Jessica MurphyJessica Murphyhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/author/15engResurrecting Chabanelhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/849https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/849 Five years ago, textile and apparel quotas were completely eliminated for all WTO member countries, including Canada.Montreal - alongside New York and Los Angeles - is one of the top three fashion production hubs in North America and the city has been scrambling to ensure the industry’s continued existence despite the pressure of loosening trade regulations. It launched a glitzy campaign to showcase Montreal as a ‘fashion city’ filled with a creativity and passion for the craft.  Jessica MurphyThu, 22 Jul 2010 19:30:00 -0400Quebec’s Celluloid Revolutionhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/839https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/839 “Film is a vision, a point of view,” said Quebec director Michel Brault in 2003.  Brault and his peers - Quebec cultural giants the lot - were at the forefront in helping the province establish a national cinema distinct from the rest of Canada. They told stories from the viewpoint of les Quebecois. They gave a nation a voice in its own language on screens big and small. Jessica MurphyThu, 10 Jun 2010 03:00:00 -0400The leaking begging bowlhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/809https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/809 Ottawa spends some $5 billion on foreign aid every year. Countless numbers of people also give millions in personal donations to global relief efforts. It's no wonder generous Canadians want to know where their money goes. A spate of recent news stories has cast doubt on the accountability and transparency of humanitarian aid. Jessica MurphyFri, 23 Apr 2010 19:30:00 -0400Haiti can risehttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/772https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/772In 2006, Canadian-Haitian intellectual Georges Anglades penned the tongue-in-cheek novella, 'What if Haiti declared war on the USA?' It explored a Haiti so totally destroyed in a war against imperial powers it's given a chance to climb out of three centuries of adversity by starting from scratch. Sadly, Anglades and his wife Mireille died in the January earthquake that ravaged the country they loved and worked throughout their lives to improve...Jessica MurphyThu, 11 Feb 2010 16:30:00 -0500École polytechnique: Remember, remember the 6th of Decemberhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/730https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/730 Just after dark on Wednesday, December 6, 1989 - a drizzling and foggy early winter day in Montreal - Marc Lepine walked through the doors of Universite de Montreal's Ecole Polytechnique with a hunting knife and a .223 Remington concealed in a bag.He was dressed in a pair of blue jeans and Kodiak boots... Jessica MurphyThu, 03 Dec 2009 20:00:00 -0500Federal Court throws out prison smoking banhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/711https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/711 Hardened criminals enfeebled by severe nicotine fits have won their court battle against a sweeping prohibition on smoking in federal penitentiaries. On Oct. 23, Federal Court Judge Luc Martineau overturned the total ban enacted by Corrections Canada in May, 2008. Jessica MurphyWed, 04 Nov 2009 19:00:00 -0500Ending homophobiahttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/673https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/673 Quebec’s wide-ranging, inter-ministerial action plan against homophobia, years in the making, is expected to be tabled this fall. The action plan uses as its framework the recommendations put forward by the Quebec human rights commission’s 2007 report into homophobia in the province. Jessica MurphyWed, 02 Sep 2009 16:00:00 -0400Will the real Richard Bergeron please stand up?https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/652https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/652 Projet Montreal’s website seems to have whitewashed an element of its leader’s history. While it trumpets a number of books Richard Bergeron has published - “Le livre noir de l’automobile” and “L’économie de l’automobile au Québec” - there’s no mention of his most recent treaty, “Les Quebecois au volant, c’est mortel.” The book deals primarily with Bergeron’s favourite bugaboo - the car - and how it has caused millions of deaths and injuries since its invention.. Jessica MurphyThu, 06 Aug 2009 19:00:00 -0400“Montreal needs the main”https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/642https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/642 Surrounding Cabaret Café Cleopatre is a sex store and a nightclub, a vacant lot and sagging, boarded-up buildings with decades of grime ground deep into concrete and stone. On cloudy days the corner looks squalid. Sunny days don’t suit it. To get inside, you push through a gaggle of tough-talking strippers on a smoke break and through the music and black lights filtering from their ground floor establishment... Jessica MurphyThu, 02 Jul 2009 08:00:00 -0400Justice for Anas? (DATE DE PARUTION 30 OCTOBRE 2008)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/573https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/573 Bizarre circumstances surround the shooting death by police of Mohamed Anas Bennis on Dec. 1, 2005.This summer, the family, who has been fighting for almost three years against government stonewalling, thought they would finally learn the facts about that day in Cote-des-Neiges... Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 19:45:00 -0400The ‘killing’ of Justin St-Aubin (DATE DE PARUTION 7 AOÛT 2008)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/574https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/574Justin Scott St-Aubin  was 25 when he died of a heart attack in the Rivieres des Prairies detention centre in Nov. 2007. The young Montrealer had been held in isolation for five days, never receiving the emergency psychiatric care recommended by two doctors...Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 19:30:00 -0400Boroughs gone bonkers (DATE DE PARUTION 13 NOVEMBRE 2008)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/575https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/575 Last September, The Metropolitain reported on merchants along Parc. Ave being hit with a number of fines under Montreal’s cleanliness bylaws. At the time, property owner Bill Vasilios Karidogiannis complained that the street was in disrepair despite merchants pressuring the borough to contribute to its upkeep. So when the borough sent a team of workers to clean the streets a couple of weeks later, he was overjoyed.What he didn’t realize was that he would have to foot the bill... Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 19:15:00 -0400Don’t clean weeds and butts? You pay! (DATE DE PARUTION 4 SEPTEMBRE 2009)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/579https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/579 Montreal merchants say they’re being fined under the cleanliness bylaws while the City remains in disrepair.Bill Vasilios Karidogiannis, a property owner on Avenue du Parc, is the recipient of one of those fines - $260 for not maintaining the weeds around a city tree. The weeds in front of his property had grown higher then the 20 centimeters allowed under a Plateau bylaw. Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 18:00:00 -0400What happened to the honour system? (DATE DE PARUTION 2 OCTOBRE 2008)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/585https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/585Revenu Quebec has played hardball for far too long. According to a partner and chartered accountant with a prominent Canadian financial management firm, the provincial revenue ministry has dropped the honour system and started to treat the average citizen like a crook...Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 16:45:00 -0400Criminalizing the homeless (DATE DE PARUTION 10 JUILLET 2008)https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/587https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/587Despite recent steps by Montreal and the Ville Marie borough to alleviate problems surrounding homelessness downtown, ongoing policies continue to marginalize the very people they’re trying to help...Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Jun 2009 16:15:00 -0400Battle lines drawn on Turcothttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/540https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/540 The battle lines have been drawn over the Turcot Interchange redevelopment project between a government that wants a new highway and Montrealers who seek a cleaner, greener version of their city. Residents turning out for the Bureau d’audiences publiques sur l’environnement hearings on the Turcot Interchange redevelopment plan. For the most part, they agreed something must be done for the decades-old structure crumbling under the weight of hundreds of thousands of vehicles each week. But they don’t believe a few trees make a project green... Jessica MurphyThu, 28 May 2009 21:00:00 -0400Canada and Afghanistanhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/507https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/507Afghanistan is a mess - increasingly violent, facing major hurdles in development and a severe food shortage - but according to a panel of experts lined up by the Canadian International Council, NATO needs to see its engagement through...Jessica MurphyThu, 09 Apr 2009 16:00:00 -0400IMAGINEhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/515https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/515John Lennon and Yoko Ono created a brand of fame 40 years ago that remains strikingly contemporary – shades of which can be seen in both the earnest activism of U2’s Bono to the self-obsessed flashbulb frenzy surrounding today’s vapid starlets...Jessica MurphyThu, 09 Apr 2009 05:00:00 -0400EI for the self-employedhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/492https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/492 Chris Hopkins never really wanted to be an entrepreneur. But facing dire job prospects after moving to Prince Edward Island, he started a home business that eventually failed. Now, Hopkins is using his free time to spearhead a campaign to allow entrepreneurs to opt into the federal employment insurance program... Jessica MurphyThu, 19 Mar 2009 13:00:00 -0400Who controls the Internet in Canada?https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/451https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/451 Net neutrality hasn't yet made an imprint in Canada’s national dialogue, but the controvery addresses nothing less than who acts as the gatekeeper to the most powerful communication tool we have. Net throttling – also called traffic shaping – can be defined as  the control of computer network traffic in order to optimize performance, or the alteration of traffic on a particular connection to increase efficiency throughout the network... Jessica MurphyThu, 26 Feb 2009 16:00:00 -0500Madoff’s Montreal effecthttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/460https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/460Among the victims of Bernie Madoff's alleged Ponzi scheme were a number of prominent Canadians, including former Westmount resident Phil Robinson.Robinson, part-owner of the Gray Rocks and Mont Blanc ski resorts, lost about $4 million to the accused Wall Street swindler, according to a report by The Globe and Mail newspaper. His extended family lost upwards of $13 million...Jessica MurphyThu, 26 Feb 2009 07:00:00 -0500Quebec’s poverty wallhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/439https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/439Quebec gets both top marks and failing grades when it comes to fighting poverty in the province...Jessica MurphyThu, 05 Feb 2009 02:30:00 -0500The New Frugalityhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/382https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/382Will 2009 be the year we finally learn financial common sense? History and the emerging field of behavioural finance suggests that we won't..,Jessica MurphyThu, 15 Jan 2009 07:30:00 -0500Caregivers or victims?https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/111https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/111 Pinay, The Filipino women’s organization in Quebec, have opposed aspects of Canada’s Live-In Caregivers Program for over a decade.In November, the McGill school of social work released a report that supports what they’ve been saying for years: the women coming to Canada as domestic workers are often victims of exploitation... Jessica MurphyThu, 18 Dec 2008 15:00:00 -0500“It’s a matter of dignity”https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/117https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/117When Quebec’s 38th legislature was dissolved on Nov. 5, the work by the national assembly’s standing committee on social affairs came to a halt...Jessica MurphyThu, 27 Nov 2008 22:00:00 -0500Decision Quebec: riding round-uphttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/130https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/130 Jessica MurphyThu, 13 Nov 2008 22:00:00 -0500Boroughs gone bonkershttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/132https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/132 Last September, The Metropolitain reported on merchants along Parc. Ave being hit with a number of fines under Montreal’s cleanliness bylaws. At the time, property owner Bill Vasilios Karidogiannis complained that the street was in disrepair despite merchants pressuring the borough to contribute to its upkeep. So when the borough sent a team of workers to clean the streets a couple of weeks later, he was overjoyed.,, Jessica MurphyThu, 13 Nov 2008 19:00:00 -0500Justice for Anas?https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/395https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/395 Bizarre circumstances surround the shooting death by police of Mohamed Anas Bennis on Dec. 1, 2005. This summer, the family, who has been fighting for almost three years against government stonewalling, thought they would finally learn the facts about that day in Cote-des-Neiges... Jessica MurphyThu, 30 Oct 2008 21:00:00 -0400Excited deliriumhttps://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/188https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/188 The concept of 'excited delirium' is igniting the debate on stun gun use by police forces across Canada. Defenders of the term call it an unrecognized health and policing crisis while critics fear it could be used to whitewash police brutality...  Jessica MurphyThu, 16 Oct 2008 13:00:00 -0400What happened to the honour system?https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/202https://www.themetropolitain.ca/articles/view/202Revenu Quebec has  played hardball for far too long. According to a partner and chartered accountant with a prominent Canadian financial management firm, the provincial revenue ministry has dropped the honour system and started to treat the average citizen like a crook...Jessica MurphyThu, 02 Oct 2008 20:00:00 -0400