Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Montreal's New Champlain Bridge To Open June 24, Six Months Behind Schedule

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2019 07:19 PM

    Montreal's new Samuel De Champlain Bridge will open to traffic on June 24, roughly six months behind schedule.


    Federal Infrastructure Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne announced the date today.


    The $4.2-billion bridge over the St. Lawrence River will open first to traffic headed to Montreal, and a week later, on July 1, the lanes headed off the island will open.


    But Ottawa and the consortium in charge of construction have still not resolved what penalty will be paid for the late completion of a project initially scheduled to be ready last December.


    Under the contract with the consortium, Signature sur le Saint-Laurent, penalties were set at $100,000 a day for the first seven days, then $400,000 a day for subsequent days, with a ceiling of $150 million. Analysts have said the penalty could hit $75 million.


    The 3.4-kilometre span will open in two phases to ensure a smooth, safe transition of traffic from the crumbling bridge it replaces, which was built in 1962.


    Champagne said in an interview there will be a price paid for the delay.


    "I have always said that if there are delays, there will be consequences," he said. "The discussions are going to continue, because in a project of this size, there will always be demands."


    If the two parties are unable to resolve their differences, it will be up to a court to decide, he added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    MAP OF EXTREMISM: Anti-Discrimination Organization Wants To Map Offenders With Hate Atlas

    VANCOUVER — An advocacy organization says it wants to map hatred and discrimination across Canada in a move that is prompting warnings of caution from one civil liberties group.

    MAP OF EXTREMISM: Anti-Discrimination Organization Wants To Map Offenders With Hate Atlas

    'I'm A Little Numb:' Killer Of B.C. Gas Station Attendant Grant De Patie Dies

    BLIND BAY, B.C. — The mother of a British Columbia gas station attendant dragged to death under a vehicle more than a decade ago, says she is "numb" to learn her son's killer has died.

    'I'm A Little Numb:' Killer Of B.C. Gas Station Attendant Grant De Patie Dies

    Cheetahs Will Not Prosper In B.C.: Panel Rejects Permit Request For Two Big Cats

    The owners of two cheetahs will not be allowed to return the large, African cats to southeastern British Columbia to use them as ambassador animals promoting conservation of the endangered species.

    Cheetahs Will Not Prosper In B.C.: Panel Rejects Permit Request For Two Big Cats

    B.C. Judge Orders RCMP To Give Meng Data On Devices Seized During Arrest

    Justice Heather Holmes of the British Columbia Supreme Court says the RCMP must make copies for Meng Wanzhou of data on an iPhone, an iPad, a Macbook Air, a Huawei phone, two SIM cards and a flash drive.

    B.C. Judge Orders RCMP To Give Meng Data On Devices Seized During Arrest

    Trans Woman Hopes Funding Cut Will Send Message To Vancouver Rape Crisis Group

    "The organization is not bad," said Nixon. "It just means that attitudes have to change."    

    Trans Woman Hopes Funding Cut Will Send Message To Vancouver Rape Crisis Group

    Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Vandalized Again In Downtown Montreal

    Vandals struck a Sir John A. Macdonald statue in downtown Montreal once again, spray painting the imposing bronze monument to the country's first prime minister early Thursday.

    Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Vandalized Again In Downtown Montreal