City of Winnipeg crews knock down walls of business destroyed in February fire — but rubble pile remains
CBC
City of Winnipeg crews began knocking down the walls of a Main Street business destroyed by fire earlier this year, but the owner says the pile of rubble that has been a blight on the neighbourhood for months will remain for the foreseeable future as a dispute with the province over the cleanup drags on.
"I hate to be the bearer of bad news — there's nothing happening at this point with the city, other than that they are just ensuring that nothing falls right, left or centre," said Robert McDonald, owner of Surplus Direct.
On Wednesday, an excavator ripped down parts of the brick walls left after a Feb. 11 fire destroyed the Surplus Direct building on Main north of Jarvis Avenue, as well as two neighbouring businesses.
Crew members wore white hazardous materials suits as they hosed the debris with water on Wednesday.
The city issued demolition permits for the buildings that housed the neighbouring businesses — Top Pro Roofing and Lord Selkirk Furniture — but the provincial government issued a stop-work order for the Surplus Direct building, saying tests it commissioned showed evidence of significant asbestos-containing material in the rubble.
McDonald questions the validity of the province's testing.
He hired Imrie Demolition to do the work, which contracted the environmental consulting company HLC Consulting to test for asbestos. Asbestos fibres have been linked to a variety of respiratory illnesses and cancer.
Out of 20 samples taken from brick mortar, debris, wall panelling, insulation and roofing materials from a variety of locations, one showed signs of asbestos, McDonald said.
Subsequent testing showed the asbestos content as 0.1 per cent — below the point at which waste is technically considered "asbestos-containing material" under the province's guidelines, according to a copy of HLC Consulting's report on its findings, which McDonald previously provided to CBC News.
Despite those test results, McDonald said the province ordered its own tests, with two out of seven samples showing high levels of asbestos. However, McDonald said the province's samples didn't indicate which materials were sampled, or where they came from.
"There's a whole bunch of things that are not right, what went on there. So I'm at best very, very unsure of their findings," he said.
The cost of a standard demolition would be about $200,000, McDonald said. But safely demolishing a building believed to contain asbestos — which involves soaking the material in water before moving it to prevent dust flying into the air — would double the cost, he said.
A provincial government spokesperson confirmed the province conducted its own testing, which showed the presence of asbestos. Given the age of the buildings — built in the 1950s — "Manitoba's laws assume suspect materials as containing asbestos unless proven otherwise," the spokesperson wrote in an email.
"It is important to note that a single positive finding is sufficient to confirm the presence of asbestos."