Updates from August, 2023 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 22:22 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

    CTV notes that Momesso’s restaurant is up for sale. I’ve never eaten there, but they did make a fine espresso.

     
    • Joey 09:20 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

      In other institutional restaurant news, Amelia’s is moving after its landlord refused to renew the lease. Not sure when but I think they’re taking over the spot La Cabane had on St.-Laurent.

    • Kate 09:42 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

      La Cabane has closed?!

    • Joey 09:53 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

      Guess so. The address for the new Amelia’s is the same as La Cabane, so…

    • Blork 10:05 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

      Yeah, I walked by La Cabane a few days ago and it was shut. This means Amelia’s will inherit the liquor license, so no more BYO with your pizza. On the other hand, it won’t be 40 degrees in there on warm summer evening (like it was in the old location).

  • Kate 22:14 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

    Traffic blockages on the long weekend are already being dreaded.

    CBC also looks at NDG residents annoyed by roadwork and CTV at more general annoyance with road construction sites.

     
  • Kate 22:09 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

    The hit-and-run killer of composer and conductor Boris Brott, knocked down in Hamilton last year, has been sentenced to nearly 8 years in prison.

     
    • Kate 18:15 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

      A Superior Court judge has ruled that Longueuil can cull the deer herd in Michel-Chartrand Park with a crossbow hunt. The ruling may yet be appealed.

       
      • Faiz Imam 14:29 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        Goldwater won’t give up till this goes to the supreme court, that lady will go to the ends of the earth for some cute animals.

        Those deer unfortunately need to die, there’s no other solution and the longer we wait the more ecological damage it causes.

      • Kevin 16:59 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        I’m with Faiz. Deer are tall rats, squirrels are tree rats, and raccoons are fat rats that have learned to open the brown compost bins

      • Kate 17:11 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        Goldwater is a smart woman. So I don’t understand why she can’t see that a piece of land can only sustain so many animals when there are no predators and they’re boxed in so they can’t migrate somewhere else. That park may be nice but it’s not a fully natural setting. If anything, it would be cruel not to cull them, and probably on a regular basis too.

      • dhomas 06:34 on 2023-09-02 Permalink

        If I remember correctly, she wants the deer to be moved someplace else. How you move about 80 deer, I don’t know. Maybe we should release a few wolves instead…

    • Kate 12:52 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

      La Presse reported Thursday morning that the ARTM admitted it would take four years to update its fare collection system to accept phones and credit cards in payment. Immediately, transport minister Geneviève Guilbault kicked, saying it has to happen faster.

      Also mentioned in that second piece is a promise for better wayfinding from Bonaventure metro station to the REM, after reports that a Concordia graphic design student had put up improvised signs to serve the purpose.

       
      • Orr 13:15 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        ARTM: Is that a French acronym for underachiever and proud of it?

      • Kate 15:39 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        The question would be: does the ARTM have the budget to make this upgrade? Does Guilbault know whether they do, and if they don’t, does she have the power to hand over enough money to do it in the time frame she’d like to see?

      • DisgruntledGoat 15:42 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        I know not everyone is the biggest fan of the REM being imposed on the city by CDPQ Infra.

        However when you look at the dumpster fire that is the ARTM it’s kind of a small miracle ‍♂️

      • Kate 16:37 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        The ARTM is a relatively recent entity (since 2017) and it is, like everything else here, a creature of the provincial government. So any strife between the ARTM and CDPQ Infra is purely a Quebec thing – it’s not the doing of Montreal or Montrealers.

      • Spi 16:48 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        That’s being generous, it’s essentially staffed by the same people that were at the AMT before it was split into EXO/ARTM. When the ARTM decided to come out against off the REM-Est, I said that they better come out with an even better project (which they didn’t) or else they’d all be unemployed by the end of 2024. I stand by that, especially since the CAQ plans to create a new agency to manage large transportation projects and the transport providers don’t like working with l’ARTM.

      • DisgruntledGoat 16:48 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        Completely in agreement. We are held hostage by the rest of the province on a lot of topics, unfortunately.

      • DeWolf 18:36 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        As Spi says, the fact that the STM and other agencies that actually provide public transport hate the ARTM says a lot about what a dysfunctional entity it is.

      • PO 22:34 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        It’s going to take four years because instead of paying for and implementing an already existing, off the shelf, well tested and highly effective system that already exists in dozens of other major cities, they’re going to create their own convoluted system in-house that will have half the functionality, four times the cost and only work under specific and limited circumstances. It wouldn’t be the first time.

      • Joey 09:26 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        Some of the more interesting parts of the project will be completed sooner, but this whole enterprise was doomed when “you need to be able to book a Téo Taxi with your Opus card” was considered essential. We don’t need one app to rule them all – just a way to get on transit with our phones.

    • Kate 11:32 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

      The 2017 law passed by the Couillard government to make police camo pants illegal as a pressure tactic has been ruled unconstitutional by a Superior Court judge, who also said they posed no threat to public safety.

       
      • Nicholas 11:55 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        Quebec certainly has experience telling public sector workers what they can and can’t wear, so I’m sure we’ll get the notwithstanding clause used on police right away.

      • DisgruntledGoat 15:47 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        The camo pants were just an additional ‘ick’ for me, as someone who deplores the continued militarization of the look of police forces.

        Black uniforms, dark police cars, police should not look intimidating. It fundamentally goes against serving and protecting, their supposed place in modern society.

        Bring back those blue unis and big hats from the 70s!

      • Kate 16:39 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        I found them entertaining, like clown pants. Many of the cops were sporting pink or pale blue “camo” prints which were never intended as military camouflage.

    • Kate 09:28 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

      I can’t say I ever watched MAtv Montreal, but Videotron’s shutdown of the station is being called another loss to local media by some who were involved.

       
      • Ephraim 10:15 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        Anyone know what it means to their cable licence? And if this has to do with the fact that they were required to broadcast about 20% in English because Montreal isn’t unilingual

      • Kate 11:35 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        Steve Faguy has some details which suggest Videotron still has the licence for now.

      • Blork 13:00 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        Community television like that had a much more prominent role before the Internet (and by “prominent” I mean it was a tiny speck then, versus now when it’s a microscopic spec). I can’t say I’ve watched MAtv much either, but a few years ago the QWF (Quebec Writers Federation — anglo writers) did a series of sit-downs with local writers that was nice to see.

        But ultimately I think they have no viewers. One could argue that they still have a role to play in terms of local media, but that’s sort of moot if nobody watches. And why does nobody watch? Because most people would rather scroll through Tiktok and the platform formerly known as Twitter than sit down and passively watch a few local talking heads blah-blah-blah about something that’s covered well enough (in their opinion) on Facebook or YouTube.

        User-generated media like FB, Tiktok, YouTube, podcasts, etc. was supposed to save us from the tyranny of the networks, but they haven’t really; they’ve just become networks in their own fashion. While any knob can stick up a podcast or YouTube video of a sofa filled with ango writers discussing their work, nobody’s going to watch it. Same as nobody’s going to watch it on MAtv.

      • Kate 13:17 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        We’re always dealing with the problem of who does the primary reporting – and I say this as someone who’s had a secondary news blog for more than 20 years. Social media is fine as a place to boost news stories we find interesting or complain about news that upsets or disturbs us, but someone has to go out and collect that primary news or investigate those stories, then write them up or record them for broadcast.

        What most people don’t realize is that reporting is a slog. You have to go out and question people who might not want to talk to you, or dig into matters that someone would rather keep quiet. A reporter has to sit through tedious council sessions or press conferences waiting for that one nugget of information that’s the key angle that makes a news story.

        I don’t know how much primary reporting was done by people working for MAtv Montreal. The little I heard of it sounded like it was mostly talking heads, and that’s where regular media fall down now. Social media makes us all news commentators, we don’t need to watch other people doing endless analysis and giving their opinions – not unless it’s one of the rare people whose thoughts on the news are worth hearing.

        But we do need the primary news, now more than ever, given how much obfuscation is created by social media, and potentially also by artificial intelligence.

        If we don’t have reliable primary news, everything we hear about is nothing but rumour.

      • Blork 10:45 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        I might be wrong, but I’m pretty sure MAtv wasn’t any kind of primary news source. Anytime I’d pass by it was just local people sitting on sofas talking to mild-mannered and very earnest hosts about very non-offensive things.

      • CE 11:12 on 2023-09-01 Permalink

        Im always surprised when I see that cable TV still exists. For anyone around my age and under, having cable is akin to having a fax machine and has been that way for a long time. I read recently that the average age of viewers of even youth-oriented cable networks is somewhere in the 50s.

    • Kate 09:01 on 2023-08-31 Permalink | Reply  

      More people are opting to carry naloxone kits as fatal drug overdoses are on the rise. Last year, 175 people died in Montreal from overdoses.

      Statistics also show that 3 out of 4 overdose deaths here occur inside the home and not down a dark alley as usually imagined. And only 9% happen to the homeless.

      Also challenging received ideas about the homeless, a recent study showed that homeless people in Canada given a sum of $7500 spent most of it on housing and food, not booze, smokes or drugs.

       
      • Ephraim 10:19 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        You would think that someone would come up with a system to provide housing and food the same way that they do for independent senior residences. You pay a certain amount, but the government subsidizes it as long as you have a basket of services that includes at least one meal a day. Independent companies have built these buildings specifically for these services. You would think they could do this more like a rooming house and offer stability

      • Orr 13:19 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        175 people dying out of 1,255 total overdoses in Montreal area in 2022. It’s a lot, and it is somewhat preventable.
        In BC by comparison, 6 deaths per day.
        No wonder Canada’s chiefs of police are calling for decriminalization.

      • walkerp 13:53 on 2023-08-31 Permalink

        It’s one more statistic demonstrating how disproportionate the police budget is compared to actual needs in this city. 175 ODs vs 30ish homicides and yet we need to give more money to the police to combat the scourge of gun violence that is destroying Montreal.

      • Chris 12:12 on 2023-09-02 Permalink

        That study with the $7500 seems to have some serious flaws, like in how they selected who’d get money. They excluded the long-term homeless, drug and alcohol abusers, and the mentally ill.

        It looks more like they wanted to show a conclusion, and made a study to fit.

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