Medicine Hat News

Quebec is relaxing COVID restrictio­ns, but dance floors remain empty

- JACOB SEREBRIN

MONTREAL

For Montreal DJ Marc-Andre Patry, there’s no point performing if people can’t dance.

“I wouldn’t go to the museum for an exhibition and look at a piece of art on the wall if it was 80 per cent covered. I feel the same thing with music, especially the music I play,” he said in a recent interview.

For years, Patry has hosted a monthly event called Voyage Funktastiq­ue in nightclubs. The COVID-19 pandemic shut it down, but this summer Patry was able to move the party outside. With the weather getting cooler and Quebec’s COVID-19 rules still prohibitin­g dancing in bars, Patry is planning to put away his turntables.

“If people can’t dance to that music, then I’d rather not do anything,” he said.

Quebec and British Columbia are the only two provinces that continue to ban dancing in bars and nightclubs as part of their COVID-19 regulation­s. As Quebec relaxes other pandemic restrictio­ns, nightclub owners, DJs and people longing to dance say they don’t understand why it remains banned.

Many, including the organizers of a protest scheduled to take place in Montreal on Saturday, say they support the efforts the province has taken to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, but they believe dancing can resume safely in venues where the province’s vaccine passport is required.

Tommy Piscardeli, the owner of Montreal nightclub Stereo, said for him, it’s about fairness. His venue — which does not serve alcohol and has a permit that allows it to stay open after Quebec’s 3 a.m. closing time — has been shuttered since the beginning of the pandemic.

Adding to his frustratio­n was seeing videos of thousands of Ricky Martin fans dancing at a recent concert at Montreal’s Bell Centre. He said it doesn’t make sense that 17,000 people can be in an arena “screaming, dancing, shouting, singing,” when he can’t have 500 people in his club.

“They wouldn’t be screaming, shouting, losing their minds,” he said. “It’d be dancing.”

Piscardeli said that without legal places to dance, people are now going to undergroun­d parties where vaccine passports and other public safety measures aren’t being enforced. Allowing dancing would “bring people back to the venues that actually have all the protocols in place, that are going to check for vaccine passports, are going to do all the things they’re asking us to do,” he said.

Mathieu Grondin, the co-founder and general director of MTL 24/24, a non-profit organizati­on that advocates for the city’s nightlife sector, said he sees reopening dance floors as a “harm reduction” initiative, adding that venues that are flouting COVID-19 measures are also likely violating other health and safety rules.

“Montreal is one of the last few cities in the world where you still can’t dance, and we have one of the highest vaccinatio­n rates in the world for adults. Dance floors have reopened all across Europe, all across North America,” he said, adding that 20 per cent of Montreal’s tourists come for the city’s nightlife.

The cultural impact goes beyond nightlife, said Laurianne Lalonde, who used to frequent salsa and samba clubs before the pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada