-
‘Wordle’ Today #1,246 Hints, Clues and Answer for Saturday, November 16 - 16 mins ago
-
SA vs IND | Twitter erupts as Arshdeep extracts demons off Joburg pitch by bamboozling Klaasen and Hendricks - 18 mins ago
-
Inverclyde Council leader quits after assault allegations - 21 mins ago
-
NYT ‘Connections’ November 16: Clues and Answers for Game #524 - 30 mins ago
-
3 teams that will target Ishan Kishan in IPL 2025 Mega Auction - 32 mins ago
-
Police told not to stop car of Skye shooting suspect - 36 mins ago
-
Officer who beat a man at the veteran’s hospital in Los Angeles sentenced to a year in prison - 47 mins ago
-
Bryan Kohberger Update as Lawyers Challenge Evidence - 48 mins ago
-
Creamline starts drive for No. 5 - 52 mins ago
-
Further Scotland to County Durham electric cable approved - 56 mins ago
Families of loved ones buried at Montreal cemetery demand answers over state of grounds – Montreal
Katrina Goulo didn’t expect to bring gardening tools to her dad’s grave at Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Cemetery on Father’s Day.
She and her mother spent hours clearing her father’s resting place of high brush. They say it’s disrespectful to allow the cemetery, Canada’s largest, to be overgrown with weeds.
“The cemetery looks like it’s been abandoned,” she told Global News. “This is just not right. It’s a disgrace.”
Severino Paolini, who went to visit his father-in-law’s grave and struggled to find his footing through grass and shrubs up to his armpits, agrees.
“Every time we come we can’t even walk around because there’s too much grass,” he pointed out. “You can’t even see the tombstone.”
Jimmy Koliakoudakis who went to pay respects to his parents feels lucky. He said until recently there was a large mound of dirt and gravel in front of his parents’ gravesite, left over from his mother’s funeral last summer. According to him, just two weeks ago he asked some workers nearby to help him get rid of the dirt, which they did.
“Thank goodness for that,” he declared. “Otherwise, after eight or nine months, it still would’ve been a pile of dirt and rocks.”
Breaking news from Canada and around the world
sent to your email, as it happens.
The issue of poorly maintained grounds at the cemetery is the clients’ latest disappointment. A months-long strike by workers, which ended last July, caused a backlog of unburied bodies that took officials months to clear. The labour action also forced the closure of the cemetery for several months.
Clients who had to bear that in 2023 say they are fed up.
“If you’re short on manpower, it’s not the families’ fault,” Koliakoudakis pointed out. “We’re always stuck in the middle where we either have to cut the grass ourselves, flatten or level the soil ourselves.”
Paolini wonders why the cemetery doesn’t hire more help.
“There’s a lot of people that don’t work and they want jobs, so make them cut the grass,” he reasoned. “It’s not too hard.”
Goulo wonders the same thing and says she and her family want answers.
“I don’t know any other cemetery that you come to that looks like this,” she said. “It looks like it’s been abandoned for years. It’s not fair for the families who pay.”
In a statement to Global News, cemetery officials apologized for any inconvenience, saying, “In the past week, more than 880 hours were spent maintaining the cemetery. Despite the challenges posed by this spring’s extraordinary weather and the subsequent backlog, our dedicated teams are committed to maintaining the cemetery’s standards of cleanliness and respect.”
“We offer our apologies,” they said, adding, they “affirm our dedication to rectifying these matters. Rest assured, our commitment to the community is steadfast, and we are devoted to providing the level of service you rightfully expect. Your trust is invaluable, and we are here to support you through these trying times.”
However, they did not give a timeline for when the cemetary would be back to normal.
© 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Source link