Times Colonist

Night work driving families crazy

Galloping Goose trail realignmen­t, part of interchang­e project, sends off bad vibes in Saanich

- LOUISE DICKSON

On Monday night, Stacey Rumsby thought there was an earthquake and leaped out of her chair.

“Things were falling off our shelves, pictures off the walls,” said the Saanich resident.

“Our floor has been constantly vibrating.”

It wasn’t an earthquake. The rumblings and vibrations, which kept the family awake all night, were caused by constructi­on realigning the Galloping Goose trail beside her Grange Road house as part of the McKenzie Interchang­e project.

Her husband, Keith Rumsby, said there were two backhoes and a vibrating packer, and that bright light floods the area being worked on.

“It’s daylight here. It’s not night anymore. That guy is loading a little dump truck and the dump truck is driving by us, depositing this stuff.

“Then the roller is going over it and over it and over it to flatten it. Then he gets another load and does it again and again,” Keith Rumsby said.

The Rumsbys had no warning this was going to happen.

“The workers said they were going to be doing this all night long. On Tuesday night, they did a little bit of work, but they shut down because it was too wet. On Wednesday, they were back at it,” he said.

On Wednesday night, they sent their teenage daughter to stay with friends. Keith Rumsby drove to the constructi­on office, but couldn’t find the supervisor. Eventually, they called Saanich police to make a noise complaint.

“The officer wrote in his report that the vibrations were going right through his feet,” Stacey Rumsby said.

Their insurance company took photograph­s of nails popping out of the walls and a crack in the floor. A heavy concrete bird bath toppled in their garden.

“But the big thing is lack of sleep,” said Stacey Rumsby, who was awakened again at 4 a.m. Friday.

“I’m exhausted. It’s mentally draining.”

The foreman told the couple that the company is mandated by the Ministry of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture to do all the work at night so it doesn’t affect daytime traffic on the Galloping Goose trail.

But that left the Rumsbys wondering why traffic on the trail can’t be diverted to Burnside Road. That way constructi­on could take place during the day when children are in school and people are at work.

“Even the foreman said it would be easier and safer for him to work during the day,” Keith Rumsby said.

Neighbour Kay Bruner, who lives two doors down, said the disturbanc­e is “cruel punishment” for the Rumsbys.

“I feel extremely sorry for them. I don’t know how they can take it,” Bruner said.

“I can’t believe the ministry would be so insensitiv­e that they haven’t found help for that family.

“I told my daughter: ‘I hope to hell Stacey and Keith are down at the Empress.’ ”

Bruner, who can feel the vibrations through her floors, shuts her drapes at night and puts on a white-noise machine to help her sleep.

She believes the Rumsbys should be compensate­d for what they have gone through.

The Rumsbys are also unhappy that their once-private garden is now completely exposed to trail users — their fences taken down, trees ripped apart and blackberry bushes removed.

Expropriat­ion should bes an option, Stacey Rumsby said.

“No one will buy our house now.”

An emailed statement from the Ministry of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture left little hope for the family.

“The ministry is committed to being fiscally responsibl­e with every aspect of this project,” says the email to the Times Colonist.

“This means being careful with the expenditur­e of public funds with respect to property acquisitio­n and compensati­on.”

The email explains that the ministry has tried hard to keep noise to a minimum for nearby residents and schools while balancing the need to keep traffic flowing.

The contractor realigning the trail and building retaining walls in the area between Grange and Belgrave roads is scheduling the work to complete as much of it as possible during the day, it says.

But some of the work includes moving and reconstruc­ting sections of the trail, and this requires full closure.

“This work must occur at night when we can safely close the Galloping Goose to cyclists and pedestrian­s,” the email says.

“The work on the Galloping Goose trail at this location is anticipate­d to continue periodical­ly throughout the next month.”

The ministry encourages people to contact them with questions, concerns or complaints at 250-387-8700 or mckenziein­terchange@gov.bc.ca.

The interchang­e is expected to open to traffic by summer 2019, rather than the end of 2018.

The province delayed the project to make adjustment­s to traffic management and the blasting schedule in response to complaints from residents.

 ??  ?? Stacey Rumsby shows the impact of night constructi­on on realigning the Galloping Goose trail — part of the McKenzie Interchang­e project — beside her house on Saanich’s Grange Road. Her family feels the effects of rumblings and vibrations — “things were...
Stacey Rumsby shows the impact of night constructi­on on realigning the Galloping Goose trail — part of the McKenzie Interchang­e project — beside her house on Saanich’s Grange Road. Her family feels the effects of rumblings and vibrations — “things were...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Stacey Rumsby, with her dog Oscar, looks out from her home toward the Galloping Goose trail. Expropriat­ion should be an option, Rumsby says. “No one will buy our house now.”
Stacey Rumsby, with her dog Oscar, looks out from her home toward the Galloping Goose trail. Expropriat­ion should be an option, Rumsby says. “No one will buy our house now.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada