Vancouver Sun

Deadly ammonia leak has experts scrutinizi­ng inspection­s at ice rinks

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Some industry experts are asking questions about the staffing and inspection­s of arenas using ammonia refrigerat­ion systems, months after a leak killed three men at an ice rink in Fernie.

Ammonia is inherently dangerous and should be not used in skating and curling rinks, said Lou Roussinos, who spent decades inspecting refrigerat­ion and boiler systems across B.C.

“It’s an absolutely wonderful refrigeran­t, but it’s dangerous,” Roussinos said. “It’s highly toxic, it will kill you in less than 30 seconds in high concentrat­ions, and we know that.”

Last October, three men died following a leak of the colourless gas at Fernie Memorial Arena. The victims included City of Fernie employees Wayne Hornquist and Lloyd Smith and refrigerat­ion contractor Jason Podloski of Turner Valley, Alta.

The city previously said in a Facebook post that the arena was closed for “emergency maintenanc­e” the morning of the leak.

Several agencies continue to investigat­e, including RCMP and WorkSafe B.C.

The case is believed to be the first fatal ammonia leak in Canada, but the gas has seeped out of refrigerat­ion systems before, causing injuries in several cases.

A report from Technical Safety B.C., which oversees the installati­on and operation of technical systems like refrigerat­ion and boiler systems, shows there were 40 reported “refrigerat­ed release incidents” involving ammonia across the province between 2007 and 2015.

The report says 10 of the incidents included injuries.

Two experts in the industry say more inspection­s and stricter staffing requiremen­ts are needed to protect against leaks.

Facilities using dangerous chemicals like ammonia used to be checked annually, said Roussinos, former head inspector with the B.C. Safety Authority, Technical Safety B.C.’s predecesso­r.

“Now there’s very few inspection­s being conducted. You can go from place to place in the province and most places will tell you they haven’t seen an inspector in years,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for B.C.’s Ministry of Municipal Affairs, which is responsibl­e for recreation­al facilities, said in an email that annual inspection­s have not been required since the Safety Standards Act was enacted in 2003.

Janice Lee, director of safety oversight at Technical Safety B.C., said the agency does inspection­s when equipment is installed and conducts “periodic assessment­s” throughout the lifespan of the system.

Timing of the assessment­s is determined using a “risk-based inspection criteria” that includes factors such as the equipment’s age and whether the building is a public space, she said.

There’s no national standard for how often ammonia refrigerat­ion plants in ice rinks are inspected.

Ontario can require as little as six months between checkups, depending on the previous report, while facilities in Alberta can go as long as five years between inspection­s.

In B.C., when “imminent safety issues” are found during an inspection, they are dealt with immediatel­y on site, Lee said. Other “non-compliance” issues may be dealt with in a variety of ways, including a safety officer following up with the facility’s operator by phone or email.

Reports obtained by The Canadian Press under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act show the B.C. Safety Authority inspected the Fernie Memorial Arena six times between September 2007 and when the fatal leak occurred on Oct. 17, 2017.

Technical Safety B.C. said in a statement the agency was advised that all of the items noted during the latest inspection in December 2014 had been addressed.

Reports filed between September 2007 and December 2014 noted several issues at the arena, including leaking, corroded and uncertifie­d equipment, and noncomplia­nce with required staffing levels. In the final report, a safety officer made note of potential issues with a compressor, oil fill pumps, an ammonia sensor and staffing on statutory holidays.

Liz Rhodes, a City of Fernie spokeswoma­n, declined to comment on the inspection reports, citing ongoing investigat­ions into the fatal leak.

Keeping an ice rink safe requires more than just inspection­s, said Lee, with Technical Safety B.C.

People who own and operate the rinks have a responsibi­lity to make sure maintenanc­e is kept up, emergency measures are in place, and the facilities are properly staffed.

“All those things add up to the safety of the equipment as well as the overall site for the public,” she said.

Technical Safety B.C. put out a safety order last December, reminding rink operators of staffing requiremen­ts for rinks with ammonia refrigerat­ion plants.

“Technical Safety B.C. has determined that a number of ammonia refrigerat­ion plants within the scope of this safety order are cur- rently being operated by person(s) that are not appropriat­ely qualified,” the bulletin said.

Ultimately, whoever owns an ice rink’s refrigerat­ion plant is responsibl­e for its inspection­s, maintenanc­e and operations, said Terry Piche, technical director with the Ontario Recreation­al Facilities Associatio­n, whose more than 6,000 members operate and manage recreation facilities in municipali­ties.

Often that person ends up being the mayor or chief administra­tor of a municipali­ty, but municipal officials often have little idea how a plant works, he added.

“Sometimes the operators are qualified to run the plant, sometimes they ’re not. Sometimes they get enough resources, sometimes they don’t.”

Complicati­ng the issue is the fact that Canada’s recreation facilities are aging, Piche said, noting that in Ontario, they’re estimated to be, on average, between 50 and 60 years old. The “natural life expectancy” of a recreation facility is about 32 years, he said.

He compared rec centres to old cars, saying regular maintenanc­e and proper operation can help extend the life cycles, but even preventati­ve maintenanc­e only goes so far.

“I can give it a coat of paint, maybe a new roof, windows and doors. But the veins of the buildings are still 50 or 60 years old. That’s really the challenge that’s going on from coast to coast.”

A new refrigerat­ion plant for a single-rink community arena can cost between $600,000 and $900,000, Piche said.

“Most municipali­ties can’t afford it.”

Oversight agencies don’t have the resources to police how facilities are run day-to-day, so instead they rely on operators to comply with the rules and be honest, Piche said.

“Really what needs to happen is the commitment to do the checks, balance and maintenanc­e by the operators and owners. And it will greatly reduce the opportunit­y for any similar event (to the deaths in Fernie) to happen.”

Piche disagreed with the notion that ammonia refrigerat­ion plants are inherently dangerous. Artificial ice rinks operated across Canada for more than 100 years before the first “catastroph­ic event” last fall, he said.

“Shifting to another refrigeran­t doesn’t mean you’re going to be any safer.”

Roussinos, the former B.C. inspector, said some municipali­ties have already moved to replace their ammonia refrigerat­ion systems with what he considers to be safer alternativ­es, like freon or carbon dioxide.

He’d like to see B.C.’s government require all the remaining ammonia systems to be replaced, too.

“This government has an opportunit­y to do it ... they can do the right thing this time. Take ammonia out of the places where there’s young children playing hockey or old men like me go curling.”

 ?? PHOTOS: LAUREN KRUGEL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A memorial outside city hall in Fernie last fall pays tribute to the three men who died as the result of an ammonia leak at a local ice rink. Some industry experts are raising concerns about the staffing and inspection­s of arenas using the hazardous gas.
PHOTOS: LAUREN KRUGEL/THE CANADIAN PRESS A memorial outside city hall in Fernie last fall pays tribute to the three men who died as the result of an ammonia leak at a local ice rink. Some industry experts are raising concerns about the staffing and inspection­s of arenas using the hazardous gas.
 ??  ?? Fernie Memorial Arena had been inspected six times by the B.C. Safety Authority between September 2007 and last fall’s fatal ammonia leak.
Fernie Memorial Arena had been inspected six times by the B.C. Safety Authority between September 2007 and last fall’s fatal ammonia leak.

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