Wedgewood Park pool contractor's legal battle with city heading to Supreme Court - Action News
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Wedgewood Park pool contractor's legal battle with city heading to Supreme Court

EllisDon says it is still owed just under $1.1 million.

Pool closed while city assesses repair work, with litigation clouding issue of who pays

A multilane indoor swimming pool sits next to large glass windows. There are no people in the water but lifeguards sit in chairs around the pool.
The pool is closed while the city assesses work to remove and reinstall sound panels from the ceiling. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

With part of the new Paul Reynolds Community Centre closed for repairs andnot for the first time the contractor that built it is heading to Supreme Court in an ongoing money disputewith the City of St. John's.

The pool in the Wedgewood Park neighbourhood remains closed while officials assess work necessary to remove and reinstall sound-reducing panels that tumbled off on Nov. 10.

However, the question of whether the cost will be borne by the taxpayer or covered under warranty is complicated by litigation launched by contractor EllisDon, which says the city still owes money for the job.

The centre opened in June 2017, six months behind schedule, but had to temporarily close the gymnasium for repairs shortly after opening, and now the pool, earlier this month. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

In July 2017,London, Ont.-based EllisDon sued the city for $4.9 million, the amount it said was still owing on the $32-million recreation facility, which had opened just the month before.

In a counterclaim, the City of St. John's denied it owed EllisDon$4.9 million, and said the contractor failed to completethe centre which was originally set to open in January 2017 on time.

EllisDon's response to the city's counterclaim was that delays in the centre's completion were the fault of the city and the city's project consultant, Ron FougereAssociates.

Contractor blames city for delays

"Drawings and specifications prepared by the city and/or Fougerewere incomplete and/or poorly co-ordinated and/or in conflict with one another," claims EllisDon's Sept. 21, 2017, filing with the Supreme Court.

EllisDonalso claims those incomplete specifications prompted numerous requests for information, site instructions and change orders, but Fougeredid not respond to them within time allotted in the contract.

The contractor also says the city failed to identify aspects of the project during the design phase that "resulted in extra work beyond the scope of the contract."

It blames the city for failing to "include the deteriorated condition of the various pieces of existing underground infrastructure in the contract documents, resulting in delays in the early stages of the project and during the construction of the CarrickDrive roundabout."

Due in court Nov. 30

As of court documents filed late last month,EllisDon says the city released funds to cover most of what was owed, but says there is still$1.1 million in outstanding invoices.

An email from the city to EllisDon dated Oct. 2 says there is still $219,350 in work that still needs to be done.

With the two sides at an impasse, EllisDonis asking the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador to decide the matter. The two sides are due in court Nov. 30.

Meanwhile, the city says the pool could be closed until Dec. 9, but how much it will cost and who will pay for it is still up in the air.

In an email to CBC, a spokesperson for the city said, "We cannot comment on warranty in this case due to outstanding litigation."

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