Resources

The Peter-McGill Community Council

1857 Maisonneuve Blvd W #215-16, Montreal, QC H3H 1J9

(514) 934-2280 https://petermcgill.org/en/

 The Peter-McGill Community Council is a non-profit organization and neighbourhood roundtable that brings together various bodies in western downtown to improve life in the neighbourhood. Residents are at the heart of the Council, making up over half of their membership.


CLSC Métro – CIUSSS West-Central Montreal

1801 de Maisonneuve Boulevard West, Montreal, QC H3H 1J9

(514) 934-0354 https://www.ciussswestcentral.ca/sites-and-resources/clsc/clsc-metro/


Ville-Marie Borough Council

https://montreal.ca/en/city-government/ville-marie-borough-council

Borough council makes decisions and adopts by-laws, including on urban planning, the road network, permits, culture, and recreation.


SPVM – Ville-Marie West, Westmount PDQ 12

21 Stanton Street, Westmount, QC H3Y 3B1

(514) 280-0112 https://spvm.qc.ca/en/pdq12

For Emergencies or to report a crime call 911

To Anonymously report a crime: Info- Crime (514) 393-1133

Eco-Quartier Peter-McGill

1240 Saint-Marc Street, Montreal, QC H3H 2E5

(514) 933-1069 https://ecoquartierpetermcgill.org/en/accueil/

 Their mission is to improve the quality of the environment in the Peter-McGill district for the benefit of the community, through public awareness and outreach activities aimed at residents, organizations and businesses. Their actions help to empower the neighbourhood's stakeholders and address the area's social and environmental dynamics by means of activities focusing on waste reduction and responsible waste management, greening initiatives - urban agriculture, cleanliness and eco-citizenship.


The Office de Consultation Publique de Montréal

1550, Metcalfe Street, Suite 1414, Montreal, QC H3A 1X6

(514) 872-3568 https://ocpm.qc.ca/fr

The Office de consultation publique de Montréal is an independent organization whose mission is to carry out public consultation mandates entrusted to it by the Ville de Montréal city council or executive committee. The mandates primarily involve urban and land-use planning projects under municipal jurisdiction, but may include any project submitted by the executive committee or city council. The Office also has the mandate to propose rules to structure public consultation in Montréal to ensure implementation of credible, transparent and effective consultation mechanisms.


Short-term rental accommodations

Short-term rental accommodation involves renting all or part of a home to tourists for fewer than 31 days. This includes primary and secondary homes offered for rental on various platforms such as Airbnb or Facebook.

All short-term rentals require an establishment number, and, if applicable, a classification certificate issued by the Corporation de l’Industrie Touristique du Québec (CITQ).

The regulation for Ville-Marie borough allows short-term tourist rentals on Ste-Catherine Street only, between Saint-Mathieu and Atateken (Amherst).

Please consult the following for further information: https://montreal.ca/en/topics/short-term-tourist-rentals and https://montreal.ca/en/how-to/areas-where-operating-tourist-home-authorized?arrondissement=VM

If you are having problems with short-term rentals on your street (illegal listings, cleanliness, noise, etc.), you may:

  1. Call 911.

  2. Call 311 if the rentals at one precise location are problematic. A city inspector shall eventually investigate if several calls are made for the same location.

  3. File a complaint at Revenu Québec by calling 1-855-208-1131 or by filing up this form:  https://www.revenuquebec.ca/en/online-services/forms-and-publications/current-details/lm-6-v/

  4. Talk to the political elected leaders.

  5. If it is an AirBnB rental, you may file a complaint directly to AirBnB. The link is: https://www.airbnb.ca/neighbors?_set_bev_on_new_domain=1662650732_ZTk2MWE5MDg2NGE1&locale=en