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metro montreal

Montrealers who depend on the metro for getting around are in for a rough couple of weeks.

As we reported last week, starting September 22, the Société de transport de Montréal (STM) will cut back metro service as part of a strike by its maintenance workers, leaving riders with far fewer options outside of peak hours.

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Food prices in Canada are continuing to soar, with many residents looking for ways to save on their grocery bills. While there's no online app to bring down the cost of living in Canada, there is one that can score you cheaper fruits and vegetables on your next grocery run.

For Quebecers looking to save money on fresh produce, the Too Good To Go app has partnered with Metro grocery stores to help local shoppers save a bit more on their food bill all while reducing food waste.

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Montreal's metro is the unsung hero of nights out, dinner dates, and after-hours gigs. It connects neighbourhoods, powers commerce, and facilitates the daily commutes of nearly a million people every day.

Yet, the vital artery of urban life is facing a potential reduction in service hours from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., a move driven by the deepening funding crisis of the Société de transport de Montréal (STM).

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The Société de transport de Montréal (STM) recently posted a video to its TikTok page of random items that are collected in the Montreal Metro lost and found — ranging from shoes to rat food.

The TikTok, titled "Normal things we find in the lost and found," featured a handful of eyebrow-raising items that really make you wonder what some transit users are up to. The list of lost and found items from the Montreal Metro includes baby shoes, a door handle, a bouncy ball, cracked iPhones, mini plush dolls, kids' baseball caps and, of course, you cannot forget the rat food — adult rat food to be specific. Actually, someone did forget the rat food.

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The views expressed in this Opinion article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Narcity Media.

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Few vehicles for review-writing capture the spectrum of human thought quite like Google reviews. Not just for restaurants or services, these reviews exist for plenty of labelled structures on the map, including (but not limited to) Montreal metro stations.

From wrong-headed diatribes about unhoused people to dedicated essays about metro architecture, metro station Google reviews unlock a special passion in reviewers that is just about unmatched. For this little experiment, I looked at some of the most popular stops in the city's more central boroughs, arranged here from lowest to highest rating.

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Navigating the Montreal Metro can sometimes be tough, especially when you're transferring at Lionel-Groulx or Berri-UQAM. But for one rider, getting off at the final stop was seemingly the hardest task.

Audrey Gaudreau found herself stuck at the Longueuil-Université-de-Sherbrooke Metro station terminal after forgetting to get off the yellow line's final stop, and she documented the scary yet hilarious experience on TikTok.

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Montreal's metro not only allows regular dogs to ride the rails but their robot counterparts as well — or at least they're allowed to inspect local stations.

The Société de transport de Montréal (STM) partnered with local software company Osedea and robotics manufacturer Boston Dynamics to have a robot dog perform "automated and autonomous" inspections of station platforms as part of a pilot project.

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With four lines and 68 stations, the Montreal metro has a pretty good rep, and rightfully so, considering it's one of the best public transit systems in North America. Now, while the metro gets you where you need to be in decent time, things aren't always smooth sailing.

Whether it's too hot, too crowded or too dirty, there are a few Montreal metro stations that have certainly rubbed many Montrealers the wrong way.

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It's no secret that groceries are hella expensive, and with prices only expected to increase in 2023, finding a Montreal grocery store that offers a wide selection of products at a cheaper cost is a must for many. So, this got us thinking...

We asked you all on Instagram for your favourite grocery stores in Montreal and we received nearly 150 messages and over 25 recommendations. Here are the top 15 grocery stores that received the most submissions:

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Place-d'Armes station on the Montreal metro is closed from December 1 to 20 to make way for COP15, taking place in the adjacent Palais des congrès. The STM said it temporarily shuttered the station at the request of authorities. Orange-line trains will otherwise run normally.

The Palais des congrès is now the epicentre of a large security operation in anticipation of the arrival of as many as 12,000 delegates for the United Nations biodiversity conference. That means some additional bus route and traffic interruptions.

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Public transit, like any other social scene, is full of secret rules and unspoken agreements that can either make travelling a massive pain or smooth as silk. When you're on the metro or riding the bus, there are some things you can keep in mind so that your fellow voyagers don't spend their whole trip vividly picturing your imminent demise. If you want to avoid the judgmental gaze of your peers and elders, here are eight simple tricks to make sure you're a stand-up citizen (sometimes literally) when it's time to commute.

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