Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

Eby terminates Downtown Eastside consultancy contract that came under fire

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2025 01:13 PM
  • Eby terminates Downtown Eastside consultancy contract that came under fire

British Columbia Premier David Eby has terminated a consultancy contract to improve conditions in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside that came under fire from critics, who called it a political favour that lacked transparency.

Eby's office said in a statement on Tuesday that the debate about Michael Bryant's contract had become a distraction from work to improve the neighbourhood.

It said the contract with the consulting company owned by Bryant – a former CEO of Legal Aid BC and Ontario attorney general – ended on Sunday, and Eby later clarified that it was his decision.

"We have a shared dedication towards improving conditions in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, and thank him for his work to this point," the statement said.

"However, debate and discussion around this time-limited contract is distracting from the important work underway."

The statement said the government remained committed to making life better for people who live in the area.

In a news briefing in Vancouver, Eby said Bryant would receive no severance, and he had been paid up to Sunday, an amount in the neighbourhood of $75,000.

Asked why an outside consultant was needed, Eby said that Bryant checked many boxes. 

"I wanted someone to come in with fresh eyes, to have a look at the thing with no connections to the neighbourhood, but who had an empathy and understanding for the challenges of addiction, an understanding of the law, and an understanding of the realities of politics," he said of Bryant, who has written of his past struggle with alcoholism.

Eby said he did not know the circumstances behind Bryant's exit from his role at Legal Aid BC, which the Opposition B.C. Conservatives have said "ended abruptly" last year.

Eby said his relationship with Bryant began in his Legal Aid BC role, when Eby was attorney general.

Pressed whether Bryant was fired from Legal Aid BC or left of his own accord, Eby said the questioning "illustrates exactly" why the government had to terminate the contract

"Because it became about Michael Bryant, and apparently about Legal Aid BC, when it needs to be about the Downtown Eastside ... that's why we terminated the contract." 

The Conservatives have attacked Bryant's contract, saying no reporting benchmarks have been disclosed or met.

The contract instructing Bryant to develop a “framework” for co-ordinating services in the neighbourhood was worth up to $325,000, including $25,000 in expenses.

Opposition Leader John Rustad said the government had hired Bryant without announcing the contract first, then got rid of him after being caught "red-handed."

Rustad said the situation showed the "arrogance of David Eby, thinking that he could just hire anybody he wants, friends, relatives, and get away with it." 

Rustad said the hiring and firing of Bryant showed a "pattern of disrespect" to the public from a government acting without transparency.

Rustad said Bryant would not have made any "difference one way or another" to the problems of the Downtown Eastside.

Malcolmson has blamed a “communication problem” between her ministry and the Premier’s Office for not having announced Bryant’s appointment earlier. 

Eby acknowledged that "there was definitely an issue in our communication shop" in informing the public about Bryant's appointment.

"I agree it would have been a lot better had the information bulletin been released as planned, and it wasn't," Eby said. "That was a serious mistake, and unfortunately, it ended up where we are today." 

But Eby disagreed with suggestions that Bryant was working without the public's knowledge. "He was operating quite openly," he said. 

Opposition MLA Trevor Halford said last week of Bryant's contract that there were "no public deliverables, no transparency, and no justification for why this appointment wasn’t disclosed.”

The contract with Bryant's company, the Humilitas Group, is dated Feb. 12. It says the company is to engage with government and non-government sectors to align Downtown Eastside services with provincial policy objectives.

It also says the company is to support the development and implementation of "operational frameworks to address systemic challenges in the DTES."

The contract says the government wishes for a framework to support improvements for the people, public spaces, infrastructure, health care and housing of the DTES.

However, it says, "the parties acknowledge that the contractor does not warrant that these outcomes will be achieved."

When asked what Bryant had delivered, Eby said Bryant's work included multiple meetings with people living on the Downtown Eastside, leaders of non-profit organizations and municipal politicians. 

Eby added that Bryant had also met with him, as well as Minister of Social Development and Poverty Reduction Sheila Malcolmson, to discuss his initial findings and recommendations, "that we will look at developing in the future."

He said he thought that Bryant was going to provide the government with "some very helpful work," adding that his briefings have provided a "foundation" for the government to move forward.  

Bryant was involved in the 2009 death of a cyclist in Toronto. Charges against Bryant were withdrawn.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

MORE National ARTICLES

Bell media is slashing 4800 jobs across the country

Bell media is slashing 4800 jobs across the country
A Bell executive is linking the major cuts parent company B-C-E announced this morning to federal government policies. Robert Malcolmson says the company needs immediate relief, which could come from a fund it has proposed that would see streamers subsidize local or national news.

Bell media is slashing 4800 jobs across the country

When the sun goes down, a swarm of rats emerges in downtown Vancouver

When the sun goes down, a swarm of rats emerges in downtown Vancouver
When the sun goes down, the rats of Vancouver's Burrard Skytrain Station emerge, in a scurrying blur of fur and whipping tails. Dozens of them, large and small, scamper around a park in front of the downtown station, running up and down the stairs among the legs of commuters and a wary reporter. Some appear to be feasting on birdseed scattered on the ground.

When the sun goes down, a swarm of rats emerges in downtown Vancouver

PM hints at tougher penalties for car thieves as feds seek ideas at national summit

PM hints at tougher penalties for car thieves as feds seek ideas at national summit
The Liberal government will consider tougher criminal penalties for people who steal vehicles, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday as he kicked off a daylong summit aimed at confronting the scourge of auto theft.

PM hints at tougher penalties for car thieves as feds seek ideas at national summit

Former RCMP intelligence official sentenced to 14 years for breaking secrets law

Former RCMP intelligence official sentenced to 14 years for breaking secrets law
A former RCMP intelligence official has been sentenced to 14 years in prison for breaching Canada's secrets law in what the judge called a case without precedent. Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Maranger handed the sentence Wednesday to Cameron Jay Ortis, who was found guilty in November of violating the Security of Information Act.  

Former RCMP intelligence official sentenced to 14 years for breaking secrets law

Sex offender missing from halfway house

Sex offender missing from halfway house
Vancouver police say  a man considered a high risk and violent sex offender is missing after he failed to check in to his halfway house yesterday. They say 36-year-old Johnny Walkus is wanted Canada-wide.

Sex offender missing from halfway house

Liberals' proposed AI law too vague

Liberals' proposed AI law too vague
Representatives from Big Tech companies say a Liberal government bill that would begin regulating some artificial intelligence systems is too vague.  Amazon and Microsoft executives told MPs at a House of Commons industry committee meeting Wednesday that Bill C-27 doesn't differentiate enough between high- and low-risk AI systems.

Liberals' proposed AI law too vague