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Montreal

Valrie Plante plans to make vaccination mandatory for Montreal's elected officials

A mandate requiring the next elected officialson Montreal'scity councilto be adequately vaccinated against COVID-19 could be adopted by the city's executive committee in the coming days.

Municipal party leaders in favour, discussions underway to impose vaccination on all City Hall employees

Incumbent Montreal Mayor Valrie Plante's proposed vaccination requirement is viewed favourably by the city's main municipal party leaders. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

A mandate requiring Montreal city council'snext elected officials tobe fully vaccinated againstCOVID-19could be adopted by the city's executive committee in the coming days.

According to incumbent mayor Valrie Plante, no one without two shots should be allowedto enter Montreal's City Hall.

"Aspiring municipal officials are required to lead by example," said Plantein a Fridaytweet,respondingtoan article from Radio-Canada.

"This is why all elected officials will have to be able to show their vaccination passport during the next meetings of the municipal council."

A regulation on the vaccination passport will be adopted next Wednesday in the executive committee, then submitted to a city council vote.

Since no municipal council meeting is scheduled ahead of the Nov. 7 elections,the decision willsubmitted to the next elected officials, likely bythe end of the year.

Montreal is not the first city to want to impose vaccinationon municipal workers. To work at Ottawa City Hall, employees must be fully vaccinated by Nov. 1unless theyhave amedical exemption.

A vaccination passport has also been imposed at Quebec's National Assembly, but so far there's nothing of the sort at the federal levelin the House of Commons.

Parties support vaccine mandate

Plante's proposed vaccination requirement is viewed favourably by Montreal's main political parties.

Plante's Projet Montralsays its 103 candidates are already fully vaccinated.The same goes for the 98 candidates of Denis Coderre's Ensemble Montral party, who had made the decisionin Septemberto eject Julie-Pascale Provost, then candidate for mayor of Lachine, from the caucus.

Ensemble Montral said she had failed to provide proof of vaccination to theparty.

Mouvement Montral Leader Balarama Holness is also in favour of theidea.

Both he and Coderre want to take it a step further and make vaccination compulsory for all 28,000 city employees something Plante had said she wouldn't do.

Balarama Holness, left, Valrie Plante, centre, Denis Coderre, right, are all in favour of imposing mandatory vaccines for elected city officials. Both Holness and Coderre want to take it a step further and make vaccination compulsory for all 28,000 city employees. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press, Holly Cabrera/CBC, Charles Contant/CBC)

Meanwhile, at least twoMouvement Montral candidates have come under fire recently regarding their stance on public health measures.

Rita Ikhouane, who is vying for city councillor inCte-des-Neiges Notre-Dame-de-Grce, told Radio-Canada she is not against vaccines, but she doesn't see her vaccination status as anyone's business.

"If society thinks[getting vaccinated] is the right thing to do, I'll do it.But I like to take my time and think, without feeling like I'm doing something wrong," she said in a phone interview.

Holness said he was not aware of her vaccination status and said "she will not be invited to any public event." She can, however, maintain her candidacy.

Another elected member of Mouvement Montral, Marc-Andr Bahl,was recently removed fromhis party. On Saturday, Holness saidhe fired Bahlimmediately upon learning of his controversial social media posts.

Bahl shared conspiratorial content about the pandemic on his Facebook page. He also wrote "Islamophobia is not racism" and posted an anti-Semitic cartoon depicting Montreal's Hasidic community.

Bahl was the candidate for Rosemont-La Petite-Patrie andcame to Mouvement Montral after the merger with the Ralliement pour Montral party.

Holness says the party does not welcome any form of discriminatory remarks or behaviour. He saysa closer look at other candidates who entered the party after the merger is now in order.

Other political staff not affected

Plante's proposed vaccination requirementwill be limited to elected officials in Montreal. Themeasure will therefore not concern political staff and other municipal employees working at City Hall, such as peopleworking in housekeeping or security guards.

According to Radio-Canada, there could be discussions with different unions on the subject in the coming weeks,in particular aboutimposingvaccination on all City Hall employees.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Romain Schue