Protesters, advocates worry Quebec is complicating access to health care in English
MONTREAL — Several dozen protesters gathered in front of a Montreal hospital on Saturday afternoon to protest Quebec’s French language reform law as anxieties deepen over the ability to access health-care services in languages other than French.
Mario Napolitano was one of the Bill 96 opponents demonstrating in front of Santa Cabrini Hospital. As one of the city’s health-care institutions that has bilingual recognition in the province, it is permitted to offer both signage and documents in Italian as well as French.
Sporting a T-shirt that read “English is a crime in Quebec,” Napolitano said he has been in touch with staff who feel they were pestered about the use of English by Quebec language watchdog staff when they visited the hospital earlier this week.
“It’s too much. The hospital is a place of healing,” he said in an interview before the protest. “We don’t find bill 96 is protecting the French language. We find that it’s attacking the English language.”

