Follow me
info@mikecohen.ca

“Forcing” municipalities to return to in-person public meetings represents another example of pretending COVID is over

The Quebec government continues to dig its head in the sand, doing away with COVID-19 measures as if this is a race.

Public Health Director Luc Boileau said today that he may delay the lifting of the mask mandate past mid-April. Well,  that makes sense. We are now officially in a sixth wave. Hospital workers are out in big numbers. A number of restaurants and pubs have had to shut down and while the hard to get PCR testing numbers show over 3,000 cases a day, Boileau  admitted that the real number of daily infections in Quebec is likely closer to 30,000.

Head in sand

Some people from our government do indeed have their heads in the sand.

 

I know it is an election year for the Quebec government, but if the governing CAQ continues to act like COVID does not exist they are removing the incentive for people to get vaccinated or boosted – and just watch as hospital emergency rooms go beyond capacity.

As a city councillor in Côte Saint-Luc,  I am at loss to understand why municipalities have just been advised that we are now being forced to return to in-person public meetings.  For the past two years we have been convening virtually. The process has worked exceptionally well and while we all want to do this again with the public in attendance and for them to be able to ask questions directly to us, it really is all about timing. Since we now have live webcasts of these meetings, more people than ever are tuning in.  And nobody can argue about the safety factor.

As this sixth wave begins,  no less than nine Members of the National Assembly – including the Premier and the Deputy Premier- sit home isolating because of COVID. Would it not make more sense for the government to leave this choice up to each municipality? Clearly they are spreading the new variant among each other in Quebec City.

Today, Health Minister Christian Dubé spoke about not entirely lifting the State of Emergency; that the government still requires the power to make some urgent decisions. He took a lot of heat for this. Well, here is a perfect opportunity for him to grant municipalities to return to public sessions at the very least when this sixth wave subsides.

Here is the memo municipalities received

À la suite des derniers développements concernant les mesures de la COVID-19, le ministère des Affaires municipales et de l'Habitation confirme que l'arrêté 2020-029 du 26 avril 2020, qui permet la participation à distance des membres de toute réunion, séance ou assemblée d’un organe délibérant (dont le conseil d’un organisme municipal), a été abrogé le vendredi 25 mars dernier par l’arrêté ministériel 2022-024. Dans ce contexte, l’ensemble des séances du conseil doit de nouveau se tenir en présentiel, conformément aux règles prévues, entre autres, à la Loi sur les cités et villes et au Code municipal du Québec.

Le site Internet du MAMH sera mis à jour sous peu pour tenir compte de cette abrogation.

I was interviewed by CTV Montreal News. You can see the report here.

CBC also did a report. You can see it here.

 

Related

Service at the CLSC René-Cassin will resume soon

A constituent contacted me this week to express concern...

Côte Saint-Luc resident opens new private family medicine clinic near Royalmount

Left to right Dr. Baliesh, Clinical Manager Roxane Plaza,...

Traumatic accident for 89 year old CSL woman in Walmart parking lot

Dorothy Baker (Hart Winterfeld) was a dynamic and fully...

Blood test centre and pediatric clinic in operation and more health services on the way at Kildare and Cavendish

The state-of-the-art Clinique Médicale Step is now fully operational...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Our local MNA gives us hope that Pablo Rodriguez can win the next election

The province of Quebec has never been in worse...

David Tordjman has won the Côte Saint-Luc election for mayor

Across Quebec, including of course Côte Saint-Luc, municipal elections...

The Equinoxe rental condos have been sold

The Equinoxe apartments on Marc Chagall Avenue in...
Mike Cohen
Mike Cohenhttps://mikecohen.ca
Mike Cohen, born and raised in Côte Saint-Luc, has long been active in the community as a volunteer, journalist, and consultant. He attended local schools and was first elected as City Councillor for District 2 in 2005. Since then, he has been re-elected in each municipal election, most recently in 2025.

Our local MNA gives us hope that Pablo Rodriguez can win the next election

The province of Quebec has never been in worse hands than the CAQ government. Premier François Legault does indeed seem to be the captain...

David Tordjman has won the Côte Saint-Luc election for mayor

Across Quebec, including of course Côte Saint-Luc, municipal elections were held on Sunday, November 2. Lior Azerad in District 5 and...

From The Montrealer Newspaper: Table 51’s Laval revamp, Maiko Sushi, Yans Deli & a new Ben & Florentine

Table 51 Restaurant  and Bar made its debut at Carrefour Laval in 2010,  branching out to add a Decarie location next to old Blue...

1 COMMENT

Comments are closed.