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Mountain named for deceased avalanche safety advocate

Mount Mathieson located about 90 km northwest of Whistler
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MEMORIAL MOUNTAIN The provincial government announced the naming of Mt. Mathieson in memory of former ski guide Brent Mathieson. Photo submitted

A year before he died in a highway accident in 2002, heli-ski guide Brent Mathieson became the first person to ski the 2,000-metre run from the top of a then-unnamed mountain to the creek below — a path that became known as "Brent's Run."

Fourteen years later and Mathieson has more than just a ski run named after him.

On April 24, the provincial Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources announced the mountain would now officially be known as Mount Mathieson.

"It really feels like Brent is still with us, in some ways," said Karen Richardson, Mathieson's girlfriend of six years, of the announcement.

Mount Mathieson — located about 90 kilometres northwest of Whistler and reaching a height of 2,323 metres — is a fitting tribute for a man who dedicated his life to mountain safety, Richardson said.

"He was pretty active in the mountain community," she said.

"He was a certified guide and he did lots of work in the industry. He did lots of heli-skiing and lots of work with the Canadian Avalanche Association."

Mathieson was born and raised in Burnaby.

According to a Ministry of Forests press release, Mathieson spearheaded the creation of the North Shore Avalanche Advisory — a safety bulletin that summarized winter mountain conditions. The publication would later be incorporated into Avalanche Canada's public bulletin on avalanche safety.

"Avalanche Canada is very pleased to see Brent Mathieson honoured in this way," said Gilles Valade, executive director of Avalanche Canada, in the release.

"He was truly dedicated to public avalanche safety and his work has left a lasting legacy."

Minister of forests Steve Thomson said naming the mountain after Mathieson was a testament to his many contributions to backcountry avalanche education.

"It is a fitting tribute to someone who was an accomplished outdoorsman, expert guide and respected community leader," Thomson said in the release.

According to Sharon Dean, manager of communications for the Ministry of Forests, the B.C. Geographical Naming Policy governs how geographical features are named in the province.

Personal names are only given to geographical features posthumously a minimum of two years after the person's death, Dean said in an email.

"The ministry (also) consults with the community, public and First Nations on commemorative naming proposals," she said.

In Mathieson's case, the naming process took about two-and-a-half years, Richardson said.

"There's been lots of talk about what to do as a legacy for Brent," she said, adding that some of the suggestions included a scholarship fund at a school he worked at in Vancouver, or a mountain hut somewhere in the backcountry.

"But I think the naming of the mountain, it was just perfect, because it's just such a solid piece of land... I think it just has so many good aspects about it," Richardson said.

"It feels like it's a real grounding piece, and it's in the area where he lived and worked so I just think it represents lots about him."