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projet montreal

The city has announced the Montreal streets that will be pedestrianized for the summer of 2022. They are:

  • avenue du Mont-Royal from boulevard Saint-Laurent to rue Fullum;
  • rue Wellington from 6e avenue to rue Régina;
  • rue Sainte-Catherine E. from rue Saint-Hubert to avenue Papineau;
  • rue Ontario E. from boulevard Pie-IX to rue Darling;
  • avenue Duluth E. from boulevard Saint-Laurent to rue Saint-Hubert;
  • rue Saint-Denis from rue Sherbrooke to boulevard de Maisonneuve;
  • rue Émery;
  • rue Sainte-Catherine O. from boulevard Saint-Laurent to rue de Bleury;
  • rue Clark from rue de Montigny to the Maison du développement durable (one block);
  • place du Marché-du-Nord from avenue Casgrain to avenue Henri-Julien;
  • avenue Bernard from avenue Wiseman to avenue Bloomfield;
  • and rue de Castelnau E. from rue Saint-Denis to avenue de Gaspé.
In a press release, Projet Montréal, the party of Mayor Valérie Plante, said that the administration has devoted funding to keep subsidizing the summer pedestrian street program for three years. Pedestrianized streets became a citywide phenomenon in the summer of 2020 when social distancing requirements inspired the city to create more space for foot traffic.

"Boroughs, business owners, residents, customers, passers-by and tourists appreciate the quality of life offered by pedestrianization projects," Mayor Plante said in the release.

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The results are in and Montreal has decided who the mayor will be for the next four years. Like it or not, Valérie Plante is here to stay and like her first run as mayor, she has big plans for the future of our metropolis.

Here's some of the major things Plante promised to do if she were re-elected.

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Election night 2021. Winners: Valérie Plante, keen-eyed Twitter users, schadenfreude, gender equality. Losers: Denis Coderre, Valérie Plante's husband's blazer.

While the Montreal mayor made headlines with her historic second mandate, it was an unfortunate — and extremely relatable — snapshot of her husband, Pierre-Antoine Harvey, that caught the attention of at least a few members of the Twitterverse.

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Multiple outlets now project that Valérie Plante has been re-elected Montreal mayor in the 2021 election.

The election was hotly contested until the very end, with Plante overcoming rival Denis Coderre and political newcomer Balarama Holness.

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With Montreal election polling stations set to close at 8 p.m., the latest poll from Léger and the Journal de Montréal showed incumbent mayor Valérie Plante ahead of her opponents.

The poll, which reached 515 voters between November 3 and 4, had Valérie Plante leading rival Denis Coderre by five percentage points overall (including decided and undecided voters).

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The race for Montreal mayor was shaping up to be an encore performance of the Plante-Coderre rivalry until Balarama Holness crashed the political stage.

With bold proposals and a promise to put "people before politics," the community organizer and former CFL star is looking to bring his Mouvement Montréal party into city hall.

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It's no secret that it's become harder than ever to find housing and affordable rent in Montreal recently. Many have called the housing situation in Montreal a crisis — and with a municipal election this weekend, it's important to know how each party hopes to solve it.

Here's where the mayoral candidates and their parties stand on housing and affordable rent in the city.

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Is the mayor on her way to a second term? A new poll from Mainstreet Research shows Valérie Plante leading Denis Coderre by six percentage points among decided and leaning voters.

Between November 2 and 4, the poll asked 850 voting-age Montrealers about their intentions in the voting booth. Forty-six percent said they planned to vote for Plante. Forty percent planned to vote for Coderre and 5% said they were voting for Holness.

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In light of the recent drama around tax returns and income statements during the Montreal mayoral election, we thought it would be good to compare exactly how much money Valérie Plante and Denis Coderre made last year.

Both candidates did quite well for themselves despite the fact that we were in a pandemic.

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In case you just woke up from a coma, the language debate in Montreal has reached a fever pitch — again. With a contentious new language bill in the books, the linguistic character of Montreal has become a focal point in the city's mayoral election.

You're right, nothing really has changed since you fell into a coma in the 1970s!

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For the past four years, Valérie Plante and her Projet Montréal party have led Montreal through police scandals, extreme weather events and a pandemic.

Now, with a mayoral election underway, Plante is fighting to keep her job.

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Mouvement Montréal leader and mayoral candidate Balarama Holness has announced a new campaign promise that is sure to please would-be first-time homeowners in Montreal.

Holness tells MTL Blog that his party would offer a 15% tax rebate for any first-time homebuyers.

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