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Laval Today. May. 28, 2026

Laval QC ☕ Morning Briefing

Good morning,

Today brings a lot of concrete items to discuss: health, public safety, and a few political files making noise in both Quebec City and Ottawa. Here is what you need to start the day with a head a little less cluttered than your inbox.

What to know this morning

  • 556,473 patients now affiliated with a GMF: Quebec surpasses its target a month early, but real clinical follow‑up remains unclear.
  • Quebec sovereignty: Mathieu Lacombe would vote yes: The Culture Minister says he does not want a referendum, but would vote yes if one were held.
  • Steven Guilbeault stepping away from politics: Guilbeault says he will leave political life at the end of the parliamentary session.

Across Canada and around the world

  • Visit from China’s foreign minister: A first in ten years, seen as a sign of diplomatic easing.
  • Strait of Hormuz: conflicting signals: Iran says it has received a draft agreement. Washington denies it.

Main story

556,473 patients affiliated with a GMF, but follow‑up remains unclear

Quebec says it has surpassed its target: 556,473 people are now registered with a family doctor or a GMF, one month ahead of schedule. Health Minister Sonia Bélanger notes that more than 200,000 vulnerable patients are included in the total.

But the announcement raises several questions.

Family doctors will receive a 2.5 per cent bonus for reaching the target, after an accelerated mailing of affiliation letters. And despite being registered, patients are not yet under active follow‑up. They will still need to go through the GAP to get an appointment. The affiliation is real, but clinical care is not yet in place.

Quebec also relaxed verification procedures to reach the target, which led to some incorrect registrations, including patients already receiving care in CHSLDs.

Opposition parties call it a “letters, not appointments” operation and question the real impact of bonuses paid before services improve.

For Laval, the immediate effect is limited. Newly registered patients enter the network, but wait times will still depend on GMF capacity and how the GAP functions.

In detail

Quebec’s ombudsman criticizes prolonged isolation and other detention practices

Quebec’s ombudsman, Marc‑André Dowd, is criticizing the use of measures he considers poorly adapted in provincial detention centres. His report describes an approach centred on complete isolation, handcuffs, chains and pepper spray, interventions that worsen problematic behaviour among vulnerable detainees instead of stabilizing it.

He highlights the case of a woman kept in 24‑hour isolation for nearly two months, a measure that intensified her self‑destructive reactions. The report notes that these practices do not reflect the realities increasingly present in detention, such as mental health issues, addiction, intellectual disabilities or homelessness.

Mr. Dowd recommends a more consistent use of psychosocial approaches, already outlined by the ministry but rarely applied. Two teams that adopted this model saw better outcomes for both detainees and staff. The report proposes 17 measures to reduce prolonged isolation, improve training and humanize interventions without compromising safety.

Indigenous women continue to be sterilized without consent in Quebec

We noted yesterday that a report confirmed Indigenous women in Quebec had been sterilized without their consent. Newly released details paint an even heavier picture. Professor Suzy Basile, who leads the research, says the accounts gathered across Nations clearly show systemic racism in the health system.

This second phase of the study includes testimony from 97 women, 55 of whom were sterilized without consent, with cases occurring after 2000 and even in 2022. Combining both phases, 77 of 132 women report a forced sterilization. Indigenous leaders are calling for official apologies and compare the gravity of the issue to other dark chapters in history, noting that the refusal to acknowledge systemic racism prevents real progress.

The report also highlights the exhaustion of women and organizations who see studies pile up without concrete change. Despite commitments made after the death of Joyce Echaquan, many say they still do not feel safe in the health system. The fact that three times more women testified than in 2022 shows both a growing willingness to speak out and the urgency of lasting change.

Coup de Cœur

Even on a day dominated by numbers, investigations and political tension, there is something reassuring in news that touches access to care. It is not spectacular, but when a file speaks directly to appointments, follow‑up and doors opening a little wider, it reaches people’s real lives.

Before we go

Thanks for starting your morning with us. We wish you a clear head, lighter traffic and, if possible, a slightly less painful stop at the pump. ☕

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Daily

Laval Today. May. 8, 2026

Laval QC ☕ The Morning Chat

Good morning,

Today’s bulletin focuses on decisions that affect daily life… some directly, others from a bit farther away, but all with real consequences here at home. We look at health, Montréal, and a few files that capture the mood of the day without requiring a second coffee to keep up.

What to Know This Morning

  • The Digital Health Record will cost $100 million a year to operate: This comes on top of the $402 million already invested in developing the project.
  • Québec’s College of Physicians is concerned about the bill on involuntary hospitalizations: It fears the number of people placed under custody could rise if the criteria are loosened.
  • Montréal launches a one‑stop service for animal services: The city is partnering with Proanima and the Montréal SPCA.
  • Canada’s unemployment rate rose to 6.9% in April: The economy lost 18,000 jobs during the month.

Close to Home

  • Montréal will host Olympic qualifying events ahead of the 2028 Games: About 500 athletes are expected for urban disciplines.
  • A body was found along the shore in L’Île‑Bizard: The case has been turned over to the Québec coroner.

Health & Society

  • Home‑care support gains one million hours in Québec: The program increases from 14 to 15 million hours offered.
  • The death of Philippe Pinette reignites the debate on systemic racism: Reactions continue following revelations about the circumstances of his death.
  • Perinatal workers denounce a lack of mental‑health training: They say needs are urgent before and during pregnancy.
  • Four Saint‑Léonard schools will receive a total of $20,000: Each EMSB school will receive $5,000 for materials or other needs not covered by regular budgets.
  • Canadian universities hit by a cyberattack: The University of Toronto, Simon Fraser University and the University of Alberta are among those affected.

Main Story

Québec’s College of Physicians fears a rise in involuntary hospitalizations

The Collège des médecins du Québec is raising major concerns about Bill 23, which would loosen the criteria for involuntary hospitalization during a crisis.

Its main worry is clear: broadening the definition of danger could lead to more people being placed under custody. The organization notes that 19,106 people were already placed in preventive custody in 2023–2024, a number it considers significant.

The College recommends that any implementation include structured follow‑up mechanisms. It also calls for a deeper study of advance psychiatric directives before they are rolled out.

Put simply, the debate isn’t only about the law itself. It’s also about whether the system can realistically absorb more custodial cases while still ensuring access to care.

In Depth

The Digital Health Record will add a $100‑million annual bill

The Digital Health Record will cost $100 million a year to operate, on top of the $402 million already invested in its development.

In practical terms, this number changes the scale of the project. It’s no longer just a major technological initiative — it’s a long‑term financial commitment for the health network.

The tool is also meant to centralize patients’ medical data. For the public, that puts two very concrete realities side by side: the promise of better information management, and a recurring operating cost year after year.

Montréal launches a one‑stop animal‑services line with Proanima and the SPCA

The City of Montréal has partnered with Proanima and the Montréal SPCA to create a single call centre for animal services.

The Proanima centre, already open in Villeray, Saint‑Michel and Parc‑Extension, offers stray‑animal sheltering and adoption, sterilization, microchipping, prevention programs and a mobile unit.

In practice, pet owners can be directed to Proanima or the SPCA depending on the situation. While the measure targets Montréal, this kind of service organization is worth watching for readers in Laval and the North Shore, especially in areas where practical day‑to‑day services matter as much as big announcements.

Unemployment rose to 6.9% in April after 18,000 jobs were lost

Canada’s unemployment rate reached 6.9% in April, while the economy shed 18,000 jobs.

This kind of national figure can seem distant from a local bulletin at first glance. But it’s often the type of indicator that shifts the underlying mood of an entire region. Job markets, household confidence, and kitchen‑table conversations follow along.

The takeaway is simple: the increase is modest, but it’s real, and it comes with a decline in employment. And it feels like these numbers are only the beginning — the real impact of automation and AI on the labour market hasn’t yet fully shown up in the statistics.

Bright Spot

Among today’s news, the $20,000 donation to four Saint‑Léonard schools brings a genuinely welcome note. It doesn’t solve everything, of course, but it shows how targeted, concrete support can quickly make a difference for a school community.

Before You Go

Thanks for taking a few minutes to go through the essentials with us.

We’ll let you get back to your morning with a clearer picture of what’s moving in Laval, Montréal and across Québec. A day that starts well is already a small victory. ☕