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Manitoba

Widow of smelter subcontractor calls for inquiry in 2008 death

The widow of a former contractor working at the Vale smelter in Thompson says her husband's death in 2008 should be the subject of an inquiry.

Liberals join call for investigation into 2008 death at Thompson smelter

Lila Fifi believes her husband David died from exposure to toxic gases while working at smelter in Thompson. (CBC)

Lila Fifisays her husband David's death in 2008 should be looked at much more closelyand wants the Progressive Conservative government to open an inquiry.

She believes the boilermaker and his co-workerswereexposed to toxic levels of gas dust particles and that they were working in an unsafe environment without adequate protective equipment.

"[They were gassed] three times a day, for six days in a row and they did nothing," Fifi told reporters outside the Liberal Party office at the Manitoba Legislative Building Wednesday.

Manitoba Liberal MLA Jon Gerrard has championed Lila Fifi's call for an inquiry. (Sean Kavanagh CBC News )

The Liberals have championed Fifi's cause and echo her calls for an inquiry.

"Though the incident occurred over eight years ago, critical information has only come forward in the last four weeks. I'm here to call for an inquiry into what happened to David Fifi," says River Heights MLA Jon Gerrard.

Fifi says she began to suspect conditions were not safe at the smelter work site after seeing safety concerns raisedby the union her husband belonged to at the time.

"It was a harsh environment. They put those guys in a gas chamber, daily, " she says.

The 52-year-old man was working for a subcontractor, Comstock,at the Vale smelter facility in Thompson in 2008. Hepassed away after a shift working to upgradeexhaust stacks at the smelter.

An autopsy report found hedied from a heart attack.

But his wife Lila has been digging into what happened for years and now says an investigation by Manitoba Workplace Safety and Health was woefully inadequate.

2008 investigation cleared Vale

The WSH investigation concluded there were no safety concerns and work resumed at the smelter.

Fifisays she was denied access to some files related to her husband's death for years, but recentlyreceived documents from the investigation. Theycontainaccounts from other workers at the site who got ill and believe they were exposed to powerfulgases multiple times.

"I was working in the 204 duct line with David Fifiand we were constantly getting gassed from at least four different stacks," boilermaker Doug Bell told a WSH investigator. "This cuts right through your respirators so no matter how you try to protect yourself you can't."

Lila Fifi wants samples taken during her husband's autopsy tested for toxic chemicals. (CBC News )

Fifi wants any samples that remain from her husband's autopsy to be tested for toxicity. She says that was never done after he died.

"My husband had an autopsy. They cut his body apart. They took samples and they didn't test [for contaminants]. You tell me why that happened?" Fifi says.

According to the testimony in theWSHreport,Fifiand his co-workers were exposed to 40 major and approximately 100 minor "gas outs" over a period of of several months.

The Manitoba government provided the following background about the incident;

"WSH immediately launched an investigation, which focused on occupational exposures. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner determined the worker had died as a result of natural causes and relayed this decision to WSH's Chief Occupational Medical Officer, who concurred with the determination."

The government has not agreed to a inquiry, but offered a statement in response to the request.

"We extend our sympathy to the family members of Mr.Fifiand thank them for their courage in raising these concerns. The safety of workers is a top priority for the government and we take these concerns very seriously," wrote a spokesperson.

CBC News asked for comment from mining company Vale.

"All employees wore proper respiratory protection, crews employed gas monitors for the duration of the job and all procedures in place for dealing with gas were followed. The incident was fully investigated at the time and there was nothing found to connect this to a workplace exposure," wrote Vale spokesperson Cory McPhee