale at a couple of major hardware stores.

             
            • seb 11:15 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              Saw a bunch of it up here in Lachute too.
              We, as people, will never give a shit.

            • dhomas 09:25 on 2022-03-22 Permalink

              It’s still legal in Lachute, unfortunately. It’s only illegal in Montreal.

          • Kate 09:43 on 2022-03-21 Permalink | Reply  

            The city has presented its ideas for connecting Cavendish boulevard via a tunnel under the CN and CP tracks, and with room for pedestrians and cyclists as well as motor traffic.

             
            • DeWolf 10:08 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              Glad to see there’s only one lane for cars in all of the different arrangements. This will presumably help prevent overwhelming the NDG portion of Cavendish with traffic, since it only has two lanes of traffic anyway.

              But which of the three arrangements would be best? I’m thinking that 1 would be okay, but there’s a risk that drivers will use the bus lanes. There’s no problem of that happening in 2 but the wide shoulders on the car lanes would invite them to speed. 3 resolves all of those problems but it would create some tricky intersections.

            • DeWolf 10:16 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              (One lane for cars in each direction, I should clarify.)

            • Kevin 10:30 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              The trees and multiple medians are a good touch that shows designers are thinking about the psychology of driving and how to force drivers to slow down.

              But I think that it may be a very long time before the route gets to look like any of these sketches. The primary short-term reason for this road is to move trucks from the 40 to Blue Bonnets while that sector is developed, and that’s going to very inefficient with just one lane in each direction.

              With that in mind, I suspect they will pick Option 1 or 2, with the bus lanes being open to trucks during construction.

            • mare 11:34 on 2022-03-21 Permalink

              For some reason I had never actually looked at a map of the area, probably because last fall was the first time I’ve been in Cote St-Luc.
              I was looking at the satellite view and noticed the three giant parking lots next to the CN and CP tracks. Not for their workers, but to store *new* cars. Thousands of them. So it’s not just train infrastructure that occupies a lot of land in that area, but car infrastructure as well, on top of all the “normal” roads and space used for parking.

              Also, the tunnel is much shorter than I thought after all those years of delays. I thought it would be something like the REM tunnel to the airport, crossing a multitude of ladder tracks, but there are only a few tracks between the two Cavendishes.

              I also agree that variant 3 would be best, but guess it will be 1 or 2, and number 3 is only suggested for the “good, better, best” spiel, common in commerce.

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