Angry cyclists protest against Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve closure
Racetrack to be closed from May 8 to Sept. 4 so events can move in for summer
About 50 angry cyclists attendedMontreal City Hall's council meeting Monday evening to protestagainst the city's decision to close the racetrack this seasonand possibly part of next summer too.
They booed during question period and had some heated exchanges with officials.
"We received a two week notice and we're very surprised to see there was no negotiations on our end. Nobody was asked anything. It came as a big surprise to us," said cyclistDaniel Jurkovic.
"Given how things were handled, we're very, very surprised and shocked."
ANALYSIS|Is Montreal developing mega-event syndrome?
Jurkovic, along with dozens of other cyclists, gathered attheCircuit Gilles-Villeneuvejust before the council meeting. They did three laps around the trackbefore biking over to City Hall, where earlier today Projet Montralpresented apetition condemning theplanned closure to Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre.
More celebratory as cyclists take a final lap before going to City Hall to protest against Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve closure @CBCMontreal pic.twitter.com/isr9f1gTU0
—@salimvalji
The 4,000-name petition claims the Coderre administration "prioritizes the interests of private promoters over those of Montrealers."
It comes after last week's announcement that construction on neighbouring le Sainte-Hlnetocreatea 65,000-seat amphitheatre at the request of event promoter Evenkowill displace the events that normally take place there.
Those eventswill be pushed over to the Circuit Gilles-VilleneuveonleNotre-Damefor the next two summers, forcing the racetrack to close from May 8 to Sept. 4 this year.
'Mismanagement, mishandling' of plan
UrosVukov, a member ofcyclingracingteam Clan Knox, said he heard about the closure through a Facebook post.
He said while he believes members of the athletic community wouldn't mind if the track was closed sporadically for specific events, closing it for the entire summer amounts to a "mismanagement and mishandling of the situation."
He said hundreds of people use the track on a typical summer evening. Training on Montreal roads isn't a viable option because they're in "terrible" shape, and while there are options off-island, it's not the same, he explained.
Uros Vukov "rouleur" pic.twitter.com/oYmLlKw1AR
—@clanknoxcycle
Safe place to train
Vukovsays the race track is often used by high-speed cyclists and triathletes, who find it'sthe only suitable place in the Montreal area to train.
"It's a controlled environment where people feel safe," he explained. "A lot of people have been complaining about how cyclists are taking up a lot of the road, they shouldn't be on the road, it makes things more dangerous.That's fine, but at least give us a place where we can train."
Opposition city councillorAlain Vaillancourtagrees.
"It's not just people who train here. There's families who come here. There's para-cyclists who come here, kids. It's a safe place to cycle," said Vaillancourt,ProjetMontreal's sports and leisure critic.
"They can keep it open between events. They can decide to make sure that the setting-up of the events is really quick, that the setting-down is really quick, hire more people, minimize the impact for everybody, and between all of that, give us a track."
Thecity says there were safety concerns for cyclists this summer; STM buses will be using part of the track asa detour during construction.
Park belongs to all Montrealers, Coderre says
Montreal Mayor Denis Coderretold reporters Monday afternoon that said the park belongs to everyone.
"The reality is that the park belongs to all Montrealers, and there is development there."
"There is an economic impact too. Whatare you going to say to the 65,000 people from Osheagawho are coming? And most of them are from outside Quebec.That's good for Montreal," he said.
With files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak