Vancouver Sun

MT. POLLEY FALLOUT

Three engineers face hearing

-

The regulatory body for engineers in B.C. is alleging negligence or unprofessi­onal conduct by three engineers after the 2014 collapse of a tailings dam at the Mount Polley mine.

Engineers and Geoscienti­sts B.C. says disciplina­ry hearings against Laura Fidel, Todd Martin and Stephen Rice will take place next year.

“The informatio­n released today marks the conclusion of a lengthy, independen­t investigat­ion,” the regulatory body said in a statement Wednesday.

“Engineers and Geoscienti­sts B.C.’s Investigat­ion Committee alleges that three individual­s involved in the design, constructi­on, and monitoring of the tailings storage facility demonstrat­ed negligence and/or unprofessi­onal conduct in the course of their profession­al activities.”

The allegation­s have not been heard by a disciplina­ry panel and are unproven.

Fidel could not be reached for comment, nor could lawyers for Martin and Rice.

The spill at the gold and copper mine was among the largest in B.C.’s history and sent 24 million cubic metres of mine waste and sludge into waterways.

A three-year deadline for provincial charges passed last year, but B.C.’s Conservati­on Officer Service is still investigat­ing along with federal Fisheries officials.

If Engineers and Geoscienti­sts British Columbia’s allegation­s are proven through the disciplina­ry hearing, it says it can impose sanctions under the Engineers and Geoscienti­sts Act that can include a reprimand, practice restrictio­ns, suspension, cancellati­on of membership or a fine of up to $25,000.

The investigat­ion was led by a three-person subcommitt­ee of senior profession­als who reviewed 13,000 documents including contracts, reports, correspond­ence and daily site reports, the regulator said. It also considered the reports resulting from other public investigat­ions conducted by the Independen­t Expert Engineerin­g Investigat­ion and Review Panel and the chief inspector of mines, it said.

Max Logan, chief of strategic operations for the regulatory body, said the investigat­ion and discipline process is typically triggered by a complaint.

“In this case, however, we took the unusual step of initiating an investigat­ion without first receiving a complaint, which we have the authority to do,” Logan said.

Notices of inquiries filed against the three individual­s allege they failed to ensure the Mount Polley tailings storage facility and embankment were adequately monitored and visited regularly.

The documents identify Rice as the most senior engineer at AMEC Foster Wheeler working on the Mount Polley tailings storage facility. They allege he allowed Fidel, “a relatively junior engineer with little experience with embankment design,” to act in a role she was unqualifie­d for, and they allege that Rice was also unqualifie­d for his role as review engineer.

The notice of inquiry against Fidel alleges she accepted responsibi­lities that she was unqualifie­d for, including parts of the embankment design and stability analysis. It alleges she failed to ensure sufficient monitoring of the embankment­s, including failing to advise the company that students should not be used as field inspectors.

The notice of inquiry against Martin says that as design engineer, he adopted an overly steep design slope for the perimeter embankment that did not follow engineerin­g “norms” for a rock fill dam on soil foundation. Other allegation­s against him include ignoring drill log data, failing to address the fact that the embankment constructi­on wasn’t in accordance with its design and failing to ensure adequate monitoring of the site.

 ??  ??
 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? Debris enters Quesnel Lake after a tailings pond breach near the town of Likely in 2014. Engineers and Geoscienti­sts B.C. says disciplina­ry hearings related to the incident will be held for three engineers next year.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES Debris enters Quesnel Lake after a tailings pond breach near the town of Likely in 2014. Engineers and Geoscienti­sts B.C. says disciplina­ry hearings related to the incident will be held for three engineers next year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada