Updates from June, 2024 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 21:27 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

    The Montreal Economic Institute says the city shouldn’t increase its presence in the real estate market, which is a reliable indicator that it absolutely should.

     
    • Kate 11:55 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

      Opossums never used to make it across the Canada‑U.S. border, but now they’re establishing themselves as denizens of the island of Montreal.

       
      • jeather 12:34 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

        I had no idea!

      • walkerp 13:03 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

        That’s cool. They are really neat animals. Be prepared if you have never seen one before, they can get quite large and may appear at first to be a gigantic rat.

      • Ian 13:38 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

        I’ve seen them in Petite Patrie. Only cats, rats, skunks, groundhogs, raccoons, and squirrels in my alley so far.

      • Uatu 13:47 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

        They eat ticks which means they’re a welcome addition to the island!

      • Ian 20:25 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

        They can eat their entire body weight in ticks each year, which is great since I don’t eat any at all.

      • Ephraim 17:22 on 2024-06-29 Permalink

        You don’t eat ticks or Opossums? Personally, I don’t eat either, but I figured I would ask for clarification, just in case 😀

      • Ian 17:52 on 2024-06-29 Permalink

        Well neither, but I did mean ticks 😉

      • Ephraim 13:09 on 2024-06-30 Permalink

        Incidentally for your neighbours… none of them are kosher. All insects aren’t. And only Addax, Antelope. Bison, Cow, Deer, Gazelle, Giraffe, Goat, Ibex and Sheep can be kosher. (Though, no one is sure how to properly shochet a giraffe anymore.)

      • Kate 13:22 on 2024-06-30 Permalink

        That’ll be OK. I don’t think opossums are Jewish.

      • Ephraim 13:53 on 2024-07-01 Permalink

        You think giraffes are?

    • Kate 11:51 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

      More on the rise in crime in the metro as reported in 2023, a sharp increase from the previous year – and giving the metro’s special constables plenty to do.

       
      • Kate 11:05 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

        A collision between a river shuttle and another boat Thursday afternoon off Île Charron, one of the Îles de Boucherville, left nine people injured.

         
        • Nicholas 16:44 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

          La Presse has a lot more details, including that the pleasure boat was going at high speed and fled the scene, meaning there could be criminal charges. It also correctly notes this is a Navark boat (which operates service for the ARTM), unlike the CTV article which incorrectly calls it an “STM river shuttle”, even though the STM has nothing to do with this. But CTV published first, so I guess that’s what counts. La Releve published a few minutes after CTV, with quotes photos from the scene that La Presse presumably paid for, given it’s the same La Releve photographer. The local pubs are really putting the national media to shame, especially as Bell cut some more technicians yesterday.

        • Kate 18:57 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

          Thank you, Nicholas.

          Hit-and-runs even on the river!

      • Kate 08:51 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

        An outdoor exhibit about Zïlon has been put up along Atateken till October, shown in this video from CBC. Zïlon died last year.

         
        • Ephraim 14:26 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

          And the building he painted has basically destroyed his artwork. You have to go back to 2014 to see it in all it’s glory! https://maps.app.goo.gl/eZrT8waMFtwB7qud7

        • CE 21:06 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

          That was a really good piece but what replaced it by Bordalo II, made out of old junk is exceptional!

        • Ephraim 22:05 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

          Yes, but only because Zilon’s work was tagged and covered over. It’s a shame we can’t keep nice artwork sometimes.

        • Kate 14:10 on 2024-06-29 Permalink

          Zïlon chose to work mostly in forms subject to alteration or obliteration. He must have known when he painted that building that the owner, or a future owner, was bound to eventually change or demolish it. I think we have to accept that as part of his philosophy as an artist.

        • Ian 17:53 on 2024-06-29 Permalink

          Zïlon was also known for painting over other people’s work, so fair game.

      • Kate 08:46 on 2024-06-28 Permalink | Reply  

        Weekend notes from CityCrunch, La Presse, Sarah’s Weekend List, CultMTL.

        List of things to do from Time Out, summer activities from Silo57, free activities from Narcity.

        Open and closed for Canada Day weekend.

        And TVA is already dreading the traffic while CTV warns of rain.

         
        • Kate 13:44 on 2024-06-27 Permalink | Reply  

          The REM is down in both directions till further notice, a breakdown in the control system being blamed.

          …It’s back, but was down for four hours.

           
          • Kate 13:41 on 2024-06-27 Permalink | Reply  

            Pierre Legault, who started both Moisson Montreal and Renaissance, has received the Order of Canada, as have notables such as Daniel Lavoie and Kent Nagano. CBC lists the Montrealers that were named; the full list is here.

            I wouldn’t turn one down, but the one I’d really like is the Order of Montreal

             
            • H. John 13:14 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

              For fans of Louise Penny’s mystery novels featuring Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, the character of Dr. Myrna Landers, retired psychologist and Three Pines bookstore owner, was based on Myrna Lashley (newly appointed Order of Canada member).

              Penny’s and Lashley’s late husbands both worked as doctors at the Montreal Children’s Hospital, where Myrna Lashley created their first Employee’s Assistance Program.

          • Kate 09:14 on 2024-06-27 Permalink | Reply  

            Crimes in the metro have nearly doubled in the last year, but this week it was also reported that armed violence is down in general. You win some, you lose some.

             
            • Kate 09:12 on 2024-06-27 Permalink | Reply  

              Quebec published its requirements for commercial signs this week – explained here, including a video showing the possibilities – and businesses are asking for a break, saying a year to change all their signs is difficult. As this piece says, “On ne se contentera plus d’un petit « les cafés » devant un nom dans une langue étrangère beaucoup plus en évidence.” We should have something like this as of next year:

              LE CAFÉ

              SECOND CUP

              LA QUINCAILLERIE

              CANADIAN TIRE

              That will be hilarious.

               
              • walkerp 09:19 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I’m cautiously optimistic this will somewhat reduce brand pollution on our commercial streets.

              • Ephraim 10:18 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                @walkerp – I think it is going to get a LOT worse because of this. The Les cafés is 2x to 3x the size, under the requirements. So the store to get it’s name BIG is going to have to put up even bigger descriptors OR put up MORE signs that are in French.

              • Kate 10:24 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                It’s going to look like we’re all very slow or dyslexic children who couldn’t otherwise be aware what’s going on along our streets and malls.

              • MarcG 10:26 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I’m hoping for more of a Socialist Utopia vibe

              • Uatu 10:37 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                Meh just put up a QR code and you can read it in wtf language you want

              • Mark 11:03 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I know they are not the same departments and ministères, but to think that hundreds if not thousands of personnel hours have been spent on coming up with these proposed changes, while we are on the cusp of massive climate upheaval, a generational housing crisis and a broken health care system is maddening.

                Not even considering that this will do absolutely nothing to improve the state of French, which is the goal right? I work for a literacy non-profit and the official French course system for newly arrived immigrants is in such a shambolic state that organizations on the ground are reaching out to us to help them clear the backlog of demands to help people. Some folks started a course with the official system, and then bam, everything stopped and they had no courses for 6 months, which works wonders for someone trying to learn a language. Dysfunctional isn’t even a strong enough term.

                I used to think that these high profile OQLF measures would win the “regional” votes over, but the thing is, there has been a real spill over of immigrants to non-traditional regions and towns, and organizations are contacting us saying they don’t have any resources to help these folks.

                The voter in Granby (chosen at random) who would have had his nationalist fever scratched by seeing La Quincaillerie Canadian Tire isn’t buying it. If you want to improve and retain French, do two things: improve the schools and help adults learn the language. But that takes time, and you know, elections are soon.

              • steph 11:05 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I expect the visual pollution to only increase. It’s infantilizing that we need descriptors.

              • Kate 11:33 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                When I went to visit my sister in the Netherlands in 2010, I was for some reason routed via Detroit. (I didn’t book the ticket.) I spent a little time in the Detroit airport, which was a visual overload of brash commercial signage. So when I got to Schiphol around 5 a.m. it was almost comic to see very plain generic signs on the businesses there – mostly closed at that hour – and no glitz.

                But we’re not doing that either.

                Don’t underestimate the passive aggressive possibilities here. We’re going to see something that will rival the hacking off of the apostrophe‑s that disfigured commercial signage for years here after the passage of the first Charter of the French Language in 1977.

              • jeather 13:36 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I can’t help but think the disastrous French class system for recent immigrants is deliberate.

              • CE 14:06 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                I wonder if many brands will just change their names to French versions à la PFK or Pharmaprix.

              • Kate 15:09 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                Except Pharmaprix isn’t a French word either. A fair number of commercial names are invented like that.

              • CE 16:06 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                It’s certainly more French than “Shoppers Drug Mart” but it’s a good point. Will a company name that is a word or words which are completely made up and exist in no language need these qualifiers? What if it’s a made up word that looks like an English word? What about languages other than English? If a business is named after the owner, is it only acceptable if it’s a French name? I see a lot of lawsuits and petty fights in the government’s future!

                Honestly, if I owned a big company and was expanding into Quebec, I’d do what KFC did and make the name French. Give the people what they want, whatever is lost in brand recognition will be made up for in goodwill.

              • Ian 18:36 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                KFC is one of the best examples of internationalization. On the other hand, there is a reason many retail chains exist all throighout the US and Canada except Quebec.

                We will lose some retail chains probably, but it’s a great time to be a commercial signage and installation company in Montreal, I bet.

              • CE 21:23 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

                I’m having trouble thinking of too many international brands that exist in say, Ontario, but not here. I don’t think it’s the worst thing that some international brands stay away. All the more room for local brands to fill the void. I’d much rather have Simons than Nordstrom for example. Starbucks has always had trouble getting a foot in the door in Montreal and we have lots of excellent independent cafés and small local chains instead (it’s one of the first things out-of-towners remark to me).

                I’ve been thinking of this law as I walk around and imagine how ridiculous it could get. Will Barfly on St-Laurent have to put a big “BAR” in front of its name? Ubisoft (a French company) is a compound of two English words (ubiquitous and soft), will they have to put something like “entreprise de développement, d’édition et de distribution de jeux vidéo” before their name? Even Montreal brands have been singled out in some of these articles like “Cool&Simple” (which could argue that it’s in French as “cool” is often used in French, the & symbol works in French, and “Simple” is as much a French word as an English one. Local brands like Copper Branch and Top Discount will have a more difficult time justifying their names. I feel like these requirements are going to be a complete shitstorm and have no idea how deep they will or can go to require compliance.

              • Ian 21:59 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

                … but of course Renaud-Bray will be just fine 😉

              • Ephraim 22:07 on 2024-06-28 Permalink

                @Ian – Names are exempt. So McDonald’s and Wendy’s are safe, but Burger King isn’t. If gas stations weren’t enough of an eye sore… wait till we have giant ESSENCE signs on top of all of them

              • Kate 13:40 on 2024-06-29 Permalink

                Le Roi des Hambourgeois! Pourquoi pas?

            • Kate 08:49 on 2024-06-27 Permalink | Reply  

              Public transit entities in the Montreal area are posting expenses that raise eyebrows, like parties and bottled water. Meantime, QMI continues with its crusade against the OCPM, revealing that there was wine at certain dinners, and in some cases, partners were invited and paid for.

               
              • Kate 19:49 on 2024-06-26 Permalink | Reply  

                The new owners of the remnants of the Just For Laughs festival will mount a revived comedy festival in July.

                 
                • P 23:44 on 2024-06-26 Permalink

                  Christ that’s sad. What a shame the whole thing fell apart. Dane Cook?

                • Kate 08:34 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                  I had to look him up. He does have a Wikipedia page.

                • Ephraim 13:32 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                  He’s actually quite a well known comedian. Big around like ’05 or ’06 or so. Had a few movies. Has been pretty quiet for quite a few years (ie read desperate)

              • Kate 19:43 on 2024-06-26 Permalink | Reply  

                The city is expecting to temporarily shelter 250 households which haven’t found new digs this Moving Day, as compared to 120 last year at this time. Hundreds of households throughout Quebec are still seeking new living spaces.

                 
                • Kate 19:41 on 2024-06-26 Permalink | Reply  

                  The MUHC plans to close its drug addiction program, but Mayor Plante is asking them not to do it.

                   
                  • Kate 11:49 on 2024-06-26 Permalink | Reply  

                    Will government ukase pull French commercial signage back from the bottomless pit of English? Not so long as there are too many exceptions, not enough complaints, not enough inspectors.

                     
                    • David 15:46 on 2024-06-26 Permalink

                      “On est francophones et il faut que ça paraisse.”

                      20.4% of people in Montreal have English as their first language. Why deny this reality, Mr. Roberge?

                    • Kate 18:14 on 2024-06-26 Permalink

                      We’re just NPCs.

                      Indigenous people even more so.

                    • Ian 18:55 on 2024-06-27 Permalink

                      The narrative is that since Quebec has only one official language and that multiculturalism is a conspiracy to destroy Quebec culture, not only is French the only language that should be acknowledged, it’s the only one that can be.

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