Montreal mayor calls on Quebec for 'complete' pandemic reopening schedule
CBC
Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante is calling on the provincial government to provide a concrete reopening plan for the spring and summer.
Plante says the city is entering a crucial phase for booking big tourist events like festivals and conventions, and the unpredictability is putting many of those events planned for the city at risk.
Venues need clear health guidelines to plan their events, Plante said at a news conference Sunday, accompanied by Glenn Castanheira, general manager of Montreal's downtown business association and Yves Lalumière, president of Tourisme Montréal.
"Other provinces have this plan, they have this predictability, but not Quebec," Plante said, pointing to Ontario, which announced a comprehensive plan on Jan. 20 that includes a complete reopening in mid-March.
"Montreal, as a cultural metropolis, economic locomotive, needs this plan to support its entire [cultural] industry," she said.
Lalumière said Montreal is "a dynamic and vibrant city," except it's now perceived as closed, without plans to reopen.
"Our hotel partners, airline partners, cultural partners, gastronomic partners, are exasperated and are discouraged by the lack of planning," he said.
"Montreal deserves more than a week's worth of planning."
Montreal is in danger of losing ground to its competitors as sports, cultural, and convention planners in particular need answers, Lalumière said, adding that some are on the verge of cancelling events scheduled to take place in Montreal due to the lack of predictability.
He said there is a "huge risk" to Montreal's economic health and its reputation as an open city, as cities like Chicago, Boston and New York are all open.
"Montreal is the only major North American city with no date for reopening," he said.
Castanheira bemoaned the province's tight restrictions.
"We were the first to lock down and are the last to reopen," he said, adding that he isn't questioning the province's health regulations.
Plante says it's not about not following the rules or lobbying for great change, "but there has to be a plan."