Montreal’s celebrated nightlife is facing a reckoning. What began as a string of noise complaints has now evolved into a full-blown municipal election issue, as beloved venues struggle to stay open under mounting fines and regulations.
At the centre of the debate is Champs Sports Bar, a popular venue on Saint-Laurent Boulevard known not only for its game nights and karaoke, but also as a safe and inclusive space for the city’s 2SLGBTQ+ community.
The costly saga of Champs Sports Bar
Champs’s troubles began in 2022, when repeated noise complaints from a next-door neighbour — who owns a 10-unit apartment building that used to be a commercial property — triggered numerous visits by Montreal police and the city’s noise inspectors.
The bar was soon caught in overlapping bureaucratic processes. The Régie des alcools, des courses et des jeux (Quebec’s liquor board) opened an investigation and discovered the bar lacked the correct permit for dancing. Last year, Champs was fined $3,000, ordered to close for five days, and required to install costly soundproofing.
“It’s very unnecessarily complicated,” said Pamela Bernstein, a staff member who helped the bar navigate the legal maze. “Everything takes forever and costs everyone so much money.”
By the time Champs installed its new soundproofing and hired acoustic experts, its legal bills exceeded $30,000 and soundproofing added another $14,000. Earlier this month, the venue finally secured its official permit — allowing dancing again, but only on weekends.
A growing problem across the city
Data obtained by CBC News shows a surge in noise-related complaints. From January to August 2025, residents filed 3,280 noise requests through the city’s 311 service — mostly in the Plateau and Ville-Marie boroughs — putting Montreal on track to surpass last year’s total of 4,480.
The figures don’t include police interventions, which have also risen. Many bar owners say the problem stems from the changing demographics of nightlife districts.
According to Bernstein, “the complaints all came from one person,” but the trend reflects a broader shift — as long-time workers and artists are priced out, newer residents have moved in with lower tolerance for late-night noise.
Other iconic venues, like La Tulipe in the Plateau, have already shut down after similar legal battles.
Election spotlight: nightlife vs. noise
The escalating conflict has become a focal point in Montreal’s municipal election. Outgoing mayor Valérie Plante introduced a nightlife policy to balance residents’ peace with the city’s cultural economy, but enforcement gaps remain.
Now, multiple political parties are promising reforms:
Transition Montréal, led by councillor Craig Sauvé and featuring bar owner Sergio Da Silva (of Turbo Haüs fame), wants to create a night mayor and night council to mediate disputes, limit police intervention to emergencies, and expand funding for soundproofing.
Luc Rabouin of Projet Montréal pledged to implement regulations aligned with the nightlife policy.
Soraya Martinez Ferrada of Ensemble Montréal proposed routing noise complaints to a specialized administrative unit, focusing on mediation before fines or police action.
Culture, economy, and community at stake
For venue operators, the stakes are not just financial but cultural.
“We need the city to understand that we’re part of the economy and the culture,” said Jon Weisz, executive director of Les SMAQ, which represents small and alternative music venues. “No one in the nightlife space is trying to annoy their neighbours.”
Les SMAQ’s policy recommendations include setting clear decibel limits, introducing neutral mediators, and reducing excessive fines. Under the Plateau’s proposed new bylaw, venues could face $10,000 penalties for a first infraction — a sum that, as venue owner Kiva Tanya Stimac warned, “would close one of our spaces immediately.”
Stimac, co-founder of Casa del Popolo and the Suoni Per Il Popolo Festival, said cultural venues must be protected as places “where creativity can happen.”
A recent study underscores the economic weight of Montreal’s nightlife — 34,000 jobs and $2.3 billion in annual spending — and warns that over-regulation could endanger a thriving ecosystem of artists, performers, and service workers.
Calls for a smarter noise policy
Globally, cities like London, Melbourne, and San Francisco have enacted “agent-of-change” laws to protect longstanding nightlife spots from complaints by newcomers to entertainment districts.
Will Straw, a professor of urban media studies at McGill University, believes Montreal should follow suit. “Complaints about noise are the single biggest factor behind venue closures,” he said. “We haven’t developed good policies to protect nightlife.”
Bernstein agrees. “If you’re going to live in an area known for nightlife, there needs to be a reasonable tolerance for sound,” she said.
As election day approaches, Montreal’s future as a city of late-night culture — and the balance between community peace and cultural vibrancy — may hinge on how voters respond to the beat that keeps their city alive.