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council

In a meeting on December 9, 2020, the Montreal City Council voted down an amendment that would have funded body cameras for Montreal police officers. The defeat of the proposal — by a vote of 34 to 27 — was just the latest turn of events in the years-long, zigzagging effort to make the cameras part of the SPVM uniform.

Now, in the wake of the wrongful arrest of Mamadi Camara, supporters of the measure have once again renewed calls for additional police accountability. Here's a complete history of the political evolution of the proposal, and where it could go from here.

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As we approach the one-year anniversary of health restrictions in Canada and many people continue to limit their physical contact with others, it's worth revisiting the federal and provincial governments' rules and advice for sex during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Governments began issuing COVID-19 sexual health recommendations in the spring but have continued to update them.

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The Council of the Federation announced today that Canada's premiers are planning to ask Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for 13% more money to put toward health care in a meeting that will take place in early December.  

"We are unanimous: the federal government needs to increase its federal health transfers to 35% or $28 billion more," Quebec Premier François Legault posted on Facebook on November 13.

"If we want to be able to continue delivering quality health services to all our citizens, the federal government must finally do its fair share."

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Mayor Diane Dallaire of Rouyn-Noranda announced Monday at a municipal council meeting that she and her colleagues have decided to cancel Halloween trick-or-treating in their small Quebec city this year.

"Faced with the uncertainty created by the second wave," she said, "the municipal council has taken the decision to not authorize door-to-door trick-or-treating on October 31."

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