Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Finger-pointing on as inquiry into deadly Algo Centre shopping mall collapse concludes

The Canadian Press , 13 Oct, 2014 04:25 PM
    When Commissioner Paul Belanger reports this week on the deadly collapse of a mall in northern Ontario, he and his team will have spent months sorting through numerous claims, counterclaims and finger-pointing as to who was to blame for the tragedy.
     
    No one involved in the Algo Centre mall's 30-year history of leaks — from the architect who designed it and the last owner on whose watch part of the rooftop parking caved in to the myriad players in between — has been willing to accept responsibility for the disaster that left two women dead and the town of Elliot Lake reeling.
     
    "Those who ought to have known certain conditions appeared to have no idea or simply had no desire to know how bad things were becoming," Keith Moyer, chairman of the Seniors Action Group of Elliot Lake, said in final written submissions.
     
    "Those who ought to have known and ought to have demanded immediate action to stop this deterioration appear to have been in denial."
     
    There would be no denying what happened on a sunny Saturday afternoon on June 23, 2012.
     
    Concrete and a vehicle crashed down into the mall, killing Lucile Aylwin, 37, and Doloris Perizzolo, 74. Several others were hurt. The collapse sparked a frantic scramble to get out, and then a search and rescue operation that many residents severely criticized as being woefully inadequate.
     
    The victims' families, who are suing the town and others for damages, see plenty of blame to spread around.
     
    They argue town officials failed to do their building-inspection and enforcement jobs; the mayors involved lied when they claimed ignorance of a 1999 engineering report warning of the dangers of ongoing leakage; the various owners were dishonest, negligent and greedy.
     
    Officially, of course, Belanger's 744-page report on the events leading up to the collapse will not assign legal blame or liability when it is released Wednesday along with his recommendations aimed at preventing a repeat of a similar tragedy, and his findings cannot be used in any prosecution.
     
    In practice, however, it will lay bare the roles played by those who should have, or could have, done something to prevent the collapse, who seemed to ignore the proverbial alarm bells — ear-splitting as they were.
     
    The report from the $20-million inquiry comes against the backdrop of an ongoing police investigation that has already led to serious charges — criminal negligence causing death and bodily harm — against former engineer Robert (Bob) Wood, who signed off on the good health of the mall just weeks before a corroded structural-steel weld gave way.
     
    Wood, whose 40-year career was ignominiously buried by the falling concrete, admitted to altering his report at the behest of the mall's last owner, Bob Nazarian.
     
    The discredited engineer, who tried unsuccessfully to get Belanger to black out parts of the final report that refer to him, blamed Nazarian for failing to pass on "necessary and relevant" information about the history of the mall that would have properly informed his inspection.
     
    Nazarian himself has admitted to having had the millions of dollars required for the drastic renovations needed to save the mall, but said he did not want to pour more money down what he called a "black hole."
     
    "No matter how much money you put in...that mall was doomed," Nazarian testified.
     
    However, he insisted he had no idea of the history of problems he was buying into when he purchased what townsfolk dubbed the "Algo Falls."
     
    "Definitely, I would not buy the mall if I knew that the leaks were continuing from so long period," he said.
     
    Nazarian blames "defective design and installation" of the novel but cheap waterproofing system used when the mall was built in 1979 along with the centre's first two owners' "failure to take effective remedial measures."
     
    He also blames the town for failing to enforce the building code, and various engineers for missing the structurally significant corrosion that ultimately led to the collapse.
     
    On Monday, the victims' families said in a statement they hoped the commissioner will be recommending that the province make it an offence for the owner of a building -- or directors of a corporation that owns a building -- to keep secret any problems related to the structural integrity or threats to the safety of its users.
     
    A look at the emergency response and recommendations will form the 652-page second volume of Belanger's report.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mine company heads to Federal Court next month to fight rejection of B.C. mine

    Mine company heads to Federal Court next month to fight rejection of B.C. mine
    A mining company that filed two applications for judicial review of the federal government's rejection of a $1.5-billion gold and copper mine in B.C. will fight for the project in Federal Court next month.

    Mine company heads to Federal Court next month to fight rejection of B.C. mine

    B.C. Teachers And Employers Hold Marathon Bargaining Session Over Weekend

    B.C. Teachers And Employers Hold Marathon Bargaining Session Over Weekend
    VANCOUVER - Representatives for B.C.'s public school teachers and their employers bargained through the weekend in another effort to resolve the strike that has postponed the start of the school year for more than half a million students.

    B.C. Teachers And Employers Hold Marathon Bargaining Session Over Weekend

    Prince Edward shakes hands with 87 Duke of Edinburgh award winners at B.C. ceremony

    Prince Edward shakes hands with 87 Duke of Edinburgh award winners at B.C. ceremony
    VICTORIA - His Royal Highness Prince Edward Earl of Wessex told a ballroom full of young people on Saturday they earned the right to walk a little taller after successfully completing a journey that millions attempt but relatively few complete.

    Prince Edward shakes hands with 87 Duke of Edinburgh award winners at B.C. ceremony

    Sexual dysfunction and Canadian Military's Viagra use among cabinet's secrets

    Sexual dysfunction and Canadian Military's Viagra use among cabinet's secrets
    OTTAWA - Sexual dysfunction in the Canadian military is such a sensitive topic for the Harper government that federal officials have stamped all information related to it as a cabinet secret, something not to be revealed to the public.

    Sexual dysfunction and Canadian Military's Viagra use among cabinet's secrets

    Open letter from 400 academics asks CRA to stop political-activity audits

    Open letter from 400 academics asks CRA to stop political-activity audits
    OTTAWA - More than 400 academics are demanding the Canada Revenue Agency halt its audit of a think-tank, saying the Conservative government is trying to intimidate, muzzle and silence its critics.

    Open letter from 400 academics asks CRA to stop political-activity audits

    Quebec sovereigntists learning from Scots

    Quebec sovereigntists learning from Scots
    MONTREAL - Quebecers who've spent decades fighting without success to form their own country are now finding themselves living vicariously through the Scots.

    Quebec sovereigntists learning from Scots