Ottawa Citizen

THYSSENKRU­PP FINED $500,000 FOR UNSAFE ELEVATORS.

ThyssenKru­pp performed safety tests too late

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • One of the country’s pre-eminent elevator companies has been fined $500,000 for five violations of Ontario’s safety rules.

ThyssenKru­pp pleaded guilty to the offences in Ontario court under the Technical Standards and Safety Act.

Ontario’s safety regulator says the company failed to perform mandatory maintenanc­e and tests at a condominiu­m in Mississaug­a, Ont.

The company also allowed an unsafe elevator to operate at another condo in east-end Toronto, according to the regulator.

In January, ThyssenKru­pp was fined $375,000 for a potentiall­y fatal breach of safety laws in which a man was injured.

Roger Neate, with the Technical Standards and Safety Authority, says the fines send a strong signal to elevator maintenanc­e contractor­s that safety laws must be respected.

“A clear message was sent ... to both ThyssenKru­pp and the entire elevator industry,” Neate said in a statement.

According to the regulator, ThyssenKru­pp failed to perform annual elevator tests at the Mississaug­a condo by their prescribed date. Inspectors found the tests were about two months late in 2015. Other tests, required every five years, were also overdue by about three months.

Inspectors began looking into the situation in Toronto in 2015 after a dangerous incident. The situation involved a passenger jumping from an elevator that was moving with its doors open, the authority said.

ThyssenKru­pp was convicted of putting an elevator that poses an immediate safety hazard back into service before determinin­g the cause of the problem, and of permitting the operation of an unsafe elevating device.

“The court’s verdict says it loud and clear: ThyssenKru­pp and the elevator industry will be held accountabl­e when they fail to follow the law and complete required safety tests, maintenanc­e and procedures,” Neate said.

In a recent industry report, ThyssenKru­pp and Canada’s other major elevator companies complained bitterly about Ontario’s safety authority, accusing it of imposing stifling regulation­s. The report also denied the companies have any responsibi­lity for breakdowns, delayed repairs, soaring entrapment numbers, or rising injury rates.

The safety authority has reported elevator incidents have risen significan­tly since 2011 and serious injuries are up eight per cent annually.

A private member’s bill, before the Ontario legislatur­e, aims to improve elevator reliabilit­y by imposing time limits on returning devices to service.

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