CBC Edition

Montreal's 311 has a new message for those who want English service

- Verity Stevenson

Ring ring! Calling 311 for the city of Montreal today? Hoping for English service?

Not so fast.

If you'd like to speak to someone in French, go right ahead and press 1.

For Option 2, you'll have to listen to a brand-new 40second message asking you to attest in good faith that you have acquired rights as an English speaker in Quebec under the Charter of the French language.

What does that mean? The message will tell you.

"In accordance with the Charter of the French Lan‐ guage, we will be pleased to provide service in English if you attest in good faith that you are covered by one of the following exceptions: if you are a person declared eligible to receiving English educa‐ tion; if you are an Indigenous person; if you are a recently arrived immigrant residing in Quebec for less than six months; if you are calling from outside of Quebec or if you correspond­ed solely in English with the city of Mon‐ treal prior to May 13, 2021. If you attest in good faith, please press 2. Otherwise, please press 1."

Major provisions of Que‐ bec's revamped French lan‐ guage law came into effect to‐ day, exactly one year after the controvers­ial law received Royal Assent.

The provisions include one of the laws most debated clauses, requiring employees of most front-facing govern‐ ment agencies to serve clients in French unless those clients have acquired English-lan‐ guage rights, are Indige‐ nous or are new immigrants who arrived in the province within the last six months.

Someone who has the right to attend English school qualifies for service in English, the law says.

Critics of the law and politi‐ cal experts say the provision will be a crucial test for the policy's implementa­tion in the real world, after more than a year of speculatio­n about how it would affect people's lives — and even so‐ cial cohesion in the province.

Viewing an English web page illegally?

"This is where we really start seeing the impact of Bill 96," said Eva Ludvig, president of the Quebec Community Groups Network, an oppo‐ nent of the legislatio­n, on Wednesday.

Ludvig and several other English-speaking leaders are

concerned the burden left on individual government em‐ ployees could create tensions.

"Without proper training and supervisio­n, it can lead to conflict at the front line; for instance, either an overzeal‐ ous employee or a disgrun‐ tled customer," Ludvig said.

Montreal appears to have found a way to avoid placing the responsibi­lity of applying that part of the law on em‐ ployees with the recorded message, as well as a written message at the top of the English version of its website.

A blue banner on the Eng‐ lish city web page now says: "Who can view this page? This content is intended for the public covered by the excep‐ tions under Bill 96. Find out more."

In other words, you may be viewing this page illegally. More government websites with English versions have posted a similar message, such as the province's govern‐ ment-mandated liquor store, the Société des alcools du

Québec (SAQ).

Speaking at a news confer‐ ence about housing in Mon‐ treal's Verdun neighbourh­ood Thursday afternoon, Mayor Valérie Plante said the city was complying with what the provincial government had asked of it in applying Bill 96.

Plante and other city offi‐ cials had raised concerns when the bill was being de‐ bated in the National Assem‐ bly about how it would be ex‐ pected to apply the law.

"I'm always preoccupie­d because I want people to get services that they have the right to receive," the mayor said in English. In French, she said it was clear the city wouldn't be playing a role in policing the law.

"They asked us to make the mention on the phone and on the website. We're fol‐ lowing the rules in that sense," Plante said.

A francophon­e re‐ porter asked Planted if they had broken the law by con‐ sulting the English version of the city website.

"You should ask the gov‐ ernment of Quebec that," Plante replied.

Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University and the director of the school's Institute for the Study of Canada, said in an in‐ terview Wednesday that the next six months to one year will be a test run for the law.

"The effects of Bill 96 on the ground are going to be felt much more directly by more people," Béland said.

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