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1.5K to 9K🎙 Daily cadence·58 episodes·Last published 5d ago - Monthly Reach
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2.8K to 17K
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On the show
Recent episodes
Solidarity with Muslim prisoners
May 7, 2026
Unknown duration
How Bill C12 gives Canada a “deporting machine” w/ Mostafa Henaway
Apr 9, 2026
Unknown duration
News Roundup: secret OQLF shoppers, protected cheese curds and a new Defence Bank w/ Katia Lo Innes
Apr 2, 2026
Unknown duration
Why femicides are rising in Montréal—and what needs to change
Mar 26, 2026
Unknown duration
How Bill 94 is alienating Muslim Quebecers w/ Zaineb Karkachi
Mar 19, 2026
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/7/26 | ![]() Solidarity with Muslim prisoners | Muslim prisoners in Quebec face a compounded type of discrimination. There is the usual deprivation of life and freedom that the public expects prisoners to face. However, there is a rigidity of prison life that is wholly unaccommodating to the Muslim faith, and some are saying it is becoming even worse with budget cuts from both federal and provincial governments that take away educational opportunities from prisoners.Two community organizers are taking things into their own hands with the Eid Card writing initiative for incarcerated Muslims. Local 514 host, Kalden Dhatsenpa speaks to the organizers, Nashwa and Nabeela who have taken on efforts to spread awareness and raise funds for this unspoken issue.They talk about Islamophobia in Québec’s institutions, the broader global uses of prisons to stifle racialized and Indigenous communities, as well as the reception of their initiative by these prisoners. | — | ||||||
| 4/9/26 | ![]() How Bill C12 gives Canada a “deporting machine” w/ Mostafa Henaway | In a recent tweet, border scholar Harsha Walia described Bill C-12 as “absolutely horrific,” warning that it could become “the country’s largest machinery of deportation.” As the bill moves from the Senate to the House of Commons, concerns about its potential impact are growing.In this episode, Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa speaks with Mostafa Henaway of the Immigrant Workers Centre in Montreal to unpack what’s at stake with Bill C12. A leading organizer and expert on migrant labour in Canada, Mostafa brings critical insight into the broader implications of the bill.Mostafa and Kalden discuss the dangers posed by Bill C-12, the rise of anti-immigrant sentiment, and how some companies in Montreal are exploiting migrant workers who are increasingly pushed into precarity. These stories of exploited migrant workers might become more common if the bill receives royal assent. | — | ||||||
| 4/2/26 | ![]() News Roundup: secret OQLF shoppers, protected cheese curds and a new Defence Bank w/ Katia Lo Innes | Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa is joined by journalist Katia Lo Innes for a look at the stories making headlines in Montreal this month.The OQLF is planning on unleashing “secret shoppers” across Quebec but more than half of the visits will be in Montreal. The secret shoppers will report back to the OQLF on how often french is used by service staff. The operation will be carried out by a private firm at a cost estimated at up to $350,000.The mayor of Montreal, Soraya Martinez Ferrada is fulfilling one of her campaign promises of cutting 1,000 jobs over 4 years all while mainting a hiring freeze. the union representing the city’s administrative workers decry the move saying it will affect services given by the city.Cheese curds in quebec could soon receive be “protected” so as to maintain authenticity. This move lobbied by the quebec dairy industry aims to secure a geographical indication similar to that for wines from Champagne and Bordeaux. Kalden and Katia discuss the standardization of culture and the stasis it promotes.The episode also touches on a Supreme Court challenge to Quebec’s secularism law, and a recent housing tribunal decision that could make it harder for landlords to enforce no-pet clauses in leases. The two also discuss Montreal’s role in upcoming international defence bank negotiations. | — | ||||||
| 3/26/26 | ![]() Why femicides are rising in Montréal—and what needs to change | In 2026, 7 women have been killed in and around Montréal. Ruba Ghazal, co-spokesperson of Quebec Solidaire claims that the CAQ government is contributing by underfunding prevention and support systems for women in danger. During a previous femicide spike in 2021 the CAQ promised to expand shelters and funding for services but currently at the time of writing the provincial government is short 33% of its targets.To learn more about the roots of this violence Local 514 host, Kalden Dhatsenpa, spoke to Shennel Hunte and Alham Mahmod, two representatives from Women AWARE, a survivor-led group offering peer-support for people who are and have experienced intimate partner violence.Shennel and Alham detail the work their org is doing as well as their opinion that this rise in femicides….might not be a new trend at all, but rather a crisis that has long gone under-recognized.To learn more tune in for the full discussion.If this discussion resonates with you, support is available. Here are places you can reach out to for support. You are not alone.Women AWAREHotline: 514-489-1110Email: info@womenaware.caMore resources: https://www.womenaware.ca/en/servicesCAVAC (Crime Victims Assistance Centre)Phone: 514-842-4780Toll-free: 1-866-532-2822Website: cavac.qc.ca/en/SOS violence conjugalePhone (Montreal): 514-873-9010Toll-free: 1-800-363-9010Text: 438-601-1211Email: sos@sosviolenceconjugale.ca | — | ||||||
| 3/19/26 | ![]() How Bill 94 is alienating Muslim Quebecers w/ Zaineb Karkachi | Islamophobia has long been a recurring instrument in Québec’s political landscape. From the Parti Québécois’s proposed Charter of Values in 2013, which sought to bar public servants from wearing religious symbols, to the passage of Bill 94 in 2010, Muslim communities have repeatedly been cast as scapegoats in a broader culture war. This discourse often amplifies fears around so-called threats to laïcité, despite the tenuousness of those claims.To better understand the current moment in this ongoing trajectory, Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa speaks with journalist Zaineb Karkachi about Bill 94 and the ways it is already reshaping the lives of Muslim people who work—or once hoped to work—in Québec’s public education system. | — | ||||||
| 3/12/26 | ![]() The haircut that went to the Human Rights Tribunal w/ Max Silverman and Genevieve Grey | On this episode of Local 514 we delve into a provocative legal case that has sparked widespread debate across Canada.The case centers around Alexe Frédéric Migneault, a non-binary individual who received $500 in damages from a hair salon after they faced discrimination in booking an appointment. At the center of this story and the wave of angry misinterpretations is the right to accommodation.Lawyers Geneviève Grey and Max Silverman join host Kalden Dhatsenpa to discuss the case details, legal principles, media reactions, and broader implications for human rights and reasonable accommodation. | — | ||||||
| 3/5/26 | ![]() The politics of the puck w/ Andrew Berkshire | As much as professional sports tries to distance itself from the political world, politics always finds sports. Recently FBI director Kash Patel and president Donald Trump embroiled themselves in scandal for their ugly gold medal celebrations with the US mens national hockey team. Some of which had to return to their local Canadian teams and answer for their soft support of these authoritarian figures. Even outside of international tensions, policy decisions around sports arenas, recreational centres, and funding for young talent make up many chains of political choices. If it wasn’t clear already sports are tied up with identity, culture, territory, and power in ways we do not always talk about.In Montreal especially, hockey is more than just a game. It is connected to language politics, nationalism, class, and community identity. Governments help fund arenas. Taxpayers pay for transit, infrastructure, and policing around games. National anthems and military displays are also a regular part of the spectacle.In this episode, we talk with Andrew Berkshire, president of the Game Over Network and former managing editor of Habs Eye on the Prize. After years covering hockey and the NHL, he has also spent a lot of time thinking about the politics surrounding the sport.We talk about toxic masculinity, public money in sports, culture wars, and the power structures behind the NHL, and ask a simple question. Are sports are recognized as a public good? and if so should they be administered like one? | — | ||||||
| 2/19/26 | ![]() “ICE OUT” from Minneapolis to Montréal w/ Michael Lipset | So far in 2026 US Immigration and Customs enforcement, also known as ICE, have killed at least 9 people according to reporting by Al-Jazeera. Two of those were the high-profile killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both Minneapolis residents. Today on Local 514, host Kalden Dhatsenpa, interviews Michael Lipset, who is originally from the Twin cities area where these high-profile killings took place. Michael spoke to us about the motivations behind co-organizing the ICE OUT protest in Montréal.Tune in for the full conversation. | — | ||||||
| 2/17/26 | ![]() Learning more about CSU’s anti-capitalism week w/ Julianna Smith | On this episode of Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa speaks to CSU campaigns coordinator Julianna Smith about a 5-day curriculum called Anti-Capitalist week. Julianna describes some of the workshops as well as how the campaign evolved from prior Anti-Consumerism campaigns. Tune in to listen to the full conversation. | — | ||||||
| 1/22/26 | ![]() MTL and the AI fantasy w/ Paris Marx | AI is everywhere, but can it really fix Montreal? From city permits to urban planning, municipal leaders are betting on artificial intelligence to solve local problems. In this episode of Local 514, Kalden Dhatsenpa talks with tech critic Paris Marx about the hype, the limits, and the hidden social consequences of Montreal’s AI push. | — | ||||||
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| 12/18/25 | ![]() Why the PLQ is imploding w/ Christopher Curtis | From scandals in the Liberal Party of Québec to an increasingly domineering attitude from the Parti Québecois, to a massive projected crash from the governing Coalition Avenir Quebec this moment marks a tumultuous point in Québec politics where much is uncertain. Editor-in-chief of the Rover, Christopher Curtis joins Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa to make sense of this political mess. | — | ||||||
| 12/11/25 | ![]() 30 years since Québec’s 1995 Referendum: does sovereignty have a whiteness issue? | “We are one of the white races with fewest children!” - Lucien BouchardToday’s episode of Local 514 explores the renewed relevance of sovereignty in Quebec at the 1995 referendum’s 30th anniversary. How did that pivotal moment change Quebec and has the sovereignty movement changed as well? One expert suggests a fundamental issue within the movement, whiteness. Tune in for the full discussion. | — | ||||||
| 12/4/25 | ![]() Is Bill 9 disproportionately targeting certain communities? | As Quebec approaches the 2026 provincial election, the government has introduced Bill 9, a legislation that would restrict public prayer in certain settings. Officials say the measure is meant to reinforce state secularism, while civil liberties groups argue it disproportionately affects Muslim communities. To better understand the legal implications and the broader context, Local 514 spoke with Stephen Brown from the National Council of Canadian Muslims. Here’s what Bill 9 proposes, why it’s generating debate, and how it fits into Quebec’s ongoing discussions around secularism. | — | ||||||
| 12/2/25 | ![]() The Swedish royal couple in Montréal to sell WARPLANES? w/ Nashwa Lina Khan | Nashwa Lina Khan of Habibti Please joins Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa to unpack the recent visit of the Swedish royal couple. They were not here to inaugurate a new Ikea but instead to lobby on behalf of the infamous Swedish defence giant Saab. Tune in to learn more about this shady company and how they want to set up base in Montreal. | — | ||||||
| 11/13/25 | ![]() Montreal's Chinatown: not a museum | Shi Tao Zhang joins host Kalden Dhatsenpa on Local 514 to talk about Chinatown community organizing in Montréal. The neighborhood has a long history of fighting gentrification and racism and unfortunately not much has changed. Shi Tao Zhang details the organizing done by the Resistance Chinatown Mobilization project and their multi-pronged campaign fighting for social justice in the last Chinatown in Quebec. | — | ||||||
| 10/30/25 | ![]() Who will be MTL’s next mayor? w/ Katia Lo Innes | Local 514 host Kalden Dhatsenpa is joined by regular guest, Katia Lo Innes to help viewers and listeners familiarize themselves with the different options available to them at the ballot box for the 2025 Montréal municipal elections. With new parties, and new mayoral hopefuls what is there to know before casting a vote November 2nd? Tune in to learn more about the different parties vying for your vote! | — | ||||||
| 10/29/25 | ![]() Talking to Transition MTL's Sergio Da Silva | Sergio Da Silva is one of Transition Montréal’s star candidates this municipal election. Host Kalden Dhatsenpa sits down with the city councillor candidate for Saint-Jacques to discuss nightlight, expropriation, and some tweets of his that have bothered right-wingers. Listen now to hear the full conversation. | — | ||||||
| 10/28/25 | ![]() Talking to Projet MTL’s Logan Littlefield | On this episode of Local 514, host Kalden Dhatsenpa speaks to Projet MTL ‘s candidate Logan Littlefield who is running to become borough councillor in the Champlain—L’Île-des-Soeurs district of Verdun. Logan Littlefield is a landscape architect with a vision for Verdun’s future. Can he defend the Projet administration? Tune in to find out. | — | ||||||
| 10/24/25 | ![]() What's next for Québec’s forests? w/ Nicolas Renaud | In this episode of Local 514, host Kalden Dhatsenpa and filmmaker and professor Nicolas Renaud discusses the afterlives of Quebec’s Bill 97, a controversial forestry law prioritizing industrial access over conservation and Indigenous rights. Despite being removed off the table Dhatsenpa and Renaud reflect on land defenders, ecological collapse, and the colonial logic of “Crown land.” Renaud critiques how consultation processes exclude Indigenous authority, turning collaboration into performance while forests, waters, and caribou disappear. The bill exposes the human, cultural, and environmental costs of what Renaud calls “radical capitalism” in Québec. | — | ||||||
| 8/14/25 | ![]() How to dig up DIRT on your landlord | On this episode of Metropolis, host Kalden Dhatsenpa interviews Rose, a housing rights organizer with the Comité de Logement de La Petite-Patrie, about a practical new resource she co-authored: “How to Investigate Your Landlord.“The guide aims to equip tenants with the tools to research landlords before signing leases, empowering them to recognize potential red flags and avoid harmful situations.Rose explains that in housing justice work, it is common to encounter landlords who use deceptive tactics to force tenants out or justify steep rent increases. These abuses often go unpunished due to weak enforcement mechanisms, leaving tenants vulnerable The current rental market in Montréal is a sort of wild west where bad actors operate with relative impunity.A 2020 study by the Comité found that 85% of renovation projects involving repossession or eviction were never completed—suggesting that many landlords use renovations as a pretext for removing tenants. Such findings highlight the scale of fraudulent practices and the lack of consequences for those responsible.Rose argues that part of the solution lies in tenant education and proactive investigation. By understanding their legal rights and researching a landlord’s history—such as past disputes, code violations, or patterns of eviction—tenants can make informed decisions and reduce the risk of exploitation. The guide outlines methods for gathering this information and stresses that awareness is a key defense against abuse. Such information scraping can make for strong arguments if disagreements with your landlord ever escalates to the TAL (Tribunal Administrative du Logement).Ultimately, Rose’s message is clear: tenant empowerment begins with knowledge, and knowing a landlord’s track record can be as important as understanding the terms of a lease. | — | ||||||
| 6/24/25 | ![]() Why we should support STM strikers w/ Nashwa Lina Khan | On this episode of Metropolis, we cover some significant developments, including Québec’sQuébec’s controversial Bill 97, Carney’s Bill C-2, and the anti-immigrant sentiment in Montreal, as well as the major strike by STM maintenance workers. Today, host Kalden Dhatsenpa is joined by guest host Nashwa Lina Khan, a community educator and cultural commentator on Habibti Please, a Substack and podcast.Bill 97 has been receiving fierce pushback from Indigenous leaders, conservationists as well as unions. The bill aims to divide all of Québec’s forests into three distinct zones. One zone will be dedicated to conservation, another to timber production, and a third to multiple uses.Nashwa and Kalden point out the larger context of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s drive to turn Canada into an “energy superpower.” This resource drive has empowered provincial governments and extractive industries to walk all over Indigenous land rights. Kalden and Nashwa relay this indigenous resistance as essential to fighting climate change.Anti-immigration policy has led to massive protests across the United States. Notably, the resistance in Los Angeles has caught a lot of attention for its organization and for the volume of resistance reached. Nashwa and Kalden discuss the trajectory of Canada’s anti-immigration policy and the ways that such policies could play out. Nashwa, for one, does not believe the level of resistance in Canada would be the same.It was the first STM strike in 18 years, and it has been incredibly disruptive. Two thousand four hundred of Montreal’s maintenance staff are going on strike from June 9-17, 2025. Employees are fighting for a better work-life balance, stronger safety protocols, and improved wages.Nashwa and Kalden talk about how impactful the strike has been and why we should support these workers despite the inconvenience faced by Montrealers. Especially with metro and bus drivers from the STM looking to strike, the need for solidarity will be tested more. | — | ||||||
| 4/15/25 | ![]() Montreal unites for Housing Justice | CUTV attended the Housing Justice Convergence in Montreal for its latest Metropolis episode, covering an event that brought together over 200 participants to address Canada’s housing crisis. Organized by SEIZE, the convergence aimed to unite tenant unions, developers of alternatives, policy experts, funders, and housing advocacy groups to share grassroots perspectives and encourage nationwide collaboration. The event featured over 60 panelists and 33 community partners, creating an opportunity for knowledge exchange and solution-oriented discussions.Participants came from various cities, including Toronto, New York City, and Victoria, reflecting a broad interest in addressing housing challenges.The convergence placed a strong emphasis on the communities most impacted by the housing crisis, including immigrants, women, single-parent households, elders, people with disabilities, and victims of domestic violence. Organizers stressed the importance of accurately framing the crisis, as how it is defined could shape policy decisions for years to come.The panel discussions covered a wide range of topics, including migrant justice, movement building, housing justice and anti-colonial movements, big tech, homelessness, tenant organizing, and accessibility, among others. The event aimed to move beyond identifying the problems to proposing practical solutions and empowering activists to build power for their policy demands ahead of the federal election.CUTV interviewed several key figures, including Lena, founder of Tenant Rights QC; Olivia, general coordinator of SEIZE; Malcolm, operations coordinator at SEIZE; and Quinn, a tenant organizer and member of SLAM. The interviewees shared tools and strategies for grassroots activism, such as working with media and financing housing projects. Some highlighted successful tenant union initiatives from across the country, and others advised listeners and watchers on how to become more knowledgeable about their rights. | — | ||||||
| 2/14/25 | ![]() Is Montréal a “Climate Haven”? w/ Alex Pace | The title of this week's episode is the central question posed by PhD candidate, Concordia public scholar, and tree scientist Alex Pace at “Montréal: 2050: A Climate Haven?”In this week’s episode of Metropolis host Kalden Rangdröl Dhatsenpa speaks with Alex Pace to uncover what exactly is a “climate haven”, Montréal’s performance in achieving its climate targets, and the ways he hopes his event and others like it can relieve the paralysis of eco-anxiety.As Alex describes for the show, a climate haven is a city or region safe from the most extreme weather events caused by climate change. Think forest fires, floods, hurricanes and droughts. According to Pace, the term climate haven is met with hesitation by some as its deployment has been seen as a greenwashed tactic by real estate figures who want to greenwash property sales in their neighbourhoods or cities. Alex uses Asheville, North Carolina, as an example of a supposed climate haven devastated by Hurricane Helene in September 2024.Despite the contention regarding the term, Alex believes it can be a valuable framework to help guide the city toward further building up its capacity to withstand extreme climate events, especially considering some of the more ambitious climate targets set by the municipality in their 2020-2050 climate plan.Hello, Good Byline is back! CUTV’s very own Aude Simon hops on the mic to talk about her recent coverage of protests organized by Sudanese Montrealers who want provincial and federal governments to help reunite the families currently experiencing violence amidst the war in Sudan. | — | ||||||
| 2/13/25 | ![]() Mostafa Henaway Discusses Amazon's Surprise Exit From Québec | In 1996, at the National Defence University of the United States, Harlan K. Ullman and James P. Wade developed a military doctrine known as "shock and awe." This strategy relies on overwhelming force and disproportionate displays of power to break an enemy’s will to resist. Organizer, author, and former Amazon employee Mostafa Henaway argues that Amazon has employed a similar tactic in its recent decision to leave Québec entirely.On today's episode of Metropolis, host Kalden Rangdröl Dhatsenpa speaks with Mostafa Henaway about the corporate giant’s abrupt departure from la belle province. On January 22, 2025, news broke that Amazon Canada had laid off all 1,997 employees across its seven Québec locations. Henaway believes this decision stems from the successful unionization campaign at Amazon’s Laval DXT4 warehouse last May by the CSN (Confédération des syndicats nationaux).The DXT4 facility was only the second Amazon warehouse in North America to unionize, and it was on track to be the first to secure a collective agreement. Québec’s strong labour standards would have ensured a robust contract for workers, setting a precedent that Amazon may have wanted to avoid.Amazon, however, denies that the union campaign influenced its decision. Henaway remains skeptical, citing numerous instances in which corporations like Walmart and Couche-Tard have closed unionized locations. He suggests that Amazon’s move is a calculated scare tactic designed to send a clear message to its workers worldwide: the company will not tolerate organized labour.Watch the full discussion on Metropolis today. | — | ||||||
| 2/11/25 | ![]() Montreal's Public Health Private Profits w/ Sasha Dyck | On this episode of Metropolis, host Kalden Rangdröl Dhatsenpa speaks with public health nurse and community organizer Sasha Dyck about the current illnesses spreading around Montréal, the struggles of ongoing vaccination drives since COVID-19, and local politics in the neighbourhood of Parc-Ex.Kalden Dhatsenpa – Local Journalism InitiativeSasha Dyck works as a public nurse in the Montréal neighbourhood of Park Extension (Parc-Ex), where he is deeply involved in various community projects. His work focuses on issues regarding food security, tenants' rights, and local school. In 2013, Sasha ran for municipal office and has since coordinated several election campaigns at different levels of government. On today’s episode, we fought Sasha on to discuss the challenges facing public clinics in Montréal, especially when it comes to vaccinations. Sasha explains that the pandemic has disrupted vaccination schedules, leaving many people behind on essential vaccines, particularly the measles vaccine. This delay has contributed to the first significant spread of measles since the 1980s.Sasha also reflects on the state of housing and politics in Parc-Ex, where residents are feeling the pressure of rising rents and limited affordable housing options. With three elections approaching, there’s potential for significant change in the neighbourhood, and Sasha offers his insights into how local politics might shape the future of the community. From the struggles of public health to the challenges of local governance, this conversation highlights the complex issues affecting Parc-Ex residents today. Tune in to hear more about the pressing challenges facing public health and their political underpinnings in Montreal's most vibrant communities. | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
