Vancouver city council votes unanimously to change street named after colonial leader - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver city council votes unanimously to change street named after colonial leader

Vancouver city council unanimously passed a motionThursday night to rename Trutch Street because ofracist policies against Indigenous people enacted by B.C.'s first lieutenant governor, Joseph Trutch.

New name for Trutch Street to be chosen by Musqueam people as an act of reconciliation

A street sign reading 'Trutch Street'.
Joseph Trutch, B.C.'s first lieutenant-governor, made a variety of unilateral decisions to reduce the rights and lands of B.C.'s Indigenous communities. (Christer Waara/CBC)

Vancouver city council unanimously passed a motionThursday night to rename Trutch Street because ofracist policies against Indigenous people enacted by B.C.'s first lieutenant governor, Joseph Trutch.

The streetlocated in Kitsilanowill instead receive a Musqueam name, chosen by the MusqueamIndian Band.

Mayor Kennedy Stewart said Musqueam leaders have been calling for the renaming of the street for over a decade, which inspired him to bring forth the motion last month.

The motion also states that city council will also consider requests from the Squamish andTsleil-WaututhNations to rename other streets.

The City of Vancouver became a City of Reconciliation in 2014 and promises to review Vancouver's colonial and racist past as well as make changes to reflect a reconciled relationship with First Nations people.

Stewart described the motion as the first step in continuing the city's journey toward reconciliation.

"Joseph Trutch was a racist andchief architect of policies causing immense andlong-standing harm to First Nations people. He doesn't deserve to have a street named after him," Stewart tweeted following the meeting.

Trutch was the lieutenant governor of B.C.from 1871 to 1876. Although he was one of the lead politicians that negotiated British Columbia's entry into Confederation,he alsoreduced the size ofpreviously agreed upon reserves established by then governor James Douglas by90 per cent, to a 10-acre maximum. He also denied First Nations' title to their lands and blocked their ability to acquire lands 'owned' by non-Indigenous people.

In Victoria, calls were renewed to rename its TrutchStreet in March when a group of university students launched a petition to make a change.In 2018, the name was strippedfrom one of the University of Victoria'sbuildings.

With files from Justin McElroy and Kieran Oudshoorn