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Archive for the ‘Quebec’ Category

It’s been interesting to see the media making so much of Daniel Breton’s long  and illustrious  “criminal” life. You would swear being poor automatically made you a breaker of rules, a natural born cheat who only knows deception and wild behavior. Anyone who has ever attended a public consultation with the BAPE  (Bureau d’audiences publique sur l’environment) knows what a useless puppet like organization it has been in it’s hopelessly inadequate and anal retentive recommendations. The BAPE has a noticeable pattern of making a few lightweight “green” recommendations on a project before basically giving way to whatever the developers had wanted in the first place, despite a strong presence of concerned citizens asking for major changes, if not an actual shut down of the project. I have seen Daniel Breton at many such consultations with the BAPE. If  there is anyone amongst us who knows that the BAPE needs to change their corporate/political culture and actually start fulfilling their mandate as a public interest organization on environmental issues as they are part and parcel of  urban development in Montreal and across Quebec, it is Daniel Breton. But it looks like he got crucified for demanding that they do their on the public dime jobs.

Ethan Cox has written an excellent article.

The political assasination of an honest politician: Daniel Breton resigns as Quebec Environment Minister

by Ethan Cox

I don’t like the PQ much, and I believe their recently released budget was an embarrassing affront to those Quebeckers who naively expected them to actually do the things they promised to do during the campaign. All the more so with a leaderless and election shy Liberal party guaranteeing their minority government the ability to govern as a majority in the near term.

But the carefully manufactured “scandal” which brought down PQ Environment Minister Daniel Breton, who resigned his cabinet post yesterday, is no cause for celebration. Easily lost in a sea of real scandals, and disgraced politicians riding off into the sunset, is the political assassination of a good man for the crime of considering, however fleetingly, a challenge to the status quo.

That his political enemies so easily took down Breton, and that the PQ so happily threw him to the wolves without so much as the pretence of a defence, is a clear message to anyone who would seek office to challenge the way things are: don’t, or you’ll be sorry.

First, the facts. Such as they are. Breton, a co-founder of the Coalition Quebec-Vert-Kyoto and one of this province’s foremost ecologists and environmental activists, beat out Quebec Solidaire star candidate Manon Masse for the seat representing Montreal’s downtown eastside and gay village in September’s election. It was the culmination of a political odyssey which saw him run unsuccessfully for the Green Party and the NDP, before finally joining the PQ.

His subsequent appointment to the Environment portfolio by Premier Pauline Marois was lauded by the progressive community, who saw in the new minister an ally who could be counted upon to restore the integrity and competence of a department which had become some sort of a sad little joke under previous governments.

Quebec has some of the strongest environmental laws on the books in North America, but suffers from a near complete inability to enforce them. A strong minister with the heft to fight for his budget line could therefore get a great deal done without the need to pass legislation through the fractured National Assembly.

Sadly, while activists were popping the bubbly, the corporate interests with most to lose under an activist environment minister were organizing to eliminate the perceived threat. This before Breton had done a single thing of substance. (more…)

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It was hot as hell and I really have to admire the spirit of the people who came to march in this heat. This is the real Montreal, having a party even under what many would consider to be serious circumstances. This Revolution likes to have fun!

People gathering at Berri Square.

 

 

 

 

Drummers are always good in my book.

Obligatory mask shot.

 

Some speeches were made.

 

It’s all because of people like this guy, maybe we should thank him?

 

 

There was some riot squad cops at the ready but they weren’t needed.

 

More drummers.

Democracy.

 

And the march begins.

 

 

The support from all  Montrealers is awesome.

 

Very compressed shot. My guess is that it would be at least a  15 minute walk to the front to the march.

 

Where is this all leading? Very hard to say right now. But a lot of people in Quebec are quietly organizing for an election where the message will be to vote for anyone but Jean Charest. And if the Ontario students go on strike for the  fall semester as they have indicated, this could go national in no time at all. People are ready, they don’t all just know it yet.

Mark August 22 in your calendars.

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You can watch the remaining 7 videos over at Montreal Teachers 4 Change. org

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The government’s Turcot Plan is a disaster in waiting. Everyone who has looked closely at this project knows this is a concerted effort to devalue Montreal in as many ways as possible. The question is why? Why do they insist on a project destined for tragedy in the face of rational alternatives?

Article from the McGill Daily

The Ministère des transports du Québec (MTQ) unveiled its latest plans to renovate the crumbling Turcot interchange last week. The Turcot is a tangle of three highways – two urban expressways and the Champlain Bridge – that has been slowly rotting since it was constructed with low-grade concrete in the sixties. It first became the target of much-needed renovation plans by the province back in 2007.

The MTQ’s 2007 plan met vehement opposition from local residents – the proposals would have increased the Turcot’s capacity and demolished hundreds housing units. The new $3-billion plan will still destroy over a hundred dwellings, increase the interchange’s car capacity, and mire St. Henri in construction for years to come. (more…)

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Sorry, but I didnt get this till late…

Dear fans of Sexy béton,

Today is the 4th anniversary of the collapse of the de la Concorde overpass. On this day, at around 12 noon, a section of the overpass fell onto Highway 19 in Laval and killed Mathieu Goyette and his pregnant girlfriend Véronique Binette, Jean-Pierre Hamel and his wife Sylive Beaudet, and his brother Gilles Hamel. 6 other people were badly injured in the incident: Mohammed Ashraff Umerthambi, Louise Bédard, Paul Cousineau, Robert Hotte, Anne Leblanc, and Claude Bastien.

As far as I can see, not one major newspaper in Montreal, nor the English CBC has mentioned this important anniversary today. Sept 30th will therefore pass Montreal by without a moment of reflection about de la Concorde.

If you receive this message today, I ask that you take a moment yourself to pause around 12 noon to remember de la Concorde: to mourn the people who lost their lives, to recognize those whose lives were forever changed, and to ask yourself if anything has REALLY changed over the past 4 years in Quebec to prevent another bridge from collapsing on our heads again.

Yours,

Annabel Soutar

Sexy Beton

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MTQ Responds Quickly

And they are saying NO!

All three major political parties of Montreal have said very clearly that the MTQ needs to change it’s plans for Turcot. Normally that carries a lot of weight, and when you throw in demerged cities such as Westmount being on board it is fairly safe to say that politically the Island of Montreal wants a new deal for Turcot!

What we have now in Quebec is obviously a failure of basic democratic principles. Do the Ministries of the Quebec government hold such omniscient and permanent power that they can make final decisions based on their own criteria without being held accountable to anyone, including the sitting government of the day? It appears to be that way.

Jean Charest has managed to become the most unpopular premier in the history of poll taking in Quebec for many reasons, but shoving user fees for Medicare unto the people of Quebec is something that may never be forgiven. And now we see one of the Ministries acting with an arrogance, an out and out open disregard for the people of Montreal, that is totally unacceptable.

This is not going to go away and a new kind of war will be fought in Quebec. We need to get politicians to work for us not against us as seems to be the case in Quebec these days. The days of arrogant corrupt leadership are over!

The people of Montreal deserve respect. And it looks like we are going to have earn it by not allowing a sinking ship of a Liberal government to drag us down under the water with them! Turcot is a great metaphor for all that is sailing out of control in Quebec (public inquiry into corruption, anyone?) and perhaps it’s time that Montreal chooses to control it’s own destiny.

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