September 9, 2024
Ula Chalmers, right, and her mother Amanda Chalmers are seen in a supplied photo. Ula, 16, died of a suspected accidental overdose on Dec. 10, 2023. Amanda Chalmers wants people to know her daughter could be anyone’s kid, amid a spike in deaths due to toxic drug supply.

Ula Chalmers ‘should still be here’: Inside the life and death of a Toronto girl, aged 16

Amanda Chalmers tried everything to help her daughter when she started to use party drugs, but she says her efforts to find help were tripped up by all the gaps and holes in the system

Ula Chalmers helped with the tree decorations that day, because Christmas was always a big deal in the home, then had friends over, and cooked up a favourite chicken dish — heavy on the hot sauce.

Gifted at many things, Ula was an artist and social justice advocate, she played hockey and was also a “nerd” who cared deeply for friends going through rough times. Like many teens in the post-pandemic period, she also had teenage anxieties and a curiosity for drinking and party drugs. She knew enough to start carrying a naloxone kit.

Ula went out that night.

She died between 1 a.m. and 10 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 10, 2023, in a rock garden near a west-end Toronto subway station — a suspected fentanyl overdose.

Within months, two other 16-year-olds in Ula’s cohort would also die of accidental overdoses, triggering shock waves of trauma for all those around them.

Deaths from opioid toxicity among young Ontarians aged 15 to 24 have risen dramatically in the last decade. Between 2014 and 2021, overdose deaths tripled and visits to emergency departments quadrupled, according to recent research by the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network at Unity Health Toronto.

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