
Montreal adds police patrols, limits loitering to boost sense of security in metro
MONTREAL — Montreal’s metro system will see more police patrols and a crackdown on loitering, transit officials said Thursday, citing the fact the network has become a last-resort shelter for people struggling with drug addiction and mental illness.
Executives with the transit agency told reporters that vulnerable people who have slipped through the cracks of the social safety net are spending all day in its tunnels to keep warm. In response, the Société de transport de Montréal will fence off problematic gathering places in metro stations and implement an “obligation of movement” policy until April 30.
Éric Alan Caldwell, head of the transit agency’s board of directors, said the skyrocketing number of people struggling with drug addiction and mental illness in the stations has led to a decreased sense of security among transit users and employees, as well as a hike in complaints regarding safety, incivilities and drug use.
While the metro tunnels have always been a gathering place for people who are homeless, he said the situation has become unsustainable.