Montreal Removed A Bench That Forbid Homeless People From Sitting Too Long After Backlash

"This bench has no place in... Cabot Square," Mayor Valérie Plante tweeted.
Contributing Writer

The City of Montreal has recently removed an 'anti-homeless' bench from Cabot Square in response to a public backlash.

"No resting allowed at Cabot," tweeted Nakuset, the executive director of Montreal's Native Women's Shelter, Thursday along with a photo of the bench.

Editor's Choice: 9 Spontaneous Trips You Can Take From Montreal Without A Car

Mayor Valérie Plante retweeted Nakuset's comments a few hours later and promised to remove it.

"These are the old benches set up by the previous administration that I have extensively condemned," stated the mayor (translated from French).

"This bench has no place in the vicinity of Cabot Square because it contributes to the stigmatization of people experiencing homelessness."

The mayor ended her tweet saying "it will be removed immediately," and on Thursday evening, Nakuset posted another photo showing the bench being removed.

Via mayor Valérie Plante

  • Ezra Black
  • Contributing Writer

    Ezra Black is a contributing writer for MTL Blog. He was born and raised in Montreal and loves the city and its amazing people. Feel free to reach out: ezrablack@mtlblog.com

Canada just updated its Mexico travel advisory and it's basically telling you not to go

Shelter-in-place orders are currently in effect in some areas.

Quebec is about to change when stores can stay open and it affects the whole province

Quebec is one of the only places in North America that still legislates store opening hours.

7 provincial and federal benefits Quebecers can get money from this March

Some residents can expect multiple cheques over the next few weeks.

You can now stay at the iconic cottage from 'Heated Rivalry' — and it's less than $300/night

Fans can take their obsession with the hockey romance series one step further.