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Organizer cancels Montreal Canada Day parade, citing red tape, politics

Permits, funding and government approval posed too many combined barriers, organizer says
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The organizer of Montreal鈥檚 Canada Day parade has cancelled this year鈥檚 event. Members of the crowd look on during a Canada Day parade in Montreal, Saturday, July 1, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

The organizer of Montreal鈥檚 Canada Day parade has cancelled this year鈥檚 event and says red tape and politics are to blame.

Nicholas Cowen issued a news release saying that as of last year he has faced escalating difficulty in securing permits and funding, as well as getting approval from government authorities.

鈥淒espite honouring all conditions set forth, Cowen has been met with rules that change at the last moment and requests that make putting on the parade virtually impossible,鈥 read the release on the parade鈥檚 website dated June 19. 鈥淎n event that is meant to inspire unity has been thwarted because of division.鈥

Cowen said that in 2023 he was forced to fill out the same paperwork several times and fully reorganize the event to satisfy officials. He also said he was told to find 148 volunteers at the last minute, in part to ensure there was one person standing by the tires of the parade vehicles.

鈥淚magine you are in traffic and need four people, one at each tire, to make sure no one runs under the wheel of a normal car,鈥 he wrote.

He said the federal government also 鈥渞equested that parts of the parade be removed entirely,鈥 including the cake to be served at the end of the march. 鈥淭he parade鈥檚 budget was also reduced to 2013 levels in another devastating blow to this cherished event,鈥 he wrote.

Neither the city of Montreal nor the federal heritage department immediately responded to a request for comment on Sunday.

The parade has taken place since the late 1970s, but was cancelled between 2020 and 2022 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The news comes as organizers in some cities have been rethinking their celebrations in recent years due to the rising cost of security and insurance, in addition to troubles securing funding.

Cowen told The Canadian Press in 2022 that while COVID-19 played a role in cancelling the event, he was also struggling to cover its rising costs when federal funding failed to keep pace with inflation.

There will still be other Canada Day events in Montreal on July 1, including the traditional celebration in the Old Port featuring games, face painting, cupcakes and music.

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Morgan Lowrie, The Canadian Press

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