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A report from the Provincial Employment Roundtable (PERT) released on February 17 shows the unemployment rate for anglophone Quebecers (8.9%) is 2% higher than it is for francophones (6.9%), while the provincial average is 7.2%.

Anglophones have higher jobless rates in 15 of the province's 17 administrative regions, it found, especially in the Capitale Nationale, Abitibi-Témiscamingue, and in Côte-Nord — where their unemployment rate is a whopping 25.5%.

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Activist and Grey Cup-winning Alouette Balarama Holness is saying he'll officially recognize Montreal as a bilingual city if elected mayor in November.

"We live in a francophone province in a francophone city from a legislative perspective, but the reality of Montreal is far different," the leader of Mouvement Montréal said in an interview with MTL Blog.

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Mary Simon's approval rating is lower in Quebec compared to the rest of Canada, a poll released Wednesday showed, because the new governor general can't speak French.

An Angus Reid Institute poll of 2,049 Canadians found only 49% of Quebecers approve of her appointment compared to 74% of respondents in the rest of the country.

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Last week, Quebec introduced Bill 96 — a sweeping new French-language bill that impacts everything from immigrants and local businesses to schools and signage.

The tabled legislation would amend the existing Charter of the French Language (aka Bill 101) and includes over 20 new changes to legislation that promote the use of French in Quebec. Here are nine that you should know.

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Quebec's new bill to reform French-language laws — aka Bill 96 — would place a cap on the number of students who can receive English-language education in the province's public CEGEPs.

If the bill passes, just 17.5% of all CEGEP students would be allowed to attend English CEGEPs each school year. 

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The Quebec Superior Court has ruled that the religious symbols ban under Bill 21 won't apply to English schools in Quebec, according to multiple reports. This means that teachers in English schools who wish to wear religious symbols won't be required to remove them.

The English Montreal School Board (EMSB) shared the news on Tuesday, saying it's "elated with the Quebec Superior Court’s decision to strike down key provisions of Bill 21."

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The federal government has unveiled a new strategy to "strengthen" and "modernize" Canada's Official Languages Act over the next 50 years with the aim of further protecting the use of French across the country. 

This subject is frequently debated — something Quebecers know all too well, as provincial officials propose changes to Quebec's Charter of the French Language and Premier François Legault's government considers "limiting the number of places" in English CEGEPs. 

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At a press conference on Tuesday, Premier François Legault confirmed that the Quebec government is thinking about "limiting the number of places" in English CEGEPs due to concerns about the state of the French language in the province. 

Discussions are ongoing and nothing is decided, according to Legault.

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Do you have a way with words and are looking for a new job? Then you're in luck — There are tons of jobs available in Montreal right now that allow you to flex those writer chops.

But don't worry if you're Franglais isn't 100% up-to-date. There are jobs that ask for writers who speak English, French and a mix of both, so everyone can express themselves through the power of words.

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The provincial government has announced its intention to strengthen Bill 101 aka Law 101 in Quebec. 

In a press conference on November 24, the minister responsible for the French language, Simon Jolin-Barrette, said a bill proposing major revisions to the Charter of the French Language will be tabled at the National Assembly's next parliamentary session. 

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After several highly-publicized stories involving the Office québécois de la langue française (OQLF) in Montreal over the past couple of weeks, the language debate has once again been placed under the microscope. 

And with a pandemic already ravaging small businesses in the city, some have expressed frustration with the OQLF, even petitioning for the province's language authority to be abolished. 

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An online petition created by Accent Montréal, which asks the City of Montreal to do more to protect the French language in the city, such as only publishing municipal documents in French, has been gaining traction recently.

The petition currently has over 10k signatures.

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