When the city wanted to remove a stop sign on Décarie Boulevard in Saint-Laurent, an electrical engineer named Olivier Labrèche—who'd been organizing around active mobility issues in his neighbourhood for years—thought this was backwards. The sign protected a pedestrian crossing, but the borough had decided it was unnecessary.
So he started a petition, and citizens mobilized. The borough didn't back down on the stop sign—they removed it—but they did compromise and install a raised trottoir traversant crossing to slow traffic and protect pedestrians. It was a small win, but for Labrèche, the lesson was bigger than the outcome.
By summer 2024, Labrèche had a realization: if a handful of residents with a petition could force the city to respond, what could a full political party do?
For readers who care about Montreal
Create a free account to read this story and access 3 articles per month, plus our weekly Bulletin.










Comments
Welcome to The Main's comments section!
Share your thoughts and join the conversation. Please be respectful and constructive.
No comments yet. Be the first!