days after historic rains battered montreal , residents across the city are still dealing with the aftermath and picking up the pieces. the section of n.d.g. where hoffman lives was hit hard, but so were st-laurent, parts of the west island and other areas.
in her first public remarks since the flooding , mayor valérie plante defended the city’s response on tuesday, saying it has taken steps and is committed to improving the sewer and road infrastructure.
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the city has said it is trying to improve its infrastructure to deal with the increase in severe storms and rainfalls , including by building 30 sponge parks to absorb water where it would otherwise pool on streets and near buildings.
asked this week if it plans to improve sewer infrastructure in areas that have proved to be problematic during heavy rainfalls, a spokesperson for the city pointed out that around 158 millimetres of rain fell on montreal on friday.
“there is absolutely something wrong (with the infrastructure),” said franca bucaro, a st-léonard resident who has suffered several floods in recent years . “i know it’s a lot of rain, i understand climate change is real. but, meanwhile, what do we do?”
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n.d.g. resident ilana grostern, who like hoffman is part of an ongoing class action lawsuit over last year’s floods, expressed similar frustrations and said residents are tired of the city putting the blame on them.
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“people cannot sustain this level of damage year after year after year,” she said. “ and we know we will see more and more of this .”