Ministry of Labour lays charges in Claridge construction site death
8 charges against developer, construction company and 2 supervisors
The Ontario Ministry of Labour has laid charges in the death of Olivier Bruneau, 24, who was killednearly a year ago after a giant chunk of ice broke off the wall of a constructionpit and struck him.
Provincial investigators have charged developerClaridge Homes, Bellai Brothers Construction Ltd., as well astwo supervisors.
The corporations and their supervisors Michael Lwow from Claridge and Leo Simard of Bellai Brothers are accused of failing to ensure the health and safety of workers and failing to employ proper safety measures and procedures.
There are a total of eightcharges, with eachdefendant facingtwo labour code offences:
- Failingto ensure a wall of an excavation was stripped of loose rock or other material that may slide, roll or fall upon a worker.
- Failingto protect a worker from the hazard of falling ice.
Ice stretched more than halfway down pit
Bruneau was working on the Claridge Icon condominium siteat 485 Preston St. when he was killed.Icon, at a planned 45 storeys, was to become the tallestcondominium tower in the capital.
On March 23, 2016,Bruneau,a surveyoremployed by BellaiBrothers, was measuring the foundation at thebottom of a 30-metre-deep pit when ice broke off the excavation walls.
Video taken that day shows ice stretching more than halfway down the pit. Paramedics who responded to the call estimate Bruneau was struck by ice chunks weighing up to45 kilograms.
Christian Bruneau, the victim's father, saidthe impact of the ice crushed his son's ribs and punctured his lungs. After his son's death, Christian Bruneau, along with the Ottawa District and Labour Council, advocated for a police investigation along with a workplace fatality investigation.
Police investigation stalled
Bruneausaidhe expected the criminal investigation into his son's death to be challenging and urges all workers at the site to speak with police.
"Every worker at the site should come and see police investigators and disclose the information that they have. They should do this not for Olivier, but for themselves,because they could be the next ones suffering."
A CBC News investigation last June revealed previous concerns about working conditionsat theIcon construction site in the weeks before Bruneau's death.
Over the 2015 Christmas holidays, falling debris had cracked the windshield of an excavator. And just one month before the fatalityanother worker was hit by falling ice but escaped serious injury.
In that February 2016 incident aprovincial inspector was dispatched to the site but did not issueorders or close down the site. The actions of that government inspector should also be investigated, said Bruneau.
"Explain why you didn't stop that site in February or take real action to prevent (Olivier's) accident?"
with files from Brigitte Bureau