Motorcyclists' memorial ride commemorates father killed in Anthony Henday crash

‘No family should have to go through that kind of trauma,’ event organizer says

Media | Memorial ride for Edmonton father

Caption: Motorcyclists gather for a memorial ride to remember a father of three killed on Anthony Henday Drive.

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About 60 motorcyclists rode through Edmonton together on Father's Day in remembrance of a father killed earlier this month after his motorcycle hit a deer on Anthony Henday Drive.
The group gathered at Edmonton's city hall Sunday morning and began the memorial ride shortly after 11 a.m.
The route wove through downtown streets, along the river valley, and included a roadside stop on the Henday, where the riders held a moment of silence.

Image | Stephanie Stuetz Marc-Andre Helie

Caption: Marc-Andre Helie was killed on the Anthony Henday eight months after his wife Stephanie Stuetz died in a car crash on the same Edmonton freeway. (Facebook)

Marc-Andre Helie, 36, was seriously injured after his motorcycle hit a deer around 1:30 a.m. on June 9, police said at the time. He later died in hospital.
His wife, Stephanie Stuetz, 28, died in a head-on collision on Anthony Henday Drive on October 7, 2017.
Helie and Stuetz, had three young children — one boy and two girls.
"No family should have to go through that kind of trauma," said Cory Bacon, who organized the memorial ride.
He said the family was touched by the gesture but not able to attend the event.

'He was such a great guy'

Many of the riders who came to pay their respects had never met Helie.
"They missed a heck of an opportunity because he was such a great guy," said Cory Duncan, one of Helie's friends and colleagues.
Duncan said Helie was a loving father and hard worker who believed in riding responsibly.

Image | Cory Duncan

Caption: Cory Duncan said Helie was a friend and colleague who worked hard and cared about safety. (Nathan Gross/CBC)

"Everybody that knew him has been affected pretty deeply by this," he said.

New program aims to reduce wildlife-vehicle collisions

Five people die and more than 300 people are injured in wildlife-vehicle collisions in Alberta every year, provincial statistics show.
A new project with the aim of reducing the number of collisions now tracks where they occur.
Under the new Alberta Wildlife Watch Program, government workers and contractors can use a mobile app to report animal sightings and carcasses on highways. Those reports could help identify dangerous locations or opportunities for road design changes.