
Councillor pushes to name Downtown Eastside alley in honour of Trey Helten
A Vancouver city councillor is hoping to rename an alley in the Downtown Eastside in honour of a beloved community member.
Trey Helten was a harm reduction advocate and general manager of the Overdose Prevention Society, where he was well-known for helping those struggling with addiction and homelessness after turning his own life around.
He died at age 42 in April; the cause has not been publicly shared.
Helten was also an artist and in 2022 created the first legal graffiti wall in Vancouver in the alley between East Hastings and Pender streets, connecting Cambie and Abbott streets.
Friends are already calling the calling the lane 'Ashtrey Alley,' after Helten's nickname. On Wednesday, Coun. Sean Orr will table a motion calling to make the name change official.
'It's really just a small act to commemorate the life of somebody who was so big and generous and selfless, and saved so many lives and just made an impact on so many different people in this city,' Orr told CTV News.
If the motion passes, council will ask staff to report back on the fastest way to name the alley after Helten.
With files from CTV News Vancouver's Isabella Zavarise
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
28 minutes ago
- CBC
Manitoba wildfires and evacuations wreak havoc on northern courts
Social Sharing As wildfires continue to burn across the province, cancelled court dates and hearings are putting a huge and growing strain on the court system in northern Manitoba. That backlog has some wondering how long it will take to get things back to normal, and how many will now fall through the legal cracks. "The wildfires have really messed everything up," criminal defence attorney Chris Sigurdson said. "Things get backed up on the docket, and unfortunately, when that happens, things don't get dealt with. "People become scattered and lose touch with the system and their lawyers, so if there is no court up there for several weeks, people can really get lost in the system." Winnipeg-based Sigurdson, who has been representing clients in northern Manitoba for more than 20 years, said that since the beginning of June, multiple days of court in multiple communities have been cancelled due to fires. Between June 2 and June 20, court dates have been cancelled in Nelson House, Norway House, Gillam, Gods Lake Narrows, Leaf Rapids, Split Lake, Cross Lake, Flin Flon, Cranberry Portage, Pukatawagan, St. Theresa Point and Garden Hill. The result of those cancellations, Sigurdson said, is backed-up court dockets that are now "bursting at the seams" with cases that need to be dealt with. If those dockets continue to grow, it could lead to some people being forced to spend more time locked up while they wait to appear in court, he said. There are also many people who already struggle with making court dates, and he sees that issue growing. "So many already feel disconnected from the system, and now there's an even greater chance that some just aren't going to physically show up, and that's how people get lost," he said. When people can return to their communities, Sigurdson said he and others are expecting long days in northern Manitoba courthouses. "There's going to be a lot of problems," he said. "We will have to prioritize, and deal with things that need to be done for public safety and deal with those people who are in custody longer than they should be, so we will do the best we can. "Everything is important, but things that can wait are going to have to wait, and for those on bail or in diversion programs, that really puts them in limbo. "We're just going to have to bear down and power our way through, and go through it as responsibly as we can." Manitoba provincial court Chief Judge Ryan Rolston also said the backed-up dockets in the north are a growing concern. "Whenever you put over a full docket of accused, you're going to start to create a bit of a snowball," Rolston said. Once closed courthouses are up and running again, Rolston said, they do have ways to prioritize the most pressing cases. "We've advised the counsel that if their matter is urgent — for example, if you have an accused in custody and you want to deal with that sooner — then there's ways that can be brought forward," he said. Concerns about released people With several northern communities still evacuated, Rolston is also concerned that some who get out of jail, either on bail or after serving out a sentence, may have nowhere to go. "That's one of our major concerns," he said. "For example, if someone is released and their family lives in a community like Shamattawa, well, Shamattawa is evacuated, so they may be coming out saying, 'Where is my family?'" Thousands of wildfire evacuees are set to return to their homes in northwestern Manitoba in the coming days. Lynn Lake has now lifted its evacuation order and citizens were expected to begin returning home on Friday, while Flin Flon's council announced Friday they are now working to rescind their order, and plan to start welcoming citizens back next Wednesday. The province cautioned this week, however, that with temperatures set to rise heading into July, wildfire conditions could still worsen and escalate. But even as communities start to open back up, Rolston said it won't be as easy as simply opening up courthouses and resuming cases once people return. "They have bigger-picture issues on their mind, like making sure they have electricity and making sure that people are back in their homes," he said. "So I'll be speaking to their leadership groups to make sure that we return when they're ready to have us.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
She waited 12 hours for Toronto police's non-emergency line. Then, she was disconnected
Toronto woman waited 12 hours for police's non-emergency line — but didn't get through 1 hour ago Duration 3:08 Social Sharing Rachel Carr started losing hope after she hit the five-hour mark on hold with Toronto police's non-emergency line, but couldn't bring herself to hang up since she'd already waited for so long. "I still had a glimmer of hope that maybe they would eventually pick up, but unfortunately it didn't happen," she said. Instead, right as the call entered the 12th hour, Carr was disconnected, meaning she didn't get to report that her and her husband's vehicles had been badly keyed outside their home, resulting in what she estimates is around $8,000 in damage. "I find it quite alarming," she said. "For me in my life, is it going to make a huge difference in this case? No. But another time, could it make a huge difference? Absolutely it could." CBC Toronto has reported extensively on long 911 wait times, sometimes for up to 10 minutes, answered in the same call centre as non-emergency calls and by the same people. Investigations by CBC Toronto have previously found 911 wait times have continually worsened in recent years amid staffing issues, but police have said they've been improving in recent months. This month, the call centre has come under scrutiny again as the city reviews a 911 call in which a caller waited on hold for nearly seven minutes while a teen was dying from a gunshot wound. Toronto police spokesperson Nadine Ramadan says the service recognizes no one should have to wait hours on the non-emergency line, and how frustrating it can be. "The reported situation and the wait time is not reflective of the usual average on our non-emergency line. We are reviewing this case to determine the cause and ensure every call in is addressed," Ramadan said of Carr's experience. 12-hour wait Carr says she first tried to report the incident online, but the Toronto police website says theft or vandalism over $5,000 must be reported by calling the non-emergency line. Carr first called the non-emergency line on June 16 and waited on hold for one hour and 22 minutes, according to call logs reviewed by CBC Toronto. She says she accidentally hung up, so she called right back and waited for just over an hour before she got disconnected. Carr called back and asked the person at the switchboard when it would be less busy, and was told to try in the morning. On June 17, Carr called at 8:41 a.m. and waited to speak with someone from the communications centre for 12 hours, call logs show. She says the line got disconnected and she never did speak to anyone. It wasn't until after CBC reached out to Toronto police to inquire about Carr's case that police contacted her and sent an officer to her home to take a vandalism report. A police spokesperson asked CBC Toronto to share Carr's phone number, saying it would help the call centre look into the situation, which Carr agreed to. While Carr says she's appreciative that police followed up, she's still concerned long wait times are deterring people from reporting crimes such as auto theft, vandalism and hate crimes, which could skew data used to make policing and political decisions. "If it's happening to me, there's no way it's not happening to other people and there really would be an impact in terms of statistics," Carr said. 'Just unbelievable' Max Arnold also faced a long wait when he called earlier this month to report a driving infraction he witnessed in downtown Toronto. Call logs show Arnold phoned the non-emergency line just before 6 p.m. on June 12 and waited for a little over 20 minutes. He called back a few hours later and waited for another 30 minutes. Arnold called the next morning and was on hold for two hours before he could speak with someone from the communications centre. Arnold says he was shocked with just the 20-minute wait time. "The idea of waiting 20 minutes to speak to the police was just unbelievable. It was unfathomable by the standards of when I previously reached out to non-emergency police under other circumstances," he said. "I can absolutely see why some people would say, 'You know what? If reporting something to the police takes at least two hours of my time, it isn't worth my time or effort.'" Police working to reduce wait times Toronto police didn't respond to a question about concerns that crimes are going unreported given long wait times. Ramadan reiterated the communications operators answer both 911 and non-emergency calls, and said the police service received 279,998 non-emergency calls so far this year and more than 30,000 this month alone. In all of 2024, there were 652,244 non-emergency calls, they say, according to TPS's annual report. The year-to-date average wait time for non-emergency calls in 2025 is four minutes and 53 seconds and June's average wait was six minutes and 26 seconds, according to Ramadan. "When there is a surge in emergency calls, resources are prioritized to ensure those calls are answered first, which can impact wait times on the non-emergency line," she said. Ramadan also said accidental 911 calls continue to place strain on the system, noting last year 27 per cent of 911 calls came from pocket dials and misdials. Toronto's auditor general released a report in 2022 making 26 recommendations to improve call answering times within the city's call centre, with a focus on boosting staffing levels. Ramadan says the service is hiring three classes of 90 new communications operators this year and also pointed to the implementation of a new 911 system aimed at improving response times in May. Still, John Sewell, a former Toronto mayor and coordinator of the Toronto Police Accountability Coalition, which works to make the police more accountable to the public, says more improvement is needed. "They had an [auditor general's] report on it three years ago saying you've got to fix up your act and here we are three years later and they haven't fixed the 911 system," he said. "They've allowed this non-emergency system to go into the same sort of situation and this is not good enough." TPS aims to meet a non-legislated national call answering time standard for 911 calls: that all 911 calls are answered within 15 seconds. The most recent available data from January to May of 2024 shows, on average, 62 per cent of 911 calls met the standard each month. Ramadan says there isn't a standard for non-emergency wait times, but the goal is to respond as quickly as possible. Sewell says the public deserves to have their call answered in a reasonable timeframe. "This is not a private business, where you've got your choices as to where else you can go. You've got the police and that's it," he said.


National Post
2 hours ago
- National Post
Canada's justice minister says he is 'open' to adding 'femicide' to the Criminal Code
OTTAWA — Federal Justice Minister Sean Fraser says he is 'open' to including the term 'femicide' in the Criminal Code, which has long been called for by researchers and advocates looking to shine a spotlight on the issue of the killing of women and girls. Article content The term broadly refers to when a woman is killed by a man based on the fact that she is a woman, with varying definitions that speak to previous patterns of abuse by a male perpetrator or ideologies. Police services that use the term often do so when a killing occurs in the context of an intimate partner relationship. Article content Article content Kingston, Ont. police did so for the first time last month when announcing it had laid first-degree murder charges against a 26-year-old man charged in the death of his 25-year-old partner. Police said it considered her death a 'femicide.' Article content Article content During the federal election campaign, the Liberals inked the term into their platform, promising to better protect victims of sexual and intimate partner violence by 'making murder motivated by hate a constructive first-degree offence, including femicide.' Article content In a recent wide-ranging interview, Fraser said the government would look at the 'precise language' of the reforms it plans to make to the Criminal Code, which are expected to be tabled in a bill this fall. Asked specifically whether he was open to including 'femicide' in the Criminal Code, Fraser said, 'I'm open to it, certainly.' Article content 'I'm not going to close the door on any of the solutions that may be presented to me over the next couple of months as we seek to finalize the draft. But we've not made a decision one way or another as to the language that will be included in either the name of the offence, or the specific language included in the new provisions we'll be looking to add.' Article content Article content Megan Walker, a longtime advocate for victims and preventing violence against women, says Fraser's statement makes her 'cautiously optimistic.' Article content 'It's the first time that there's been any acknowledgement that femicide could potentially be incorporated into the Criminal Code of Canada, so I'm encouraged.' Article content The London, Ont.-based advocate, a member of the city's police board —which has called for it to be defined in law—says that doing so would allow for more accurate data collection. Article content Police across Canada operate in a patchwork of how they report these killings, referring to them as an 'intimate partner death' or, in other cases, a 'domestic homicide.' Article content Other times, police do not disclose any such details. That includes the cases of a murder-suicide when no charge is laid, but a woman is killed by her partner or ex-partner. Article content National Post contacted police services across Canada to confirm whether they use 'femicide.' Police in Halifax, Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, and Edmonton said they do not, but rather stick to definitions outlined in the Criminal Code.