STM won't be adding more elevators to Metro stations, for now, citing lack of funding
The Société de transport de Montréal (STM) pointed to Quebec's spring budget in a news release, saying that for the third year in a row, the government had not allocated any new funding for infrastructure maintenance or universal accessibility.
According to the STM, maintenance funding is actually set to decrease by $258 million over the next three years.
"This is a worrying situation that jeopardizes the reliability and safety of the network," said Éric Alan Caldwell, chairman of the STM board of directors, in the release.
"This is all the more worrying given that the Annual Infrastructure Management Plan (PAGI) confirms that the proportion of STM assets in poor condition has jumped from 23 per cent to 39 per cent, whether it be tunnels, stations or our MR-73 trains."
Caldwell said that without the necessary funding, the STM can't launch projects to both maintain its infrastructure and build elevators.
Elevator installation work that is already underway at the Berri-UQAM Metro station on the Yellow line and Édouard-Monpetit on the Blue line, will continue.
The $7-million elevator project at Atwater means it is now the 30th of 68 stations in the Metro network to become universally accessible.
WATCH| Transit funding not a top priority in provincial budget:
Steven Laperrière, general manager of the disability advocacy group Regroupement des activistes pour l'inclusion au Québec (RAPLIQ), said he welcomed the addition in such a "pivotal" station but laments the pause on future projects.
He said the onus is often put on people with disabilities or people who use wheelchairs and other mobility devices, to justify the need for more accessibility, when in fact, it benefits everyone.
"Let's just say you have an accident and you have a broken leg, well you can at least have an elevator to take you [to the] subway station," he said. "It's important ... it helps everyone."
Laperrière acknowledges that STM's paratransit system, used as an alternative to riding the subway, is a good one, but he says it still has its limitations.
"You have to reserve at least 24 hours in advance so that if you have an emergency, there's nothing you can do about it," Laperrière said.
Then you need to know your departure time and your return time which requires a lot of planning, and the service isn't always on time, he added.
"What we're asking is for the complete accessibility of the subway system," he said.
While the transit agency was aiming to make 41 stations accessible by 2030, that target, it now says, is unlikely to be reached.
Despite the setback, Laperrière is still hopeful it can become a reality.
RAPLIQ is awaiting a decision on a 2017 class-action lawsuit it initiated against the STM, the City of Montreal, the Autorité régionale de transport métropolitain and Réseau de transport métropolitain.
The organization argued that the lack of wheelchair accessibility on subways and trains is discriminatory.
With hearings on the matter over since December 2023, a decision should be forthcoming, says Laperrière.
"It's kind of long, but at the end of the day, I guess everybody understands because it's a huge decision," he said. "It's going to be historical, whatever the decision is."
CBC News reached out to Quebec's Transport Ministry for comment, but did not hear back prior to publication.
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New York Times
4 hours ago
- New York Times
Live Updates: Trump Says U.S. Won't Send Peacekeeping Troops to Ukraine
News analysis President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine and other European leaders met with President Trump at the White House on Monday. In the annals of trans-Atlantic diplomacy, Monday's meeting between President Trump and European leaders may go down as one of the stranger summits in memory. Historic, yet uncertain in its outcome; momentous, yet ephemeral in its effect on the war in Ukraine; choreographed, yet hostage to the impulses of a single man, Mr. Trump. As Europe's leaders began returning to their slumbering capitals, diplomats and foreign policy experts struggled to make sense of a midsummer's meeting with Mr. Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky that often had a dreamlike quality — with made-for-TV moments and unexpected interludes. The seven European leaders put forward a show of support for Mr. Zelensky and unity with each other. They won a potentially vital, if vague, expression of support from Mr. Trump for postwar security guarantees for Ukraine and sidestepped a discussion of territorial concessions, according to Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany. Still, they all but acquiesced to Mr. Trump's abandonment of a cease-fire between Russia and Ukraine as a condition for further talks. Analysts said that put Europe's leaders essentially where they were before Mr. Trump's meeting with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Alaska last week: subject to the president's faith that he can conjure a deal with the Russian leader to end the grinding war. 'In Anchorage and in Washington, it was a triumph of empty vagueness and meaningless commitments,' said Gérard Araud, who served as France's ambassador to the United States during Mr. Trump's first term. 'In both cases, no firm decision has been taken. Nothing has changed.' Mr. Araud said Mr. Trump's reassuring words about security guarantees, and the lack of a blowup between him and Mr. Zelensky, were a relief for Europeans. But the absence of a detailed, agreed plan for negotiations with Russia, he said, could store up problems for the future. The worrisome scenario, Mr. Araud said, was 'talks and talks, which lead to nothing but possible misunderstanding.' Image President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia with Mr. Trump at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage on Friday. Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times Diplomats pointed out that the remarkable spectacle of European leaders ditching their summer holiday plans to rush to Washington was prompted less by a rare opportunity to make peace than by the fear that Mr. Trump might attempt to bully Mr. Zelensky, as he did in a turbulent Oval Office meeting in February. This time, the fear was Mr. Trump would try to force the Ukrainian president into a one-sided, land-for-peace deal with Russia. 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Video transcript Back bars 0:00 / 0:55 - 0:00 transcript Trump Caught Whispering to Macron About a Possible Deal on Ukraine Before a roundtable of European leaders in Washington, President Trump was overheard on an open microphone talking to President Emmanuel Macron of France about discussions with the Russian president on the war in Ukraine. [Trump to Macron]: 'A little tan, you're good? You look great.' [Macron]: 'Thank you for working hard.' [inaudible] [Trump]: 'It's, uh, I can call Putin and [inaudible]' [Trump]: '... and I think, we can set up a trilat, you know, so ...' [Macron]: 'And where do you want to do it?' [Trump]: 'I think he wants to make a deal. I think he wants to make a deal for me. Do you understand that? As crazy as it sounds. Just sit down.' Sit down, everybody. Before a roundtable of European leaders in Washington, President Trump was overheard on an open microphone talking to President Emmanuel Macron of France about discussions with the Russian president on the war in Ukraine. Mr. Macron may have more experience than any Western leader with the frustrations of negotiating with Mr. Putin. He spent early 2022 flying back and forth from Moscow to sit across a long table from the Russian president in a marathon, ultimately fruitless, quest to talk him out of invading Ukraine. Yet on Monday, Mr. Macron was scrupulously polite and upbeat about Mr. Trump's prospects for succeeding where he had failed. 'Your president indeed is very confident about the capacity he has to get this deal done, which is good news for all of us,' he said in an interview with NBC News. Image President Putin and President Emmanuel Macron of France at the Kremlin in 2022, in a photo released by Russian state media. Mr. Macron was not successful in his attempts to keep Russia from invading Ukraine. Credit... Sputnik, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images On Tuesday, he struck a darker tone, telling a French broadcaster, LCI, that Mr. Putin was an 'ogre,' who needed to eat Russia's neighbors to survive. Mr. Macron also has plenty of experience dealing with the ups and downs of Mr. Trump, having come into office four months after his first inauguration. A military parade on the Champs-Élysées in 2017 dazzled Mr. Trump, but crossed wires over Israel and Gaza at a Group of 7 meeting in Canada in June left him complaining that 'Emmanuel' is 'always wrong.' On Monday, the French president followed a time-tested script in placating his host. 'European leaders have figured out the Trump playbook and are playing it well,' said Mujtaba Rahman, an expert on Europe at the political risk consultancy Eurasia Group. 'Europe now clearly has a seat at the table, indeed many seats at the table,' he added, noting that even the European Commission, a longtime bugbear for Mr. Trump, was represented by its president, Ursula von der Leyen. Mr. Rahman said the leaders not only handled Mr. Trump well but also presented a coherent and consistent approach in dealing with him. While Mr. Merz and Mr. Macron both raised the importance of a cease-fire, neither pressed it to the point that it antagonized Mr. Trump or opened fissures in their unified front. 'We were well prepared and well-coordinated,' Mr. Merz told reporters after the meeting. 'We also represented the same viewpoints. I think that really pleased the American president, in the sense that he noticed that we Europeans are speaking with one voice here.' Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain, who has spearheaded Europe's efforts to try to build a multinational peacekeeping force for Ukraine, emphasized Mr. Trump's openness to an American role in that effort. He said it was also clear now that no peace deal would be negotiated over Mr. Zelensky's head. 'That is a recognition of the principle that on some of these issues, whether it's territory or the exchange of prisoners, or the very serious issue of the return of children, that is something where Ukraine must be at the table,' said Mr. Starmer, before he returned to an interrupted family vacation in Scotland. (Tens of thousands of Ukrainian children were abducted and deported into Russia during the war, leading to often frantic searches by their parents.) For Europe's leaders, these facts underline how much has changed since they gathered in London in March after Mr. Trump's explosive first meeting with Mr. Zelensky. There, they contemplated a future in which the United States seemed determined to forsake its post-World War II role as a guarantor of peace in Europe. Image European leaders at a summit on Ukraine in London in March. Credit... Javad Parsa/EPA, via Shutterstock Since then, NATO's members, prodded by Mr. Trump, have pledged increases in their military budgets. Britain and France have aligned doctrines for the use of their nuclear arsenals; Britain and Germany signed a mutual defense treaty; while the European Union has set up a funding mechanism to allow members to borrow to meet their larger defense commitments. And yet, diplomats and analysts warned, the fate of the trans-Atlantic alliance still hangs in the balance, dependent on an American president who was uncharacteristically polite to Mr. Zelensky and his European guests on Monday but could shift his tone on a dime, particularly after his next encounter with Mr. Putin. 'While President Trump proved effective in convincing NATO allies to commit to a historic increase in defense spending,' Mr. Burns, the former NATO ambassador, said, 'he has failed to lead on the greatest threat to the future of the alliance — a vengeful and violent Vladimir Putin.' Jim Tankersley contributed reporting from Berlin and Roger Cohen from Paris.


The Hill
10-08-2025
- The Hill
Trump on DC crime crackdown: ‘There will be no ‘Mr. Nice Guy'
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Yahoo
30-07-2025
- Yahoo
Stellantis warns of $1.7 billion earnings hit from tariffs
Stellantis on Tuesday said that President Trump's tariffs will cost the auto manufacturer 1.5 billion euros, or about $1.7 billion, in 2025. The parent company of brands like Chrysler, Fiat, Jeep and Peugeot announced the projected earnings hit as Mr. Trump clinches deals with U.S. trade partners that include steep tariffs on U.S. imports. Stellantis expects most of the earnings decline to materialize in the second half of 2025. "Stellantis updates its estimate of 2025 net tariff impact to approximately €1.5 billion, of which €0.3 billion was incurred in H1 2025. The Company remains highly engaged with relevant policymakers, while continuing long-term scenario planning," the company said in a statement Tuesday as it reported financial results for the first half of 2025. The automaker acknowledged that Mr. Trump's 25% tariffs on imports of autos and auto parts to the U.S. are hurting its business, particularly in North America. Stellantis builds its Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep brand vehicles in factories in Canada and Mexico, meaning they're subject to the new levies. While Mr. Trump's deal with the EU, calling for 15% tariffs across the board will make BMW and Mercedes-Benz vehicles more expensive for U.S. consumers, according to analysts. Stellantis is largely unaffected by the EU agreement. "Stellantis isn't much affected by the EU/US tariff news — the question for STLA is if the Detroit-3 will want to renegotiate the [U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA)] tariff after the EU and Japan got a better deal," UBS analysts said in a research note. Other automobile manufacturers, including General Motors, have been bracing for impact from tariffs. GM CEO Mary Barra said the company took a $1.1 billion hit from tariffs in the second quarter, and that the company is taking steps to reduce its tariff exposure by investing in U.S. assembly plants. European automaker Volkswagen also said last week that tariffs cost the company $1.5 billion in the first half of 2025. John Oliver: The 60 Minutes Interview Finding the plane used for Argentina's dictatorship-era "death flights" | 60 Minutes Immigration agent told 18-year-old U.S. citizen "you got no rights here" during arrest Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data