Updates from June, 2012 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • 23:26 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    Mainstream overview of Grand Prix weekend says that one woman’s dyed red hair made police ban her from the race site.

    There was a red-clad cycle protest Sunday and the 48th evening demonstration with plenty of police presence, followed by ten arrests according to a police tweet.

    The race promoter is pleased about the outcome, which he should be: quoting Le Devoir’s account of talking to a cop on Île Sainte-Hélène Sunday: “Le SPVM, aujourd’hui, répond donc aux besoins et désirs des organisateurs du Grand Prix ? «Tout à fait,» dira le matricule 5323, le répétant fièrement une deuxième fois lorsqu’on lui redemandera.”

     
    • Hamza 05:30 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      It’s funny that the media is being censored to the extent that it is. We’re not living in 1972 guys. Charest is just Richard Nixon and Watergate all over again.

      I mean, doesn’t the state realise that they are all going to jail sooner or later for what’s being done in Montréal?

      I mean what Trudeau did in the October Crisis is rather tame to what’s gone on for the last few weeks. This looks like the death throes of a dying regime.

      I have faith in my fellow Quebecers that this ugly time will pass and that our belle province will still be there.

      Tyrannical governments always have a ticking clock above their heads. Patience and all will be right again.

    • Paul S. 07:39 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      The only thing the protesters are accomplishing is ensuring the re-election of Jean Charest.

    • Ephraim 08:58 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Here’s the question… are the student demos even newsworthy anymore. It’s become the new norm. It’s boring. It belongs on page 7 or 8. It’s just not news. But I tell you what, it’s going to make a heck of a lot of people vote PLQ and CAC.

      If Pauline Marois (being of the common people, NOT!) thinks that she’s so right, why doesn’t she offer to go in and negotiate for the students, she could do it from her $8 million dollar home, right here in the Montreal suburbs.

      Of if the students are so right that the PQ will be elected, they should just accept the increase. I mean, the PQ has offered to roll it back.

    • Kate 09:20 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Ephraim, rem acu tetigisti. Is there a political solution to the current crisis?

      Proportional representation would be a start and if it were done in good faith, and people no longer felt their votes were a waste of time if they didn’t support the winner, I think we would rejuvenate hope in and respect for our political institutions. The problem right now is that a lot of people are not just sick of the Charest government but that a deep cynicism has set in about the power and the will of politicians to act in the best interests of, and in the name of, their constituents.

      The problem here is that it’s always against the interests of a ruling party to bring in proportional representation. It would take a real leader with balls of brass to get the process started.

    • paul 09:38 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Good post Kate…agreed. I would love to see more minority governments as they are typically more representative and accountable.
      It is really a shame there is no inspirational leader (Obama, Nenshi) in place to channel all this tension and dissatisfaction into inspiration…

      As pointed out above, I believe the Liberals will win solely on the back of the extremist protesters, and I can’t say that I blame them.

      For me personally, I would much rather live in a police-state than have the protesters control the policies of this province.

      @Hamza – ‘doesn’t the state realise that they are all going to jail sooner or later’…do you genuinely believe this?? It must be difficult to live in a world where everything is a conspiracy??

    • Ephraim 13:04 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      @Kate – Proportional has a LOT of problems. Take a look at Israel, Greece and the Netherlands. In the case of Israel, they have NEVER had an elected government, it’s always minority governments (probably because the threshold is so low and the fragmentation so high.) I would think we might do better with the Hare method than with proportional representation, because at least that way you have approval rather than tides, and of course you have to fine people for not voting, because not voting affects the turnout.

      We also need a lot more transparency. For example, every time a mandarin has a meeting where lunch if paid, for the sake of transparency it should be published with the value of the lunch (not to mention that legally speaking in this province, the value of the lunch needs to be declared on their income tax form. But what can I say, RQ’s job seems to be to make a good citizen’s life miserable, they have no interest in going after their own mandarins.)

      The current crisis is like all union business (from my experience being a member of a union), they promise you the world that they can’t deliver and they don’t know how to convince you afterward to buy what they managed to get. The problem for any negotiated settlement is you either need to create win-win or small-loss/small-loss. The students won’t get the government to back down from the increase, especially since the tax-payers don’t want them to. So the best bet is to actually find a way to get government money in a way that makes the government look good. I’ve said it before, the way to do this is to go after much more bursary money, more loans. The calculations on the bursaries are wrong and the indexation isn’t there, they need more money for the poorest of Quebecers and assurances that the amounts will grow as to not leave them behind. I would say to look for maybe $7 to $10 a day of living expenses during the school weeks (including weekends) plus the full tuition for those on the bottom rungs, index those amounts so that they never end up losing. Less for those with higher incomes. Bursaries, not loans. I would say to ask the government to provide deferred credits for tuition, maybe larger deferred credits, that are claimable over a 10 year period after graduation. Frankly, you could double them or even triple their value easily because of the number of students who move away and could never claim them. And the government could easily sell it as being a way to ensure that the money we invest in education stays in Quebec and the students become tax payers.

      As for the universities, the students should look at indexed caps in spending. Which is in the government’s best interest anyway. For example total salary and compensation is at X and that’s indexed based on the number of profs. And that works out to X/Y where Y is the number of students, so you have an average income based on the number of students taught. Cap that in a way that a university can grow, but that they can’t drop golden parachutes without it costing them, instead of the public.

      But I’m not on the negotiation team. And frankly, if I were the government, I would propose actually having the press in the negotiations, so that it’s transparent and everyone can see who is negotiating in good faith. If both sides are negotiating in good faith, there should be no problem to have the press watch, as long as the press is governed by not reporting until the end of each session or day.

    • Kate 13:16 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      At this point it will be difficult for both parties to get out of this standoff while saving face.

      I think the government does have to come off its high horse. They need to address a number of educational issues and tuition is only the biggest one. The dropout rate from high school is still bad here, for example. Education has to open up – they want us in the workforce till we’re 67 now, which may be reasonable since we’re all living longer, but if that’s so there has to be a lot more mid-life retraining made easily available and a serious push to motivate employers to hire people over 45.

      There’s talk about nobody going into the trades any more in Quebec. A push to train more women in those areas, retrain older workers to learn trades for which there’s a demand? Why not?

      But the thing about the tuition argument is that overt dissatisfaction is now bigger than the initial issue. The regular demonstrations, the casseroles, aren’t about tuition any more, but about how wealth is being divided up and how social justice is being crapped on by neoliberalism. CLASSE is never going to get satisfactory answers on this from Jean Charest because Charest is never going to acknowledge that the critique is about anything wider than the tuition question.

      Anyway, I like minority governments, because nobody’s ideology gets to dominate for years at a time.

    • ant6n 13:38 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      There exist mixed proportional systems that ensure both local representation and party representation. The resulting plurality of parties in parliament can be good – and a 5% hurdle would ensure enough concentration that there are less than 5/6 parties in parliament altogether. In such a parliament the parties have to form coalitions in order to govern, which is always based on making concession and compromises. If we had a coalition government right now, the student issue would’ve not gone this far – Charest’s macho politics are only possible because he holds a majority of the parliament.

    • Ephraim 15:30 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      @Kate You should see the waste and abuse in our education system. We could start small, but asking to close any school that doesn’t have a fully functioning governing board. See how quickly the principals of those schools manages to find enough people to get a governing board working. If I remember the numbers correctly from a few years ago, we have 6X the number of employees in our education ministry than Norway. We have 7,750,504 citizens and they have 4,885,240. And they have to worry about two different Norwegian languages, never mind ESL. You should see how long it takes the ministry to translate a course. They could hire someone via the Internet to do it in 2 weeks at pennies a word instead it can take 2 to 3 years to get it done. And if we didn’t have enough ministry employees, we get pseudo education government employees, like GRICS.

      BTW in spite of what I am saying, the ministry and the school boards have a number of well funded “free” programs that will retrain people to fill jobs that don’t need university education. Many of which actually pay better than most jobs that need university. Some of the jobs include telephone and computer support, cabinet making, soldering, gardening, carpentry, electrical/wiring, home care and plumbing. Soldering is one of the top jobs, unionized, big pay and never seem to have enough employees. And most of these programs are set up to help high school drop outs get their high school leaving at the same time. And these programs have good bursaries and loans for people who need to retrain.

      @ant6n There are, but you still end up with fragmentation and it gets worse over time. Do you vote for a party that represents immigrants, anglophones, social reform, fascists, conservatives, green, activists for the left handed, human rights, red heads, etc. Even the hurdle of 5% leaves a lot of people unrepresented… those who only got 4.9% for example. And with minority governments that don’t have a chance at majority, you are open to intimidation and blackmail, because you need the votes to get things done. (And when it all breaks down you run to try to form a national unity government, just to get something passed so the country doesn’t go completely down the tubes.)

      It isn’t about Charest, it’s about the numbers, it’s about the Laffer curve, it’s the reality of it, we are milking the cow for too much milk. You can’t ask a population that went from 7.5% sales tax to 9.5% sales tax in two years to pay for University. It’s just not the time, you don’t have the political will for it. If it wasn’t Charest it would be Marois. It’s easy to be in opposition, you just say no to everything even if you agree with it. But when you have to balance the budget, you do what you have to.

    • Kate 23:10 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Ephraim, I looked into retraining as proposed by Emploi Québec. I even spent several hours filling out, in French, a long form about my experience and skills and aspirations. The EQ woman was stunned – she’d never had anyone come back to her with such a professional-looking document. But it may not have helped, because it seemed to have the ironic effect of convincing her that I have too many chops to be given free retraining.

      Anyway, I was not offered soldering. I wouldn’t be too proud to do soldering, except my busted depth perception means I’d be constantly burning myself and ruining stuff – this also makes things like cabinetmaking difficult, as I’d be a major hazard around power saws. Besides, they don’t offer these things to women. Day care or home care for the elderly is what was on offer, and me without a nurturing bone in my body.

    • Ephraim 06:18 on 2012/06/12 Permalink

      @Kate EQ usually sends the schools the BS cases, they aren’t very efficient at it. But all the school boards and CEGEPs have the programs. And you better believe they offer them to women, there was a big push and bonuses for the schools if they brought more women into the program. Check out http://inforoutefpt.org/home.htm they have a list of all the programs and which school boards offer them. Most of the high school level programs allow people as young as 16 into them, with the voc.ed certificate, English, French and Math they also get high school leaving.

  • 17:51 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    FECQ leader Éliane Laberge has announced plans for further demonstrations throughout the summer, not just to protest tuition hikes but also to focus on popular dissatisfaction.

    It’s going to be interesting to see Monday’s byelection results in Lafontaine and Argenteuil, not just in who gets elected, but also whether the current climate gets more people out to vote.

     
    • TiGuy 18:11 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Je crois que Mme Laberge ainsi que toute autre personne appuyant la « cause » des étudiants devrait incessamment lire Conflit étudiant – Ou comment oublier les vrais problèmes.

    • Ephraim 18:13 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Einstein is rolling in his grave….

    • Alex L 20:47 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      @TiGuy Article totalement biaisé et sans intérêt. Les statistiques, on leur fait dire ce que l’on veut. Marcel Boyer est un agitateur de droite qui utilise la rhétorique et les arguments fallacieux pour faire passer ses idées. À chacun sa méthode.

    • TiGuy 21:04 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Test.

    • TiGuy 21:10 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      C’est vrai parce que vous le dtes, Alex L. Ça doit vous rassurer, j’imagine. Quelle méthode que la vôtre : avilir et salir la réputation d’un type, écarter sa position sans l’aborder pour autant. Bravo. Avec de l’intransigence de la sorte, le Québec peut bien avoir des problèmes.

    • Alex L 22:36 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      J’ai dû mal m’exprimer. Mon commentaire ne cherchait pas à attaquer l’auteur en question, mais bien démontrer son manque de crédibilité sur la question: une simple recherche Google suffit pour s’en persuader. Le gouvernement, parmi tant d’autres, nous a prouvé à quel point il est aisé de manipuler les gens avec chiffres et statistiques et à ce sujet, Marcel Boyer ne fait pas exception.

      Traiter la crise actuelle d’« enjeu enfantin », sans discuter ou aborder les enjeux à l’origine du conflit pour ensuite noyer les lecteurs dans un flot de statistiques sans rapport reflétant à son avis les « vrais problèmes » du Québec, c’est à mon avis faire preuve d’une grande étroitesse d’esprit aux relents paternalistes qui n’ajoute rien au débat. Il y a de nombreuses façon de désinformer et manipuler le lecteur, les statistiques en sont une.

      Je vous conseille un petit livre tout simple: http://www.luxediteur.com/autodefenseintellectuelle

    • Hamza 05:23 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Where are the polls? There hasn’t been ANY QUEBEC POLLS in weeks!!

    • TiGuy 06:14 on 2012/06/11 Permalink

      Alex L: faudrait bien que vous développiez votre « intellectuel » avant que vous puissiez songer le défendre.

  • 16:00 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    Interesting notes on the Petit Maghreb of Saint-Michel and Brossard’s Chinatown: the interesting thing about the Petit Maghreb is that it’s all about the businesses, as few Maghrebis actually live around there.

     
  • 15:36 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    TVA has images of Sunday’s arrests around the Grand Prix; Gazette likewise; CTV has a great shot of police liberally pepper-spraying people on a sun-drenched street; the Journal has notes on metro searches.

    Oh, and Lewis Hamilton won the race.

     
  • 12:57 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    The Grand Prix continues under heavy manners as 30 arrests are made near the site and police searches in the metro justified by SPVM as “Random searches allowed under regulation R036-4B. Detentions for ‘suspect behaviour.’ ” (Thanks to Justin Giovannetti for tweeting the explanation.) La Presse is calling these preventive arrests.

     
    • Ephraim 13:32 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Shameful that it has come to this. Just shameful.

    • Alex L 13:35 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Let’s take the metro with pinned red squares.

    • Kate 13:35 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      It’s an undeclared state of emergency – normal rights have been suspended but without announcement. We’re supposed to just understand it.

    • steph 13:48 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Does that regulation even apply since the searches aren’t random but profiled?

    • Kate 13:53 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      I’ve seen tweets from people saying they were searched for no reason, which I assume means no red square, no black clothing. Just being at Berri-UQÀM and carrying some kind of bag or backpack seems to be enough.

    • montrealfilmguy 14:28 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      This morning i had to travel through a series of buses and metros to get comics from a guy.I always carry a shoebox with me to carry them.
      A lot of cops saw me.Really thought they were gonna lock unto me and the shoebox.

    • montrealfilmguy 14:36 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Law of probabilities says that sooner or later one low IQ cop is not going to recognize Bernie Ecclestone and cavity search him for Maalox.Then watch Bernie throw some casseroles.

    • Kate 15:50 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Not a chance, @montrealfilmguy. He’s bound to have private security guys with him.

    • Marc 21:46 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      The cops are damned if they do, damned if they don’t. It’s just a sad, no-win situation. Anyways, F1 is done for this year.

    • montrealfilmguy 21:56 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Kate,thanks for that but i was..(cough ) making ..a…a funny.

    • Kate 23:20 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Sorry. Feeling a bit grim this weekend.

    • montrealfilmguy 23:57 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Thats perfectly understandable.Keep up the good work and move forward.

  • 08:48 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    Saturday evening saw some fraught scenes along Ste-Catherine near Crescent, with 28 arrests and tourists saying the scene was like a movie. A taxi driver lost his cool after being stuck in the demo gridlock and hurt three people as he forced his car through the crowd. He was arrested but not charged, police finding his action “accidental.”

    More demonstrations are expected Sunday in connection with the Grand Prix, although news reports suggest it will be made difficult to get to the island today.

     
  • 08:44 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    Le Devoir tested the rumour that wearing the red square gets you stopped and searched in the metro this weekend. It does.

     
  • 08:14 on 2012/06/10 Permalink | Reply  

    Insurance companies are pushing the city to do something to fix the insufficient sewer systems that overflow in various parts of town when we get the kind of hard downpour we’ve seen already twice this summer. (Implied here is that the hard-headed insurance business accepts that climate change is a fact.)

     
    • Ephraim 16:48 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      There are essentially two solutions to this. In the end, we all pay for it… either the city can fix it and the premiums remain the same while our tax money is used for this. Or the city can refuse to pay to fix the problem and premiums will eventually go up. Of course, eventually the city will need to fix it but if they wait too long the premiums will have gone up and we will end up paying for the increase on both sides.

      Montreal has been having these downpours for over 25 years. Remember the River Decarie Expressway? Lac Lacadie Circle? Are the sewers slower than before or there just no overload system?

    • Kate 18:07 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      The L’Acadie circle only got bad after the reconstruction in 2004 that didn’t take into account how the new structure interacted with the old sewer system underneath it. At any rate I don’t recall it was notorious for filling up before it reopened that year.

      I think there are lots of reasons sewers are a problem now.
      – Everything is older and more worn out than it was 25 years ago.
      – The city’s on a hill so some parts of town are bound to be affected worse than others.
      – I read a description recently about the awful effects a downpour can have on Crescent Street bar bathrooms. When Crescent was first built up, the sewers put in were meant for low-density residential buildings, which are still there behind the glitzy bar frontages. They were never meant to cope with the quantity of beer piss and other unmentionables they get daily, let alone adding a torrential downpour.
      – Applies also to the sewers on Sherbrooke Street and other parts of town originally built up to be low-density residential areas 100 years ago but that now host big office towers, busy businesses or other bathroom-heavy institutions, without the corresponding upgrades under the street. (Residents in lower NDG near Vendome metro are concerned about the MUHC hospital and what it might do to their sewer system for similar reasons. As far as I know, the question has not yet been answered.)
      – In general, more people living here and going to the bathroom, basically.
      – We always had the risk of floods in the lower areas of town. The old pumping station under the bridge and the other one near Mill Street were built because this is an island and we have a dynamic and sometimes not very convenient relationship with water. Here, here and here are three examples of what I mean, found with a single Google search.

    • Chris 18:34 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      We should pay for water by litre. This will encourage conservation and thus reduce the water flowing through the system. That ought to help a bit, and would be cheaper than digging up every street.

    • Kate 18:38 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Or we could hold it in.

    • Ephraim 19:12 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      The sewers on Laurentian (Marcel-Laurin) between Henri-Bourassa and Louisbourg were famous for filling. Montreal has had a lot of sudden rain.

      Some of the sewers in the Plateau are actually brick and others are actually wood, that’s how old they are. But the city always patchworks things and well, we know the results of patchwork. 50 years later and you can still tell where the tramlines used to run, you see the parallel cracks in the asphalt every year. (I do wonder if sandless asphalt might be better for the city, but worry that it would be more problematic in the winter.)

    • Robert H 19:31 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Depuis des décennies, les écologues et les météorologues tentent de nous prévenir que les changements climatique viendront, mais leurs affirmations etaient écartés comme les bêtises paranoïaque. Maintenant que les changements sont venus, c’est le tour des compagnies d’assurances de nous rappeler qu’il y aura les conséquences pour notre environnement et nos poches. Quand l’argent parle, on écoute.

    • Kate 23:22 on 2012/06/10 Permalink

      Tu l’as dit, bouffi.

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