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Montreal

Lawyers make case to delay Quebec's eviction of Ville-Marie Expressway encampment

A legal clinic is calling on Quebecs Transport Ministry to find the people living in the camp a place to stay and to delay the eviction until at least July 15.

'It's spring right now in theory, but look outside,' says lawyer representing tent community

camping tents and recycling bags under the Ville-Marie Expressway
The Transport Ministry, which owns the land, already postponed a first eviction in November, saying it wanted the people there to have more time to find a place to stay. (Douglas Gelevan/CBC )

The Quebec Transport Ministry's eviction deadline for a group of people living under the Ville-Marie Expressway has passed, and lawyers representing the small tent community are in court arguing that theeviction should be postponed by at least a few months.

The Mobile Legal Clinic (MLC) has requested an emergency injunction and asked to delay the eviction of about 20 people living in the encampment until at least July 15.

The ministry, which owns the land, has said that it needs to go ahead with a major construction project in the area. It had given the people there until the end of March to leave. The encampment is locatedon a stretch between Guy Street and Atwater Avenue.

In the past, the ministry has also said it would work with different organizations and the city to help the people living under the expressway find a place to stay.

ric Prfontaine, a lawyer for the MLC, said the ministry has failed to do that.

Prfontaine asked Quebec Superior Court Judge Chantale Masseto allow time for the weather to improve andfor the group to resettle elsewhere in better conditions.

"It's spring right now in theory, but look outside," Prfontaine told the judge on Monday, noting that temperatures are still dipping below zero and major snowfall is still possible.

Lawyers for the Transport Ministry said the work wasalready delayed in November in order to not to force the group to move during winter and to give them more time to find accommodation.

A man speaks in a courthouse.
ric Prfontaine, lawyer for the Mobile Legal Clinic, is calling on the Quebec's Transport Ministry to delay its eviction and find accomodation solutions for the people living under the Ville-Marie Expressway. (Steve Rukavina/CBC)

On Monday, Nancy Brl, a lawyer for the ministry, told the court delaying the work any further would have serious consequences.

"It's not simple to modify this timeline.It took a long time to come up with this work schedule," she said.

Brlsaid work was planned to have minimal impact on highway traffic, but delaying the work further will worsen trafficdisruptions.

She also noted that the Transport Quebec engineers who haveinspected the structure of the highway in that area have noted damage and said repairs are necessary.

"Any delays will augment intensity and length of work," saidBrl, who also saidmore delays couldalso lead to the contractor cancelling the contract.

The eviction of the campers will likely happenbetween April 12 and 15 unless the court rules otherwise, she told the judge.

'Extremely vulnerable and marginalized'

Anabel Semerdzhieva, another lawyer for MLC, asked the court to consider the "extremely vulnerable and marginalized" position of the people living in the tent community, which stems from issues like mental and physical illnesses and drug addiction.

According to Semerdzhieva, one man who's lived under the expressway for the past year hasStage 3 lung cancer and is undergoing radiation treatments three times a week.

A woman who's lived there for seven years is two months pregnant, has hepatitis and struggles with both alcohol and crack addiction, while another man battling heroin addiction suffers from a terminal blood infection and bipolar disorder, said Semerdzhieva,

Semerdzhieva argued it is highly improbable the group among whom there are couples and pets will be able to find space in shelters, which are separated by gender and mostlyprohibit animals along with drugs and alcohol.

The hearing is expected to continue on Tuesday.

"The ministry owns the land where the camps are established. Their stories are sad. We don't contest that," said Brl, the lawyer for the ministry. "But the fact remains that they have no right to occupy that land."

with files from Steve Rukavina