Boroughs of Montreal during the COVID-19 pandemic

The following describes the impact of COVID-19 in the boroughs of Montreal during the pandemic in Montreal:

Ahuntsic-Cartierville

On March 25, TVA Nouvelles learned that five people in the Notre-Dame-de-la-Merci CHSLD had tested positive for COVID-19.[1]

On April 1, there were 70 cases of COVID-19 in Ahuntsic-Cartierville health establishments, in addition to the 29 cases and seven deaths from the Notre-Dame-de-la-Merci CHSLD. 10 cases were also reported in the Laurendeau CHSLD, 31 at Sacré Coeur hospital and one at Fleury hospital.[2]

On April 5, 15 people died in two CHSLDs in the neighbourhood. In addition, 99 residents and 94 staff members had been infected by that date.[3]

On April 14, six percent of cases in the metropolitan area were in Ahuntsic-Cartierville.[4]

On April 15, the Laurendeau CHSLD reported 142 positive cases and 21 deaths, representing an increase of 81 cases over three days.[5]

On April 28, the MP of Ahuntsic-Cartierville, Mélanie Joly, declared that she would donate a portion of her annual salary increase to two food banks in the area.[6]

On May 19, CCM Hockey donated 100,000 surgical masks to the Nord-de-l'Ile-de-Montréal CIUSSS.[7]

Between mid-May and June 11, 49 residents in the Notre-Dame-de-la-Merci CHSLD died, bringing the total since the start of the crisis to 90. At the time, this was the largest number number of deaths in a CHSLD.[8]

On June 12, the management of Concerts Ahuntsic en fugue announced that the seventh edition scheduled for August 2020 would be postponed to 2021.[9]

Restroom facilities in the borough's public parks gradually began reopening on June 26.[10]

Anjou

On March 13, at the request of the City of Montreal, the local soccer club, FC Anjou, suspended its season until further notice.[11]

Starting on March 19, municipal council meetings were held behind closed doors to limit the spread of COVID-19.[12] Among the 19 boroughs of Montreal, Anjou is the only one that did not broadcast its session online or take questions from the public.[13]

The borough of Anjou may be particularly at risk due to its demographics:

  • 9,995 of Angevins[14] are aged over 65 and over
  • 5,240 are aged 75 and over
  • 7,100 live alone
  • 33% of families have single parents
  • The average total pre-tax income of residents aged 15 and over is lower than the Montreal average
  • Immigrants and non-permanent residents account for 33% and 10% of the resident population, respectively.[15]

The borough set aside an emergency fund of $100,000 to donate to local community organizations, and another $50,000 for Centre-Aide.[16]

On April 5, a Costco spokesperson in Anjou announced that three employees had tested positive for COVID-19.[17]

As of May 5, only a dozen shops were open at Les Halles d'Anjou Market. Normally, a little more than 40 merchants are present daily.[18]

On May 8, a frozen food delivery service became available, free of charge, for residents of Anjou who were affected during the crisis.[19]

Baie-d'Urfé

On March 21, the town of Baie-D'Urfé created a special committee to deal with COVID-19.[20] The day before, parks and playgrounds were closed.[21]

Since the beginning of April, volunteers have been handing out masks at grocery stores.[22]

Eight employees of the Première Moisson plant located in Baie-d'Urfé tested positive for COVID-19.[23]

Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce

The Jewish General Hospital of Montreal, one of the four centres initially designated by the Quebec government to care for COVID-19 patients, treated two of the 17 Quebecers that had tested positive for COVID-19 as of March 13, 2020.[24]

On March 14, in a press release, Sainte-Justine University Hospital Centre indicated that a child who had returned from a trip to Europe had tested positive for COVID-19. It was the first case of coronavirus found in Quebec in a minor.[25] Five days later, an employee tested positive.[26]

On March 16, a student at Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf tested positive.[27]

On March 30, the Montreal Regional Department of Public Health published the number of confirmed cases by borough. Out of 1,612 confirmed cases in Montreal, 161 came from the Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough.[28]

On April 7, the Alfred-Desrochers CHSLD was revealed to be severely affected by the virus. Nine elders had died from COVID-19, while 39 other residents had also received a positive diagnosis.[29] That same day, Marguerite Lescop died from COVID-19 at the age of 104, in the Alfred-Desrochers CHSLD, where she had lived for several years.[30]

On April 8, the Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery in Montréal, the largest in Canada, stopped performing burials and cremations.[31]

On April 23, a truck broadcasting public service announcements in French, English, Vietnamese, Tagalog, Yiddish, Spanish, Creole, Arabic, Russian, Mandarin, Tamil, Hindi, Wolof, Farsi and Urdu began circulating in the streets of the district.[32]

On April 27, out of 12,034 Montrealers who had tested positive for COVID-19, 1,097, comprising 9%, were from the Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough.[33]

On May 12, a group of residents asked the City of Montreal to provide more resources, such as mobile screening clinics and masks.[34]

Côte Saint-Luc

On March 20, public health authorities revealed that individuals who had been diagnosed with COVID-19 had been in several public places in Montreal over the past week, including the metro between the stations Angrignon and McGill, the 106 bus from Newman Boulevard towards Angrignon station, the Notre-Dame-de-Grâce library, the 24 bus headed west on Sherbrooke Street between Notre-Dame Hospital and the Fine Arts Museum, and the Aunja Restaurant.[35] These individuals were among the four residents of Côte Saint-Luc who were declared positive for COVID-19, according to the city's mayor, Mitchell Brownstein.[36] He added that this made Côte Saint-Luc the worst affected municipality per capita in Quebec. On that same date, the emergency chief of the Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital received a positive diagnosis of COVID-19.[37]

A drive-thru testing clinic was set up in Côte Saint-Luc on March 29.[38] There were more than 50 cases in the area at the time,[39] and by the end of the month, Côte St-Luc had the highest COVID-19 rate in the province,[40] with 107 positive cases.[41]

On April 2, the IGA in Quartier Cavendish announced the closure of its establishment to the public due to the pandemic.[42] Two days later, an employee tested positive for the virus.[43]

The drive-thru testing centre closed on April 16, as a new centre had opened up at the Jewish General Hospital.[44]

Effective July 1, masks became mandatory in public areas in Côte St. Luc,[45] making the municipality the first jurisdiction in Canada to make masks mandatory.[46]

Dollard-des-Ormeaux

Celebrations for the 60th anniversary[47] of the city of Dollard-des-Ormeaux were suspended due to the pandemic.[48]

From April 22 to May 8, 40 residents of the Vigi Dollard-des-Ormeaux CHSLD died due to COVID-19 and lack of staff.[49] A doctor said that 70 percent of the 160 residents were positive for COVID-19.[50]

Dorval

The province confirmed its first case on February 28—a 41-year-old woman who had landed at Montréal–Trudeau International Airport, located in Dorval, on a flight from Doha, Qatar on February 24.[51][52][53] She was transferred to the Jewish General Hospital on March 3 and released on March 4.[54][55] A few days later, the Journal de Montréal revealed that a person suffering from COVID-19 had used the shuttle service offered by Montréal-Trudeau airport.[56]

On March 13, the city of Dorval announced the closure of certain municipal buildings until further notice.[57]

On March 29, the Residence Herron in Dorval was placed under guardianship.[58] On April 11, it was stated that at least five residents of CHSLD Herron had died from COVID-19 in the last month, as part of a larger pattern of neglect discovered at the facility.[59]

The billionaire Michael Rosenberg was sent to intensive care, where he was intubated and put under sedation. He had participated in a wedding on March 16 at the Crowne Plaza hotel in Montreal.[60]

On May 25, the City of Dorval decided to cancel all of its major events until at least July 1, including celebrations for Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day and Canada Day.[61]

Hampstead

At the start of the crisis, the mayor of the City of Hampstead, William Steinberg, downplayed COVID-19.[62] Despite this, the April 6 municipal council meeting was held online.[63] At that moment the median rate for Montreal was 36 cases for every 100,000 people. However, in some neighbourhoods like Hampstead the number reached 150 to 200 per 100,000,[64] leading to the implementation of additional sanitary measures.[65]

Towards the end of May, tennis courts and dog parks were opened in the neighbourhood.[66][67] Day camps for the summer remained cancelled.[68]

Kirkland

On March 30, Kirkland closed its parks and park chalets.[69] The city has also set up a telephone line for seniors to get real-time updates and discover available resources from the city to help.[70] The Ecclestone swimming pool was also closed for the summer season 2020.[71]

Lachine

On March 24, the borough of Lachine confirmed that it was offering a contribution of $35,000 to Centraide's emergency fund.[72]

At the beginning of April, a testing centre was opened at the Cité Medical de Lachine clinic.[73]

On April 6, a Lachine dépanneur was the target of criticism after citizens learned that the delivery man's wife was suffering from COVID-19.[74]

On April 21, a case of COVID-19 was detected at the Sisters of Sainte-Anne motherhouse. One month later, it was the most affected private seniors' residence in the province.[75]

From May 3 to 5, the number of COVID-19 cases in Lachine doubled.[76]

On May 15, the borough cancelled garage sales until further notice.[77]

An outbreak at a lifeguard initiation party on July 18 forced city officials to temporarily close public pools.[78]

LaSalle

On March 10, someone with COVID-19 took a bus from Boulevard Newman towards Angrignon station.[79] On March 27, Parc des Rapides in LaSalle closed due to COVID-19.[80]

On April 7, with 237 positive cases, LaSalle had the second highest number of cases among Montreal's boroughs, just behind Côte-des-Neiges with 400 cases. Of LaSalle's 237 cases, 23 had died. 14 of them had stayed at the LaSalle Accommodation Centre and 9 at the LaSalle Hospital Accommodation Centre. At least 29 patients had caught the virus in the CHSLD and 20 others in the hospital.[81]

On April 24, the Red Cross set up dozens of beds in the Jacques-Lemaire arena.[82][83]

On May 13, a mobile screening clinic was set up in LaSalle.[84]

On June 4, the soldiers deployed in the CHSLD Floralies gradually began to leave the establishment[85]

L'Île-Bizard–Sainte-Geneviève

Around mid-March, and despite the challenges related to the coronavirus, the city of Montreal began closely monitoring the spring freshets of the Rivière des Prairies, which runs alongside the L'Île-Bizard–Sainte-Geneviève borough.[86]

At the end of March, while Montreal counted 1,612 cases, only 5 came from the borough.[87]

Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve

On March 13, the City of Montreal announced the closure of all community centres, cultural places, libraries, swimming pools, arenas and sports facilities in Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve (MHM). Then, on March 17, they announced the temporary closure of all Access Montreal offices and permit counters.[88] On March 24, Mayor Pierre Lessard-Blais announced that the borough was offering a contribution of $100,000 to the Emergency Fund launched by Centraide.[89]

From April 13, the Francis-Bouillon arena was transformed into a rest stop for people experiencing homelessness.[90] Something similar was set up at the Maurice Richard Arena a few days later.[91] Around the same time, several new "pedestrian corridors" were put in place in the borough in order to enhance COVID-19 security.[92] In late April, a mobile screening clinic was deployed in the borough.[93]

As of May 1, 27 soldiers from the Canadian Armed Forces were deployed to the CHSLD Benjamin-Victor-Rousselot.[94]

Between May 2 and May 12, the number of deaths almost doubled in the borough.[95] Starting the next day, 15,000 masks were distributed to MHM residents[96] in nine days.[97]

On May 20, the Débrouillards scientific day camps were canceled.[98]

Montreal-Est

On March 19, Montreal-Est announced the closure of all non-essential services as of March 20.[99] A month later, the partial resumption of residential construction (from April 20) and landscaping (from April 15) took place.[100]

On June 2, the city announced the temporary closure of its facilities, after three employees were diagnosed with COVID-19 during the previous week.[101]

Montréal-Nord

On March 13, the Mayor of Montréal-Nord, Christine Black, placed herself in voluntary quarantine after returning from her trip during spring break.[102] Three weeks after the COVID-19 crisis started, the Obsession Club, a Montréal-Nord nightclub that prided itself on being the biggest swinger club in the world, declared bankruptcy due to COVID.[103]

On April 5, Toronto Raptors player Chris Boucher urged young people in Montréal-Nord to follow public health guidelines.[104]

Between March 25 and April 7, four employees tested positive for coronavirus in the Metro chain's meat and frozen distribution centre.[105] Since then, two other cases have been identified at this distribution centre.[106]

On March 30, there were 50 confirmed cases in the borough.[107]

On April 7, the first positive case in a CHSLD was reported in the borough, which had 149 cases.[108]

On April 9, the borough had 193 cases.[109]

On April 16, there were 443 infected people, an increase of 52% in four days.[110]

By April 22, 40 people from Montréal-Nord had died from COVID-19 and 839 cases had been identified.[111]

As of April 29, the borough of Montréal-Nord had 1,153 confirmed cases or 1,369 per 100,000 inhabitants.[112] Meanwhile, the rate in the province of Quebec was 325 per 100,000 inhabitants and that of Canada was 143.[113] The newspaper Le Devoir indicated that 23% of all cases in Montréal-Nord were health workers and 19% were residents of CHSLDs.[114]

As of April 30, 2020, the situation in living environments for elderly and vulnerable people in the borough was as follows:

Situation in the living environments for elderly and vulnerable people in the borough.[115]
Date Institution Cumulative number of confirmed residents Percentage of confirmed residents
April 29 Résidence Angelica Inc.[116] 162 Less than 15% of residents are confirmed cases
April 29 Hôpital Marie-Clarac 66 Between 15% and 25% are confirmed cases
April 28 Résidence Angelica 145 More than 25% are confirmed cases
April 26 CHSLD Champlain-De-Gouin[117] 30 More than 25% are confirmed cases
April 28 Château Beaurivage[118] 29 Between 15% and 25% are confirmed cases
April 28 Résidence Les Cascades inc.[119] 2 Between 15% and 25% are confirmed cases
Before April 13 Résidence Sault-au-Récollet[120] 1 Between 15% and 25% are confirmed cases
Before April 13 Résidence Portofino inc[121] 1 Between 15% and 25% are confirmed cases

As of May 1, 2020, a screening centre was opened to the symptomatic population living in Montréal-Nord.[122]

On May 23, Kent Nagano and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra sent a message of support to Montréal-Nord in a video posted online[123]

From May 19 to 25, the number of new infections fell by 26% compared to the previous week for the borough.[124]

On June 17, Stéphane Pierre Corneille, a businessman, donated $250,000 in protective equipment to various organizations in Montréal-Nord.[125]

Mount Royal

By May 14, the CHSLD Vigi Mont-Royal received help from the Canadian army after 148 employees and 226 seniors[126] contracted the virus due to a ventilation problem.[127]

From June 21, a drive-in cinema was opened on the land of the Royalmount real estate project.[128]

Outremont

On March 18, The New York Times reported that the virus was indeed present in the Hasidim of Williamsburg and Borough Park, communities woven closely with those in Outremont, Côte-des-Neiges and Boisbriand.[129] Ten days later, no less than 38% of the 971 Montrealers reached by COVID-19 resided in Côte-des-Neiges-Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Outremont, Parc-Extension and the cities of Hampstead and Côte-Saint -Luc.[130] The Outremont district was the district with the highest infection rate per 100,000 inhabitants until April 16[131]

On March 25, COVID-19 made its first victim in Montreal. A 67-year-old man who lived in the Outremont district.[132][133] The next day, the SPVM police found eight pallets containing hundreds of cases of wine from Ontario behind the Satmar synagogue, located on Hutchison Street in the Outremont borough.[134] A few days later, the SPVM intervened in order to limit gatherings within the various Hasidic groups in Montreal.[135] On May 13, the SPVM intervened again with the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community of Montreal.[136]

Pierrefonds-Roxboro

In addition to having to deal with the pandemic, the Pierrefonds-Roxboro borough closely monitored the level of the Rivière des Prairies.[137]

On April 6, an emergency fund of $35,000 was created by the borough.[138]

On May 8, the borough canceled its annual ecological gardening day scheduled for May 29, 2020.[139]

As of May 22, the Cloverdale neighborhood of Pierrefonds-Roxboro was considered a COVID-19 hot spot by public health authorities.[140]

On June 2, the borough expected a loss of local revenues estimated at $500,000 for the year 2020 and a reduction target of 3.1% of its budget, which is equivalent to $1M.[141]

Le Plateau-Mont-Royal

On March 24, the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough, together with the Caisse Desjardins du Plateau-Mont-Royal, created a local emergency fund COVID-19 of CA$200,000 to support neighborhood community organizations. Deputy Ruba Ghazal subsequently made a personal donation of $50,000 to the fund.[142] The City of Montreal, for its part, allocated $1.2 million for an emergency fund to provide food aid to the most vulnerable citizens.[143]

Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles

From May 7, 10,000 masks were distributed in the borough.[144]

As of May 15, a permanent testing centre was set up at the CLSC de l'Est de Montréal in Pointe-aux-Trembles.[145] The borough was then considered a hot zone in Quebec[146]

On May 22, as Montreal was preparing for deconfinement, RDP-PAT deployed a new series of measures to counter the spread of the coronavirus[147]

Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie

The new "pedestrian corridors" on Beaubien Street

From March 13, 2020, patients at Maisonneuve-Rosement and Santa-Cabrini hospitals could not receive a visit.[148] A week later, a member of the Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital care teams had COVID-19, the fourth case of infection in a hospital setting.[149] On March 20, the EPIC Centre, one of the largest cardiovascular prevention centre in Canada with more than 5,303 registered members,[150] suspended its activities until further notice.[151] The next day, Lenni-Kim indicated on his Instragram account that he and his mother had positive tests at Hôpital Maisonneuve-Rosemont.[152] On March 26, the Angus Medical Clinic was mandated to open a designated COVID-19 evaluation clinic. The new clinic offers medical consultations to people with a diagnosis and requiring medical follow-up.[153]

On April 2, with 133 cases, Rosemont was then the third district most affected by the virus.[154] On April 6, the borough councilor indicated in the agenda, wanting to grant financial support of $100,000 for the year 2020 to Centraide of Greater Montreal.[155] As of April 7, 87 elderly patients and seven deaths related to COVID-19 had been detected in seven CHSLDs, including in the CHSLD J. Henri Charbonneau.[156] As of April 28, four of the five surgical units at Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital were infected with COVID-19 patients.[157]

From mid-April, several new "pedestrian corridors" were put in place in the borough in order to secure travel.[158]

From April 30, traffic was prohibited on Marché-Du-Nord streets during Jean-Talon market opening hours.[159] This exceptional measure was part of the plan to secure and bring the Jean-Talon market up to sanitary standards in relation to COVID-19.[160]

As of May 11, the various roadworks in the borough gradually resumed.[161] The same day, a petition circulated online to reopen the Botanical Garden.[162] In addition, the La Mennais emergency childcare service, located in the closed district for two weeks due to an outbreak linked to COVID-19.[163]

As of May 12, 227 health workers had caught COVID in the borough, or 21% of the total in the region.[164]

On May 19, borough mayor François Croteau announced that the section of Saint-Laurent Boulevard, between rue Saint-Zotique and rue Jean-Talon would be converted into a "transit mall". The restaurateurs of Little Italy in Montreal will be allowed to extend their terraces onto the street in order to facilitate social distancing.[165]

On June 5, the organizers of the Montreal's Italian Week festival, which was to take place from August 7 to 6, 2020,[166] would take place virtually.[167]

On June 8, the mayor of the borough, François William Croteau announced the cancellation of the "pedestrianization with bus" projects on the Beaubien and Masson commercial arteries and the upcoming expiration of sanitary corridors[168]

June 9: Open or not[169]
Installation Open / Not open
Soccer and baseball fields Open for free practice, keeping a distance of two meters (6'). Matches remain banned
Basketball courts Open for free practice, keeping a distance of two meters (6'). The nets will be installed soon. Matches remain prohibited.
Playgrounds Open. Usual cleaning will be carried out in accordance with the recommendations of the Regional Public Health Department
Water sports All water games are open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., except those in the Parc de la Cité-Jardin which will open soon.
Libraries Not open (Pending the gradual reopening of the Rosemont-La-Petite-Patrie libraries, they have launched the "Rosepatrienne Chronicles", a kind of blog where Rosepatrians can testify to their confinement)
The permit counter Open, by appointment only
Community gardens Open
Skateparks Open
Tennis courts Open. Only free practice in singles is allowed, double play is prohibited. No lesson or training session is authorized and only the use of outdoor grounds is permitted.
Dog parks Open
Municipal golf Open
Swimming pools and arena Not open[170]
Maisonneuve Park parking lot and chalet Not open

On June 16, the Beaubien Cinema announced its reopening on July 3.[171]

Saint-Léonard

On April 9, Saint-Léonard announced the creation of a COVID-19 Emergency Fund, up to a maximum of $50,000.[172]

Places reopening[173]
Place Opening
Building Permits Office May 4
Community gardens May 18
Tennis courts located at Pie-XII, Ferland, Giuseppe-Garibaldi parks, Ladauversière and Wilfrid-Bastien May 22
Arthur-Péloquin and Jean-Talon dog parks - Provencher May 22
Reopening of shops May 25
Water games (Wilfrid-Bastien, Couvertin, Luigi-Pirandello Parks) May 26
Water games (Ferland and Delorme parks) May 27
Skatepark (Delorme park) May 27

From June 1, the Intermarché Lagoria grocery chain imposed the wearing of masks on its customers.[174]

In order to equip the parents, the DOD Basketball organization set up a survival kit in order to equip them so that their children continue their school learning.[175]

Senneville

By April 4, all of the boroughs and municipalities of Montreal had confirmed cases with Senneville getting its first cases.[176]

Sud-Ouest

On April 20, 115 of the 165 residents of CHSLD Yvon-Brunet were infected with COVID-19.[177] On June 3, more than four out of five deaths were in seniors' residences in the Sud-Ouest borough.[178]

On May 13, 14 and 15, a mobile screening clinic visited the borough.[179]

Verdun

On February 28, the Quebec government confirmed its first case of coronavirus on its territory. It was a 41-year-old Montrealer who returned from Iran. After presenting herself in a Verdun clinic, the lady was transferred to the Verdun Hospital.[180]

On March 27, the emergency department of the Verdun Hospital had to close its emergency department due to an outbreak of COVID-19.[181]

On April 2, at least 35 patients and two doctors had contracted COVID-19 at the hospital in Verdun.[182] The next day, while 2,837 cases had been confirmed in the metropolitan area, a total of 204 healthcare workers, including 148 in Montreal, had been diagnosed with COVID-19, including 5 doctors from the Verdun Hospital.[183]

On April 7, 2020, the actor Ghyslain Tremblay died following an infection with COVID-19 disease at home L'Étincelle, a nursing home in Verdun (Montreal), at the age of 68 years.[184]

On April 14, the Verdun hospital built a temporary annex without its parking lot to accommodate 36 additional hospital beds. Work was to be completed by the end of April.[185]

On April 17, the Verdun hospital faced a second COVID-19 outbreak.[186] The first occurred at the beginning of April.[187]

On May 8, the borough of Verdun launched a pilotte project aimed at closing, in part, to car traffic on Wellington Street.[188]

June 12: Open or not[189]
Installation Open / Not open
Libraries June 22[190]
Community gardens May 21[191]
Reopening of tennis courts (Arthur-Terrien, de La Fontaine, Elgar, Reine-Élisabeth and Wilson parks) June 1[192]
Reopening of water games June 1[193]

Ville-Marie

As of March 13, 2020, and until further notice, all of Ville-Marie's community centres, cultural sites, libraries, swimming pools, arena and sports facilities were closed under COVID-19.[194] On March 24, Ville-Marie donated $150,000 to the COVID-19 emergency fund to support the 80 community organizations in the borough.[195] The day before, a first walk-in COVID-19 screening clinic had been set up under large tents pitched on the Place des festivals.[196] At the end of March, Ville-Marie was one of 6 boroughs with more than 50 cases of COVID-19.[197]

Between April 12 and June 4, around 50 people a day used the facilities of the Grande Bibliothèque de Montréal to warm up.[198] In fact, the library hall had been converted into a shelter for the homeless during the pandemic[199]

On April 15, the Québec solidaire member for Sainte-Marie–Saint-Jacques and head of the second opposition group in the Quebec National Assembly, Manon Massé, added $50,000 to the emergency fund,[200] just like the Caisses Desjardins of Complexe Desjardins and Quartier-Latin de Montréal.[201]

In addition, a second employee of a McDonald's restaurant was found positive. While the first worked at the branch located at 12090 rue Sherbrooke Est, the second worked at the restaurant located at 2901 rue Sherbrooke Est.[202]

On May 19, the Native Women's Shelter of Montreal was urgently closed after an outbreak of COVID-19 among staff.[203]

On June 3, the Chambre du commerce du Montréal métropolitain (CCMM) proposed to make the Sainte-Catherine street a corner between Atwater and Papineau. Due to the pandemic, downtown Montreal has emptied of its 100,000 students, its millions of tourists and about 80% of its workers, most of whom are telecommuting.[204]

Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension

As of May 1, the accessible screening clinic in Saint-Michel was open from Sunday to Wednesday from noon to 8 p.m. The authorities estimated a daily capacity of a hundred tests.[205] On May 18, a walk-in mobile screening clinic was testing asymptomatic residents[206]

As of May 6, with 1,239 cases of contamination, Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension, was the second most affected arrondissement. Being one of the poorest neighborhoods in Canada, various community organizations fear an upsurge of cases.[207]

On May 15, the borough announced its Summer 2020 travel plan.[208]

June 12: Open or not[209]
Installation Open / Not open
Libraries (Return of borrowed books) June 15
Librairies (Le Prévost and Saint-Michel Libraries) June 22
Outdoor pools June 20
Sports fields May 23
Claude-Léveillée Culture House Open as a cool stop
Water sports May 26
Dog parks May 23
Community gardens May 19

Westmount

On March 12, a woman with COVID-19 attended a wedding in a synagogue in Westmount. Over a hundred people attended.[210] A week later, access to all of the City of Westmount's playgrounds was prohibited to the public until further notice.[211] Few days after, a firefighter tested positive for COVID-19.[212]

On April 6, 2020, the municipal council voted to postpone the date of the second payment of municipal tax accounts.[213] The next day, access to the borough was reserved for local traffic or deliveries.[214] Then, from April 8, Westmount pedestrians were asked not to cross paths on the sidewalks.[215] As of April 15, the resumption of services for landscaping contractors in the city quietly resumed.[216] As of April 21, 21 cases of COVID-19 were detected at St. Margaret' Residence on Hillside Avenue, the only public CHSLD in Westmount.[217]

Starting May 18, the City of Westmount opened its community gardens.[218]

References

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