Owners, managers, landlords fiercely oppose 'destructive' building inspections - Action News
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Calgary

Owners, managers, landlords fiercely oppose 'destructive' building inspections

A Calgary city councillor's request to look at bringing in mandatory structural inspections of the city's older and taller buildings is being met with fierce resistance.

Calgary's apartment and office tower owners tell Coun. Druh Farrell to 'leave the industry alone'

Former residents of Kensington Manor were given four-hour windows to pack and remove their belongings from their apartments after the building was found to be structurally unsafe. (CBC)

A Calgary city councillor's request to look at bringing in mandatory structural inspections of the city's older and taller buildings is being met with fierce resistance.

"Leave the industry alone," says Gerry Baxter, the executive director of the Calgary Residential Rental Association.

He says it would be premature to bring in what he calls a cookie-cutter approach to the city's aging mid- and high-rise buildings.

The city's building maintenance bylaw, which calls for mandatory exterior visual assessments of buildings every five years, came into law Jan. 1, 2017.

The visual inspections apply to buildings that are at least 10 years old and at least fivestoreystall.

Coun.DruhFarrell,whose ward includes the structurally unsound and vacantKensingtonManor,will ask administration on Monday to study the possibility of bringing in mandatory structural inspections.

The 150 or so tenants in the six-storey building were given just 15 minutes to gather their things and leave last November because of a "possible imminent building collapse."

Farrell believes it was pure luck that nothing catastrophic happened before the building was evacuated and shored up.

"We got lucky," she said.

Coun. Druh Farrell will ask her council colleagues on March 19 to direct administration to look at expanding the scope of the building maintenance bylaw to include mandatory structural inspections of older, taller buildings. (CBC)

What Farrell is pushing for is something building owners and managers refer to as destructive testing because in some cases walls and floors need to be ripped open and footings dug up to be inspected.

Farrell says regular structural inspections are not part of the year-old building maintenance bylaw and should now be considered.

"What we really need is to identify at what age do buildings start deteriorating and we would need third party structural evaluations. That would seem to be common sense to me, but currently we don't do that," said Farrell.

Baxter says his association's board members are strongly opposed to such a move having just recently gone through all of the consultations with the city to come up with the maintenance bylaw.

Gerry Baxter says it would be inappropriate to bring in mandatory structural inspections of taller, older buildings since the city just required building owners to visually inspect mid- and high-rise buildings every five years. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

"I don't think we want to have something that is very costly and very destructive foisted upon an industry that's already working very hard to make sure that their buildings are safe," said Baxter.

Expensive, unnecessary

The executive director of the Building Owners and Managers Association of Calgary says the requirement would add tremendous costs without any guarantee the buildings would be made safer.

"We call it destructive testing, not because it's a bad thingbut because it requires removing all finishing, taking a wall down and doing extensive work so it's again a few steps past what should be the first step and that should be the visual assessment," said Lloyd Suchet.

Lloyd Suchet, the executive director of the Building Owners and Managers Association of Calgary, says mandatory structural inspections would be destructive and expensive for the city's high-rise building owners. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

He says in most cases potential structural problems could be caught during a thorough visual inspection done by qualified professionals.

"Structural testing would not be a first step because it is never a first step in the industry," said Suchet.

Suchet says structural tests and inspections were discussed during the initial consultation for the building maintenance bylaw but were dropped because of the cost, and he says they would have unnecessarily broadened the scope of the bylaw

Knee-jerk reaction

Baxter agrees with Suchet and says that following consultations on the new bylaw it was agreed that structural testing isn't needed. He describes Farrell's motion as a bit of a knee-jerk reaction to what happened atKensingtonManor.

"Let's give the building maintenance bylaw a chance to do its job and work, and if we discover at some point in time that it's not working or it's not meeting the requirements that we had initially hoped for, then we can look to alter it or make changes. But let's not suddenly decide that we need to do structural testing," said Baxter.

Public safety trumps expensive tests

The former tenants ofKensingtonManor are urging Farrell's colleague's on council to support the motion. A spokesperson for the group says structural inspections could prevent a similar situation from happening to other tenants in the city.

Alison McIntosh says public safety should trump the cost of any structural testing, regardless of how intrusive or destructive those tests might be.

Alison McIntosh is one of the 150 or so former tenants of Kensington Manor. The building, seen behind her, was evacuated in November because of a 'possible imminent building collapse.' (Bryan Labby/CBC)

McIntosh suggests there were tell-tale signs something was wrong with the building months before the emergency evacuation.

"They were checking balconies multiple times over the course of the year in which I lived there. It seemed like if they knew about these concerns.They didn't consider them serious enough to merit imminent building collapse until it was absolutely too late," said McIntosh.

"We were forced out on minutes' notice. Our livelihoods were put at risk. We were forced into basically homelessness without appropriate compensation and things like that," she said.

The former tenants have also organized a petition calling on the government to review theResidential Tenancies Act to ensure tenants receive better protection when they are forced out of their apartments.

Service Alberta Minister Stephanie McLeansaid in a statement to the CBCthat there are no plans to review the Residential Tenancies Act. However, her department is "always looking for ways to better protect tenants and landlords and will be meeting with these tenants to hear their concerns," read the statement.

CBC News attempted to reach out to the Ontario-based owner ofKensingtonManor butcalls and text messages were not answered.

Farrell says the current building maintenance bylaw will result in 500 buildings being subjected to a visual assessment over the next two years. The buildings are at least fivestoreystall and 25-years-old.


BryanLabby is an enterprise reporter with CBC Calgary. If you have a good story idea or tip, you can reach him at bryan.labby@cbc.ca or on Twitter at @CBCBryan.