Two student associations will file a lawsuit to challenge the newly adopted Bill 78. According to the Montreal Gazette, FEUQ and FECQ will be aided by a non-profit legal clinic when they go to court next week.
The general manager of the Clinique juridique Juripop Marc Antoine Cloutier stated that the group may ask for an injunction against the law.
The lawyers will use a tactic similar to the one used by the Quebec government to prevent the abolishment of the long gun registry.
Cloutier stated that the Clinique has received over 500 emails from lawyers willing to help with the case.
The Clinique is taking on the case because they feel that basic democratic rights have been infringed upon.
A petition against the law has so far seen around 150 000 signatures.
The issue is also important to lawyers, with the Quebec Bar Association making a statement against Bill 78 last week.
While the group hopes for a Cloutier warns that the legal battle could go on for months.
Read by: Aisha Samu
Stories by: Aisha Samu, Audrey Folliot, Niki Mohrdar and Carlo Spiridigliozzi
Produced by: Carlo Spiridigliozzi
A deadly earthquake struck Italy on Sunday morning.
In a report by the BBC, the magnitude 6.0 quake hit the Emilia Romagna region in the northeast. The epicentre was thirty-five kilometres north of Bologna. It was followed by an aftershock measuring 5.1
Seven people have died and fifty people have been injured. The quake also damaged numerous historical buildings in the region.
Sunday's earthquake was the worst to hit Italy since a 2009 tremor killed 300 people in Central Italy.
Flickr Photo by: Downing Street
Read and Produced by Erica Bridgeman
Stories written by Carlo Spiridigliozzi and Danny Aubry
Facebook has announced their share price ahead of Friday’s opening of the stock market.
According to the BBC, the social networking giant has valued their shares at thirty-eight dollars per share.
Facebook have 421 shares ready to be sold when trading opens on the Friday session of the New York Stock Exchange. With their per-share price the company is valued at one-hundred billion dollars.
They will begin trading for the very first time on Friday and the demand is high. Facebook expects to sell 25 percent more shares than planned as a result of the demand.
The company has 900 million users worldwide.
Flickr Photo by: Franco Bouly
Eight Toronto police commanders are expected to be charged in the coming weeks.
In a report by CBC News, the charges announced on Thursday stem from a variety of misconduct offences while on duty during the G20 summit in June 2010.
The charges come one day after a report by Ontario’s top civilian complaints watchdog was released. His review of the G20 protest said that police were poorly prepared and let a crackdown which resulted illegal mass arrests.
In addition to the 8 commanders, 28 other officers are facing punishments related to the crackdown. Disciplinary hearings will proceed in the coming months which could cost some officers their jobs.
Flickr Photo by: Nicolai Grut
The National Assembly is debating a new bill introduced by the Liberals in an effort to end the tuition fee strikes.
According to the Montreal Gazette, Bill 78 imposes heavy fines to student groups and labour federations who prevent a student from attending class. The fines range from one thousand to one-hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars.
The Bill states that fourteen CEGEPs and eleven universities will have their winter semester suspended unless the strike ends before it becomes law. Classes will resume on August seventeenth at the latest and August first at the earliest. It also states that protestors who plan a march must give the planned route, time, duration, venue and their means of transportation to the police eight hours in advance.
The institutions affected by this bill have until June first to plan their August schedules while students have until June fifteenth to announce of they plan to return.
Bill 78 is expected to become law by Friday evening at the earliest.
Flickr Photo by: Jezz
Former Montreal City Hall chairman Frank Zampino was arrested in his own home on Thursday morning.
According to CTV News nine people in total who were accused of corruption were taken into custody that day.
Three of these people were former members of mayor Gerald Tremblay`s inner circle.
They were involved in a fraud scheme connected to a public contract which was worth somewhere over $300 million.
Mayor Tremblay is shocked and outraged by this incident and has stated that people will lose trust in municipal officials because of this.

This past May 3rd, Sala Rossa was darker than usual (or it certainly seemed that way) and the room was half-empty (or half-full, depending on your outlook). The show was slow to start - although once it did, the crowd inexplicably maintained a consistent 5 foot distance from the stage. Whether it was because they were curious to watch the projections on the white screen at the back of the stage, or because they were afraid of getting their eardrums blown out, I can't say for sure.
The opening act was Exitmusic. Hailing from Brooklyn, the duo's repertoire was moody and captivating. They opened with "The Sea" off of their 2011 release From Silence. They also performed "Passage" from the eponymous album, which surprisingly sounded better live than the recording. Otherwise, the show was a no-frills, all-black affair. There was minimal banter and interaction with the audience other than the usual interspersed thank-you's. The performance went smoothl but felt like it ended too soon.
School of Seven Bells supplemented their show with flashing LED lights as well as drums and keyboard accompaniment during their set. Alejandra Deheza sparkled and shimmered (or blinded if you were standing in the wrong spot) on stage, her neck and wrists dripping in gold and jewellery. Unfortunately due to the sound, the lyrics were barely audible for most of the show, which, as has been previously mentioned, is supposedly the most important part of the creative method for them. Or rather, it was described as the starting point for the band’s song-writing process. So much for that. The set list included "Bye Bye Bye," and "I L U" from Disconnect from Desire, "White Elephant Coat" from Alpinisms, as well as "The Night" from their 2011 album, Ghostory. The music managed to inspire some rhythmic swaying from the audience but not much else, which, to be fair, is generally what happens during shows at Sala anyway. But despite the sparse crowd there was still cheering for an encore. After a rather brief round of applause, the group swiftly returned, and played a few songs to which the response turned out to be livelier than those of the set itself. The band also seemed much more excited during those last few songs. Draw your own conclusions, but I think perhaps SVIIB might be eagerly anticipating the end of their tour in the coming months.
In parting, Benjamin Curtis confessed “I usually like to thank Exitmusic but I'm embarrassed ‘cause they’re right in front of us," a sentiment which I thought fit nicely within the breadth of the restrained and self-effacing (to the point of blandness) atmosphere of the evening.
-Maryana V. hosts Cheap Trills every Monday from 3-4pm
Read by: Sarah Deshais
Stories by: Sarah Deshais, Jamie-Lee Gordon, Alyssa Tremblay and Tara Brockwell
Produced by: Jamie-Lee Gordon