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Hamilton

Mayor pushes for external investigation into why Red Hill report was lost

The mayor's statement follows an announcement late Wednesday that the report stating the friction values on parts of the deadly parkway were below acceptable standards was kept from city council.

Video shows city's former top engineer saying 2013 tests raise 'no concerns' about asphalt

Mayor Fred Eisenberger said he and the other members of council would support an external investigation into why a 2013 report on the Red Hill Valley Parkway wasn't released until this week. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

Hamilton mayor Fred Eisenberger says he expects unanimous council support foramotion to launch anindependent, external investigation into why a 2013 reportraising issues with the surface ofthe Red Hill Valley Parkway was buried.

As the fallout fromthe bombshell report continues, family members who lost loved ones on the deadly expressway are weighing their legal options. But a law professor saysthey face a tough roadproving the city was responsible in some way for the fatal crashes might even be impossible.

The push for an independent investigationalso comes asa video has surfaced online showing the city's former top engineer telling councillorsthe 2013 tests showed "no concerns" with the parkway's asphalt.

In thestatement released Friday afternoon the mayor said it was "difficult" for him and the other members of council to understand why the six-year-old report wasn't brought forward until this week.

"We will be insisting on an external, independent investigation into this matter," Eisenbergeraddedduring an interview.

It's not totally clear what the review would look like. The Eisenbergersaid the city's legal staff will be directed to provide some options.

Eisenbergersaid he hasconfidence in the city's own,independentauditor but explained an external investigation is needed to combat the perception the auditor is"part of the inside game."

Council has already launched an internal review aimed at making recommendations to improve internal processes around reports and other types of information.

But members of the public hadbeen calling for a broader, external investigation following theannouncementlate Wednesday that the long-buried report statingthe friction values on parts of the deadly parkway werebelow acceptable standards was kept from city council.

bus drives on highway
Traffic winds its way along a busy section of the Red Hill Valley Parkway on Feb. 8, 2019. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

City staff have apologized to the public "for how this matter came to our attention." Councillors immediately votedto lower the speed limit to 80 km/h from 90, and to plan millions in safety upgrades includinglighting, barriers andmedians, and expediting asphalt upgrades.

On Friday Eisenberger said he and the other members of council "extend sincere sympathies to the families who have been affected and how the nature and timing of this information must be impacting them."

That outside investigation was supported by MPP forFlamborough-Glanbrook, DonnaSkelly, who said the high number of fatalities and collisions on the road was a cause for concern when she was on city council.

Families struggling with report

Hamilton lawyer Rob Hooper has worked with some of those families and saidhe's been contacted by several peopleabout the possibility of "individual lawsuits or the availability of a class action lawsuit."

Among those he's spoken with isTandra Henderson, the mother of Jordyn Hastings who died with her friend Olivia Smosarski when their car crossed the median on the parkway in May2015.

Olivia Smosarski and Jordyn Hastings died in a crash on the Red Hill Valley Parkway in 2015. It happened between Greenhill Avenue and King Street exits, where a high number of collisions happen. (Jordyn Hastings/Facebook)

The lawyer pointed out many factors can play a role in a car crash and said the question now is whetherthere's some sort of commonality that points to the friction of the asphalt as a culprit.

Hendersonwasn't up to speaking with a reporter Thursday.Hooper said her family is still trying to come to grips with the news.

"It's been a mystery and now they're sitting there going 'We were just starting to heal and now we find out that maybe our daughter's death was as a result of some product on theroadway," he explained.

"They cycle between really angry and really sad and a little bit confused on top of it, probably. They also have to try to deal with the fact the city knew since 2013 that there was a problem and now their child is dead."

Proving city responsibility for crashes 'almost impossible'

Standing between those families and a sense of justice is a large obstacle somehow proving the city, not other factorssuch as speeding, weather and the actions of other drivers, caused the crash that killed their loved ones.

Allan Hutchinson is a distinguished research professor atYork University'sOsgoode HallLaw School. He said he sees two legal avenues families could use, but neither one ends with much hope of asettlement.

Trying to show that the city is responsible for individual accidents will not be easy.I would even say almost impossible.- AllanHutchinson, OsgoodeHallLaw School

The first is through civillawsuits that would argue the cityor its actions led to the crash in some way.

"This is going to be a very tough row to hoe," he explained. "Trying to show that the city is responsible for individual accidents will not be easy.I would even say almost impossible."

The other route is an administrative law approach that would challenge the city for not acting in a responsible manner or neglecting to properly inform itself about what was happening on the parkway.

"If that road was taken it's not clear to me there would be ... damages for individuals involved. But it would lead to monitoring and discipline for the city in a way," Hutchinson said.

Still, a class action lawsuit does come with some advantages including putting political pressure on the city to reach a settlement.

"They can all combine together and say the city contributed to increasing the chance of an accident," the professor explained."Just because you don't think you're going to win isn't a reason not to proceed."

Video references 2013 test results

Which city officials were aware of the report remains unclear. When councilmade it public this week a statement said staffreceiveddetailed information about it for the "first time" Wednesday.

But avideo showing a2015 public works meetingthat has since surfaced online shows former engineering director Gary Moore saying a2013 report raised "no concerns" with asphalt on the parkway.

Moore's statement came in response to acouncillor'squestion aboutanecdotalconcerns from drivers that the road was slippery and built with inferior materials.

He responded by saying the asphalt was above the grade used on 400 series highways and even went sofar as to say it was "holding up exceptionally well" based on testing he said happened in 2012 or 2013.