Updates from March, 2024 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 19:02 on 2024-03-16 Permalink | Reply  

    It’s all over the media that Canadiens head coach Martin St‑Louis has taken an indefinite leave of absence for family reasons. I think all those links go to versions of the same CP story.

     
    • Kate 18:53 on 2024-03-16 Permalink | Reply  

      Some media are noting that it’s a year since the fatal fire on Place Youville, and some family members feel that justice has not been done.

       
      • steph 11:22 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

        Denis Bégin (who set the fire) is already serving a life sentence for second-degree murder. They didn’t send him back to the minimum security prison he had escaped from. The legal system is not quick, and with the culprit behind bars already, I can’t imagine they’re in a rush. Unfortunately, I also think a guilty verdict against him would advantage Airbnb in the cases by the families against Airbnb. Let the families get their payday, and then go through the formalities of the criminal case. Sad and unfortunate story all around.

      • Kate 12:43 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

        Has it been legally established that Denis Bégin set the fire? Last I recall he admitted being there but claimed someone else had done it – which makes no sense, but I didn’t think it had come to trial.

      • steph 20:01 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

        There’s been no trial yet for the Airbnb fire case yet, Begin is back in prison for a 1993 murder. There’s some government responsibility in this case as he had escaped prison in 2019 and was a wanted fugitive when the fire was set.

    • Kate 18:22 on 2024-03-16 Permalink | Reply  

      CTV has news about a report outlining how Just For Laughs ran out of money.

       
      • Kate 11:15 on 2024-03-16 Permalink | Reply  

        A judge has renewed the injunction against protests near six Jewish buildings in the city. The injunction is against four groups and an individual.

         
        • Ian 13:45 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          “We’re very happy that the court recognized the urgency and importance of protecting the Jewish community.”

          Reminds me of those who claim to speak for the entire Irish community. I live in a Hassidic neighbourhood – there’s no injunctions needed here, and it’s not like they’re not obvious about their Judaism. One might almost think it had more to do with Zionism and Israel’s foreign policy than Judaism per se but hey.

        • bob 16:24 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          It does not. It has everything to do with the enabling of antisemites and their dupes who regurgitate antisemitic tropes by substituting “Zionist” for “Jew”.

          Sometimes, they forget. The “Important Message” posted to the Montreal4Palestine Instagram account about the protest in front of the Holocaust Museum said it was “not far from the Jewish Hospital as well as many Jewish-owned institutions.” The accompanying post from SPHR Concordia said “Today’s protest will be held in the vicinity of the Holocaust Museum and many Jewish institutions.” Why is it notable that it is near the “Jewish Hospital” and “Jewish-owned” institutions?

          The whole anti-Zionism is not antisemitism thing has become a farce, as has faux-left activism. Back when the anti war movement was about Iraq, the right wing descended on it with their antisemitic bullshit, and it stuck, until now a kind of fringe of conspiracy nuts and radicals. Now that fringe has become the mainstream. They think they are skeptics, but a more credulous population you will not find.

        • Ian 17:34 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          So you’re telling me my Hassidic neighbours are antisemitic? Fascinating. Say hi to Anthony Housefather for me.

        • AMF 21:02 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          Is “my hassidic neighbours” the new “my black friend”?
          Hassidim I know are in fact experiencing elevated levels of antisemitism, including being spat at and cursed at in the street. And these recent protests featured Nazi salutes, chants of death to the Jews, and a three hour blockade of a building, all on video, and all right beside the Jewish elementary school that had a bullet in the door a few months ago.

        • Ian 21:24 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          AMF, first time poster long-time lurker?

          I don’t know you, but I do know my neighbours, and have a great relationship with them. We help each other out and talk all the time, I actually find it a way more welcoming community than most neighbourhoods in Montreal. We look out for each other.

          Anyhow yeah, I do live in a Hassidic neighbourhood and no, we don’t have injunctions against protests in front of their schools and synagogues – because there aren’t any protests. There are 8 synagogues within a couple of blocks of my house, and tons of Jewsish businesses including groceries, butchers, restaurants, bookstores… all obviously Jewish.

          But hey, I know you don’t want to hear it as it doesn’t match your narrative.
          Maybe you can expain to me how Independent Jewish Voices aren’t real Jews either.
          https://www.ijvcanada.org/ijv-steering-committee-statement-on-anti-zionism/

        • walkerp 09:38 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

          The excluded middle sits alone in the corner, more excluded than ever…

        • bob 19:23 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

          @Ian – So, because this one community has not been targetted, it means that there is no such thing as antisemitism? That swastikas painted on schools are not a thing unless they are in your neighbourhood? And IJV is a thing, like log cabin Republicans are a thing. Viewpoints dissenting from the mainstream are often exceptions that prove the rules, not evidence of moral superiority.

        • Ian 10:48 on 2024-03-18 Permalink

          To a hammer everything looks like a nail.

      • Kate 09:30 on 2024-03-16 Permalink | Reply  

        Use of public transit has become irregular since the pandemic, purchase of monthly passes having fallen by 69%. It isn’t only the effect of working from home (what Henri Ouellette‑Vézina calls “le spectre du télétravail” here) but also that the ARTM’s deals for subscriptions is much less favourable now than it was under the old fare structure. But the upshot is that transit has a less predictable revenue stream.

        In related news, it should be possible soon to recharge your Opus with your phone. But you won’t be able to use your phone directly at the turnstile quite yet.

        Le Devoir got hold of a study saying that a tramway would be a better bet for the east end than light rail.

         
        • Joey 10:50 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          I started taking the metro fairly regularly (2-3 times a week) this January. I assumed it would be sardine cans all the way during morning rush hour – while the metro is pretty full until Berri, it’s hardly the overcrowded anxiety nightmare that was common pre-COVID. That said, I haven’t hit a service interruption day yet…

        • dhomas 10:52 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          I’m part of the beta testing for the Opus “Chrono Recharge” program. It works quite well! The only weird thing is that I added a pack of 10 tickets while I still had 1 ticket from a previous purchase and it started using the new tickets before the old one. Not a big deal, but I found it odd.

        • CE 12:28 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          I ride transit quite often but at irregular hours so at all different times of day and night. The metro isn’t as jam packed at rush hour as it used to be but I do find it more full at off peak hours than I remember it being pre-pandemic. It could just be that the metro is like the buses which are more crowded than they used to be due to there being fewer departures.

          I rode transit often during the depths of Covid and those nearly empty trains and buses at 8am on a weekday were truly unsettling.

        • Blork 13:07 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          Maybe the shift towards irregular service will shift the fees away from favouring daily commuters so much. If the fees for casual use were lower, AND TICKETS EASIER TO ACCESS, then maybe more people will use it on an occasional basis instead of driving or using Uber.

          “Whaddaya mean, ‘easier to access’” you ask? Simply this: people who rarely use public transit often don’t even know how, or what’s needed for payment, and because they are human they can’t be f*cked to find out. So they avoid it. So imagine if it became known that a bus or Metro trip was only a few bucks and all you had to do was load a few tickets into an app — or even better, just pay directly with your phone. More people would use it, including casual/occasional users, visitors, etc.

          As it stands now, I’m trying to imagine a visitor from Toronto or California or anywhere else trying to navigate the Byzantine STM web site or fee structure posters if they just want to use the Metro (or worse; a bus) for a few trips or a few days. I’ve lived here for years and I can’t barely figure it out.

        • Ephraim 13:21 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          Maybe I’m stupid, but WHY do they still insist that a monthly pass has to be bought from the 1st of the month and that a weekly pass needs to start on a Monday. It’s a damn monthly pass, if you buy it on the 12th, it should be good until the 12th of the next month. And if I buy a weekly pass on a Wednesday, it should be good until the next Wednesday. I understand in the past when they actually had to look at the MONTH printed on it, but we are in an electronic age when the pass is checked by a computer. And let me pay by Apple/Google/Samsung pay. That’s how you pay in Europe. I’m not running out to get a special card to use in Bergen in Norway or in Bilbao in Spain.

        • steph 14:15 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          It’d be nice to not need two opus cards. One for zone A tickets, and another for zone AB.

        • Blork 14:42 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          @steph, that’s my situation too. Although it’s been improved somewhat by the recent discovery that the Chrono app can tell you how many tickets you have. Before that it was always a mystery. (Checking at a ticket machine is not always possible, and sometimes the info it gives was undecipherable.)

          The ultimate goal is just direct pay from your phone (ideally without even needing a special app) and it only costs like $3 a ride. Making that transferable from vehicle to vehicle might be difficult though, without an app behind it.

        • Nicholas 18:19 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          Kate, are deals for subscriptions worse now than they were before? In 2015 a monthly was $82 and a ten pack of single use were $26.50, meaning you had to take 30.9 trips to make a monthly worth it. Now at $97 and $32.50, it’s 28.8 trips. So it’s actually a better deal now to get a subscription than before. I’m sure using different trips and different years we’d find some differences, but all in all it seems about the same. But I agree that people are commuting less, so it’s less worth it.

          Ephraim, you’re absolutely right, there’s no reason they can’t make monthly passes 28 or 30 days like in many places. (This would also mean avoiding the lines that come up on the first of the month, instead spreading out purchases.) The issue is when they converted to a smart card they were thinking of adopting the old system and making it digital, rather than thinking about changing the fare structure. So we got tickets on a card, rather than money on a card.

          And, and to steph and Blork’s points as well, this complicates everything. With an electronic purse (load money on a card), there is no need to think about the fares: you just ensure you have enough money on, and tap and go, and the system calculates it for you. Easy for passing through multiple zones, easy for infrequent users, easy to allow credit and debit cards as payments, etc. There are some issues with this, with the big ones being 1. you need to have a way to determine what zone(s) people need, which either requires tapping out or having the tap machine allow you to select the zone, and 2. credit card transaction fees are high, so if every purchase is just $3, that’s over 10% in fees, so you want to encourage larger purse refills. But you can do neat things like fare capping, so that it charges you every time until you hit the day/evening/weekend/weekly/monthly cap, and people don’t have to think about which pass they should buy as it automatically applies, though they still can.

          I don’t imagine we’ll move anywhere in this direction anytime soon, as the opportunity to push that was during the fare reform, and it didn’t happen. But it could.

        • Kate 19:48 on 2024-03-16 Permalink

          Nicholas, the journalist says – translating – “The advantage of annual subscriptions have decreased considerably in recent years. Previously, an annual commitment represented a savings of around 20% on the monthly rate, allowing you to benefit from the equivalent of one month free and a lower monthly rate. However, since the price overhaul, the ARTM has only offered a discount of $5 per month after 12 months of subscription for an annual subscription on the island of Montreal.”

        • Ian 13:59 on 2024-03-17 Permalink

          It’s pretty comical how hard it is to teh use the STM unless you already know.

          Check out Berlin for comparison …

          Step 1: Buy a ticket
          Step 2: Validate your ticket
          Step 3: Use public transport

          And yes you can buy tickets nearly anywhere compared to here, with a whole pile of different methods from apps to cash, at a kiosk, on a tram, whatever. It’s almost like they are trying to make it easy and enjoyable or something.

          https://allaboutberlin.com/guides/public-transit

        • Tee Owe 15:12 on 2024-03-18 Permalink

          I’ve posted this here before, but to add to Berlin, there’s London and Toronto – tap in with your debit card (from wherever you live), tap out when leaving, the system calculates your fare and caps you at the daily cap – I know where I prefer to be a tourist

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