Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Mill That Exploded Killing Two Workers Should Have Been Shut Down: Worker

The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2015 06:35 PM
    BURNS LAKE, B.C. — Freezing temperatures wrecked equipment at a sawmill that hadn't been prepared for such weather before an explosion killed two workers, a coroner's inquest has heard.
     
    Archie Alec, who worked as a chipper attendant, testified Friday that a cold snap made it tough to operate machinery at Babine Forest Products in the days before a blast on Jan. 20, 2012.
     
    Robert Luggi, 45, and 42-year-old Carl Charlie, died in the disaster that also left 19 others injured, some with severe burns.
     
    Alec worked in the mill's basement, where he was primarily responsible for unplugging conveyors when they became clogged with debris.
     
    "Being downstairs was chaotic," he said. "Conveyors were freezing up ... all week we had problems with everything starting up. By the time we'd get things going, another machine breaks down.
     
    "Maintenance was overwhelmed with calls — here, there, throughout the mill."
     
    He said employees were called into the lunchroom for a meeting the day before the explosion.
     
    "To us, we thought we would be sent home, but we weren't," Alec said.
     
    Instead, everyone in the mill was sent to clean out the debris that had piled up in the basement. They had to use jackhammers to dislodge the material because it had become frozen in water that had been leaking from burst pipes.
     
    That seemed to work, and the sawmill was back in operation by the time Alec returned for work the next morning.
     
    "I wouldn't say it was cleaned right up but at least it was accessible to the conveyors," Alec said.
     
    On the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday before the explosion, which occurred on a Friday night, the mill was processing beetle-killed pine but switched to green wood on the Thursday and Friday.
     
    Because the pine was so dry, it produced a fine, powdery dust that created a haze as it floated in the air and caused breathing concerns, the inquest has heard.
     
    Alec said he never had to wear a mask when the mill was dealing with green wood but on the days when it was working on the pine, he wore one and it would be black by the end of his shift.
     
    A WorkSafeBC investigation concluded an accumulation of wood dust was a major factor in the blast.
     
     
    Alec worked the day shift and wasn't there when the explosion ripped through the mill and said he is no longer employed there.
     
    "My feeling is we shouldn't have (worked) at all that week, otherwise Robert and Carl would be here and the mill would still be running," he said.
     
    Claude Briere, a longtime machinist and millwright at the mill, told the inquest that conditions "totally changed" after shifts were extended to 10 hours from eight hours in an effort to boost production.
     
    Before that, Briere said there was no dust on the beams, the floors were clean and the debris was removed when he arrived at the mill every morning.
     
    "After the 10-hour shift, the piles were there from the day before, or the day before or the day before or the day before," he said adding a crew had less time for cleanup duties because they were also required to do other duties.
     
    The shift change was introduced after Oregon-based Hampton Affiliates bought the 30-year-old mill from West Fraser in 2006, he said.
     
    When new management took over, "nothing was done" to get the mill ready for the winter seasons, he said.
     
    The temperature had dipped to below -40 C before the explosion. (Prince George Citizen)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Executives With Toronto's Pan Am Games Will Split $5.7 Million In Bonuses

    Executives With Toronto's Pan Am Games Will Split $5.7 Million In Bonuses
    TORONTO — The upcoming Pan Am Games in Toronto are still proving to be a windfall for some of the executives involved in planning the event.

    Executives With Toronto's Pan Am Games Will Split $5.7 Million In Bonuses

    Mississauga Hacker David Pokora Sentenced In Delaware To 18 Months In Prison

    Mississauga Hacker David Pokora Sentenced In Delaware To 18 Months In Prison
    WILMINGTON, Del. — A Canadian member of a hacking ring that gained access to a U.S. Army computer network and targeted Microsoft and several video game developers has been sentenced in Delaware to 18 months in prison.

    Mississauga Hacker David Pokora Sentenced In Delaware To 18 Months In Prison

    Harper Gets 10-minute Papal Visit, Focuses On Ukraine Not Residential Schools

    Harper Gets 10-minute Papal Visit, Focuses On Ukraine Not Residential Schools
    VATICAN CITY, Italy — Prime Minister Stephen Harper raised the troubling findings of the residential schools commission Thursday during an unusually brief meeting with Pope Francis, but stopped short of inviting him to Canada to apologize.

    Harper Gets 10-minute Papal Visit, Focuses On Ukraine Not Residential Schools

    Carding Can Enhance Public Safety When Done 'Right,' Toronto Police Chief Says

    Carding Can Enhance Public Safety When Done 'Right,' Toronto Police Chief Says
    TORONTO — Just days after Toronto's mayor called for an end to the practice of randomly stopping and questioning residents in the streets, the city's new police chief says it can enhance public safety when done properly.

    Carding Can Enhance Public Safety When Done 'Right,' Toronto Police Chief Says

    Nestle Moves Bombay High Court Against Maggi Ban, Hearing On Friday

    Nestle Moves Bombay High Court Against Maggi Ban, Hearing On Friday
    A division bench of Justice V.M. Kanade and Justice B.P. Colabawala posted the matter for Friday after the company's lawyer mentioned it in the court on Thursday. Earlier, the matter had been listed for June 18.

    Nestle Moves Bombay High Court Against Maggi Ban, Hearing On Friday

    Pakistan Parliament Passes Anti-india Resolutions, Nawaz Sharif Says Ties Hampered

    Pakistan Parliament Passes Anti-india Resolutions, Nawaz Sharif Says Ties Hampered
    Terming the recent statements by the Indian leadership as “irresponsible”, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Thursday that the atmosphere for relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbours has been hampered

    Pakistan Parliament Passes Anti-india Resolutions, Nawaz Sharif Says Ties Hampered