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A dog bite is alleged to have touched off a series of events that resulted in the death of a 32-year-old woman in Pointe-aux-Trembles nearly two years ago.
Jérémie McLaughlin-Thibault is on trial at the Montreal courthouse, where he is charged with the second-degree murder of his neighbour, Vickie Belle-Isle. The victim was attacked in her own apartment, on June 28, 2019, and died the following day in a hospital.
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In his opening remarks to the jury, prosecutor Simon Lapierre said one of Belle-Isle’s two roommates will testify at some point in the trial and is expected to say he surprised McLaughlin-Thibault while he was attacking with a roll of plastic bags.
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Rosemary Lafrenière would be a millionaire if the city of Montreal applied its new housing development bylaw to buy her acre of land.
Instead, the city has tried to get her parcels in a Pointe-aux-Trembles field for free.
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The âBylaw for a Diverse Metropolis,â which went into effect on April 1, is intended to promote the construction of social, affordable and family housing by requiring new residential development projects contain 20 per cent of each, depending on size and location. But a lesser-known part of the so-called â20-20-20â bylaw stipulates the city will buy vacant land from developers anywhere on the island to build social housing. It even sets the prices the city will pay â ranging from $552 per square metre for land downtown and in Old Montreal to $2
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City land grab in Pointe-aux-Trembles a ‘scam,’ grandson says
The city of Montreal has perpetrated a “monumental scam” to grab plots of land belonging to several individuals in a vacant field in Pointe-aux-Trembles that happens to sit next to the future REM de l’Est, says the grandson of one of them.
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“In my personal opinion, it’s a scam,” said Bruno Martel, whose grandmother, Françoise Allard, died at the age of 90 in January 2020 before seeing a cent from the city for her two plots of land that it had initially tried to get her to hand over for free.
Family adds its voice to others denouncing Montreal s ruthless tactics to acquire their land for nothing.
Author of the article: Linda Gyulai • Montreal Gazette
Publishing date: May 10, 2021 • 5 days ago • 5 minute read • Françoise Allard, pictured, owned two parcels of land in Pointe-aux-Trembles that the city tried to acquire from her for free. Her son, Guy Martel, right, and grandson, Bruno Martel, managed to get the city to pay her but at a price they say is peanuts. Photo by John Mahoney /Montreal Gazette
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The city of Montreal has perpetrated a “monumental scam” to grab plots of land belonging to several individuals in a vacant field in Pointe-aux-Trembles that happens to sit next to the future REM de l’Est, says the grandson of one of them.
MONTREAL Quebec s ministry of transport announced Tuesday the formation of an expert committee to oversee the $10-billion extension of the REM light-rail network to the east end of Montreal. Maud Cohen, an engineer and president and director general of the Fondation CHU Sainte-Justine, will head the 15-member multi-disciplinary committee, which includes urban planners and architects. The Montreal architectural firm Lemay will work with the committee to develop guidelines for integrating the eastern REM into the urban landscape. Last December, three partners behind the project announced it would extend the network to Montreal North and Pointe-aux-Trembles, adding 32 kilometres and 23 stations.