Lethbridge Herald

FERNIE leak report

Three workers died in arena

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — VANCOUVER

A report says aging equipment resulted in an ammonia leak that caused in the deaths of three people at a Fernie ice rink

Old equipment that continued to be used seven years after a maintenanc­e contractor recommende­d replacing it caused an ammonia leak that killed three workers at an ice rink in British Columbia last October, says an organizati­on that oversees the safe operation of refrigerat­ion systems in the province.

Jeff Coleman, director of risk and safety knowledge for Technical Safety BC, said Wednesday the City of Fernie scheduled funding to replace a chilller system in 2013 but it was deferred to 2014 and subsequent­ly deleted from budget plans.

He said ammonia was used to chill liquid at the Fernie Memorial Arena and traces of the gas were found in the liquid as early as the summer of 2017, indicating a leak within the chiller, but the equipment was put back into operation on Oct. 16, the day before the colourless gas leak killed three men.

Coleman said corrosion along a seam in one tube of the chiller had caused tiny hole, allowing pressurize­d ammonia to seep into the liquid, bursting the pipe and venting large amounts of the deadly gas.

“Once the leaking chiller returned to operation, additional actions and decisions associated with the shutdown configurat­ion were a response to cascading failures beyond the scope of training and situationa­l understand­ing of those involved,” he told a told news conference.

“While the equipment failures originated from a small hole in a chiller tube, Technical Safety BC concluded that the cause of the incident was the decision to operate the leaking chiller,” Coleman said.

The release of ammonia triggered an alarm in the arena’s mechanical room at about 4 a.m. on Oct. 17.

City of Fernie employees Wayne Hornquist and Lloyd Smith, and refrigerat­ion contractor Jason Podloski of Turner Valley, Alta., died in the room while doing emergency maintenanc­e work.

Coleman said the mechanical room’s ventilatio­n system could not have prevented the extremely high levels of ammonia from accumulati­ng as the gas was released so quickly.

Technical Safety BC has made 18 recommenda­tions to prevent similar incidents related to management, maintenanc­e, training and operation, including ventilatio­n related to refrigerat­ion systems.

“As an industry, we must recognize a leaking chiller as a failed component,” Coleman said.

“We need to implement clear procedures and guidance to safely remove leaking chillers from service once a leak is discovered.”

The City of Fernie said it was operating with an approved certificat­ion for its cooling system at the time of the leak and its employees were appropriat­ely trained.

It said the report found there was no evidence that anyone was aware of any safety risk associated with the continued operation of the chiller, and the city’s maintenanc­e plan was consistent with others in the province.

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