Updates from May, 2026 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 18:31 on 2026-05-10 Permalink | Reply  

    Every so often this theme crops up: last year, a man was killed in a parking lot when a driver hit the wrong pedal and knocked him down. His friend, a 98‑year‑old woman, “wants answers” – but what does that even mean? The driver was 80 and the victim was 89. The woman is described as wanting accountability.

    Is it lawyers or journalists who urge people to say these things? An older driver made a fatal error and a man died. The article talks about families wanting to sue, but money is not going to bring the man back, and how would taking money from the 80‑year‑old fix anything now?

     
    • Nicholas 18:58 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

      Did the driver lose their licence? That’s a question I think we’d all want the answer to.

    • Kate 19:39 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

      I looked up this incident on last year’s map but none of the reports from the time mention the driver losing their licence, although now that you mention it, Nicholas, that’s a question the journalist should have asked.

    • su 20:19 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

      The story says the vehicle was a jeep, but the photo appears to show a Toyota sedan with rather huge impact damage. For that kind of damage to occur, the car must have been backing up at very high speed!

    • H. John 20:59 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

      @Kate Do any of the reports from last year that you looked at mention the age of the driver?

      The reason I ask is that this report says the driver was 80, and yet the report that it links to about the original accident quotes the police saying the driver was 60. The Suburban says 80.

      Either way what exactly makes this newsworthy?

      It was an accident, there were no charges, and we’ve had no fault insurance in Quebec since 1978.

      If the driver was 80:

      Starting at 80, and every two years after that, drivers have to undergo medical and vision assessments.

      When there are concerns, the SAAQ can require a road test, impose conditions on the licence, or even suspend or revoke it.

      The legal standard is fitness to drive. The SAAQ itself says that “very few” seniors lose their licence after the assessments.

    • R T 22:10 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

      “Her son James Torosis, who is a physician in California, says that at her age, it’s a miracle she is alive.”

      I’m glad they added that. Without it, as a lay person, I would have had no way of knowing that a 98 year old woman surviving a car crash despite multiple broken bones, multiple surgeries and multiple months of bedrest was remarkable.

  • Kate 18:15 on 2026-05-10 Permalink | Reply  

    Restaurants without TVs don’t get much business during a Canadiens playoff run.

     
    • CE 12:07 on 2026-05-11 Permalink

      I was a cook in a restaurant years ago. During a playoffs run, the dishwasher came in for his shift and asked what happened to the TV in the kitchen. The head cook had put it away because he said nobody was doing anything while the game was on, so we were going to listen to it on the radio. The dishwasher walked out of the kitchen and we never saw him again.

  • Kate 09:08 on 2026-05-10 Permalink | Reply  

    woman reading newspaperHabs garb is good for various kinds of laugh as the playoff series continues.

    Godin crosses threads, the Olympic anniversary and the resumption of National Assembly sessions, a sports fan eagerly awaiting the launch of the Quebec digital health platform. The platform was also deftly spoofed by Côté while Chapleau mocks Ontario’s attempt to scare the defense project off Quebec.

    Nobody managed to get any comic leverage on the naming of Louise Arbour as Governor General: Ygreck tried and Chapleau tried but neither scored a point.

    Notably this week, Chloe did a lengthier piece about the repurposing of churches in Quebec.

     
    • Kate 08:45 on 2026-05-10 Permalink | Reply  

      Dragon Flowers has left Bernard Street and moved around onto St‑Laurent.

       
      • Ian 18:16 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

        Right at the corner of Bernard, next to the gas station. Tammy hasn’t gone far.

    • Kate 08:34 on 2026-05-10 Permalink | Reply  

      In 2015, P.K. Subban promised $10 million to the Children’s Hospital. He has now delivered on the promise.

       
      • DeWolf 12:19 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

        TIL The Gazette finally has a website that is actually readable!

      • Kate 13:13 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

        Depending where you click you can sometimes find yourself looking at a full-page condo promotion. But it’s better than before.

      • Ian 18:16 on 2026-05-10 Permalink

        It’s not paywalled anymore, for one.

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