Manitoba

'We just don't want it to be forgotten': Tina Fontaine's family, friends gather 3 years later

Three years after Tina Fontaine's body was found near the Alexander Docks, her cousin wants to see a permanent memorial there.

Cousin wants to see permanent memorial at Alexander Docks site

Kattie-Lee Fontaine said it's been hard marking the anniversary year after year, but she wants people to remember what happened to her younger cousin. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

Three years after Tina Fontaine's body was pulled from the Red River near the Alexander Docks in Winnipeg, her cousin wants to see a permanent memorial there.

"Because it was pretty tragic, and there's still violence going on and things happening out in the streets, and we just don't want it to be forgotten," Kattie-Lee Fontaine said on Thursday.

Tina Fontaine was 15 when she disappeared in August 2014. Her body was found near the docks on Aug. 17, 2014, eight days after she was initially reported missing.

The dock site, at the end of Alexander Avenue beside Fort Douglas Park, has been inaccessible to the public for years after an ice storm damaged the dock beyond repair.
Tina Fontaine, 15, was murdered and dumped in the Red River in 2014. (Facebook)

Still, it's where family members and Drag the Red have gathered for years to remember Tina. 

"It's something special," Kattie-Lee said of the spot. "… I don't know how to explain it."

Kattie-Lee said it's been hard marking the anniversary year after year, but she wants people to remember what happened to her younger cousin. She organized the gathering for Thursday.

About a dozen people came to to sing, drum, smudge and offer tobacco in Tina's memory, she said. 

Kattie-Lee said those gathered came up with the idea for a permanent monument at the spot to honour Tina and Winnipeg's homeless hero Farron Hall. Hall rescued a teen from the water in 2009 and his body was found in the river the same weekend as Tina Fonatine's.

They plan to collect signatures to submit to the city in support of the idea. 

"Just because how flooded it gets here and ugly, we're thinking of a monument so something would actually [stay] here and not get washed away from water," she said.

With files from Holly Caruk