'Scary situation' played out between competing construction companies on TCH near St. John's - Action News
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'Scary situation' played out between competing construction companies on TCH near St. John's

A long rivalry between two of Newfoundland and Labrador's biggest road construction companies came to a head this week, resulting in smashed windows and a police investigation.

A damaged loader, broken glass and a broken gate part of incident

A man wearing construction gear standing on a dirt road.
Bill Farrell has ownedand operatedFarrell's Excavating since 1990. (Terry Roberts/CBC)

A long rivalry between two of Newfoundland and Labrador's biggest road construction companies came to a head this week, resulting in smashed windows and a police investigation.

Barriers near Municipal Construction and Farrell's Excavating both located just off the Trans-Canada Highway near the developing Galway subdivision in St. John's have been torn down in a wild scene that played out on Thursday.

Bill Farrell has ownedand operatedFarrell's Excavating since 1990. He says things haveturned from bad to worse between his company and the competitionat the site of a construction job near Exit 41.

Farrell won the contract late last yearfor the job, whichwill see a new interchange to open up better access to Galway. The job is essentially on the doorstep of his company, and that of hiscompetition, Municipal Construction, owned by Carl Healey. Farrell's contract calls for a temporaryaccess road so Healey's trucks don't loseaccess to the highway.

On Thursday, Farrell's removed traffic barriers from an existing Municipal gate and installed a new gate closer to the company's head office.

"I had a job to move the gates here yesterday to protect somebody else's property and it's in my contract to do it," Farrell told CBC News on Friday.

But the placement apparently didn't sit well withHealey.

"He just scooped them up, ran out, beat the windows out of my loader with the gate, dumped the gates," Farrell said. "Flaggers were stood up here, and there was just people running and there was just absolutely no need of what went on here yesterday."

Farrell said Healeywas the driver of the machine used to destroy the gate and that Healeywas"well aware" of what was going on, where his job was located, where the gates were going and they weren't on Healey'sproperty, but near the entrance.

A construction vehicle with a broken window.
One of Farrell's loaders was damaged during Thursday's incident. (Darryl Murphy/CBC)

Nobody was in the damaged loader at the time.

"It was a very scary situation," said Farrell.

"Government officials actually notified him a day ahead of time, then we done it a day later. So he had ample warning. He's had drawings, he had input and he knew exactly what was going to go on here. There was no surprise or anything as to what's been happening here."

Videos of the incident have circulated on social media.

Farrell said his flagspersonnearest the incident didn't return to workFriday; three stop signs have been placed instead. Other employees also opted to stay away, he said.

A concrete barrier and metal gate in pieces on the ground.
A gate was destroyed on Thursday on a construction site near the Trans-Canada Highway. (Darryl Murphy/CBC )

He said he is suingHealey for damages.

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary responded to the scene with three cruisers and is investigating.

Farrell wants that to go a step further, with the province taking on its own investigation through the Occupational Health and Safety division to have charges laid.

"To operate that backhoe the way that man did is just totally ridiculous. [He] nearly killed one of my flagpeople," he said.

"Anything could have happened here yesterday. It's just beyond what I can evenimagine."

Healey declined to do a recorded interview with CBC News butdid admit to removing the gate. He saidhe wasn't given the promised three-day notice of the gate work and that the temporary access road is incomplete and poorly designed.

He said he will pay to repair the damaged loader but isn't apologizing.

Read morefrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Terry Roberts