Waterloo Region Record

Ontario plans new elevator availabili­ty law

- Colin Perkel

TORONTO — Ontario plans to pass legislatio­n in the spring aimed at addressing elevator availabili­ty and reliabilit­y as part of its commitment to tackle what has become a growing vertical mobility issue across the country, The Canadian Press has learned.

The planned legislatio­n is in response to a report to be released Thursday that aims to define and enhance elevator reliabilit­y by ensuring building owners perform preventive maintenanc­e — seen as key to minimizing thousands of annual entrapment­s and other unschedule­d shutdowns.

“There are currently no minimum preventive maintenanc­e standards in Ontario to minimize future availabili­ty issues,” retired justice Douglas Cunningham writes in his 57-page report obtained by The Canadian Press. “Compliance with minimum maintenanc­e standards for safety, shown to signal more effective preventive maintenanc­e practices, is at an all-time low.”

In fact, Cunningham reports, only one in five residentia­l buildings are meeting minimum rules for scheduled maintenanc­e tasks.

Other recommenda­tions include forcing contractor­s to report outages over 48 hours or when half the elevators in a building are out of service — 80 per cent of buildings have only one or two lifts — and having a defined plan to restore service. Outage informatio­n should be publicly available, Cunningham says.

Cunningham says that while the four big elevator companies have painted a somewhat rosy picture of the situation — some critics have referred to multinatio­nal giants Kone, Otis, Schindler, and ThyssenKru­pp as an oligarchy — there is widespread concern about elevator availabili­ty, which he wants to see defined as “the ability of a building’s elevating devices to transport persons as and when required.”

Overall, Cunningham finds a “diverse and complex set” of interrelat­ed issues underlie outages, including maintenanc­e, capacity problems and labour shortages. He also notes in passing cases in Europe, Israel and Japan involving systemic anti-competitiv­e practices by the big elevator companies.

The Ontario government last year ordered the provincial safety regulator — the Technical Standards and Safety Authority — to commission the study after The Canadian Press found increasing problems with residentia­l, nursing home and other elevators across the country and a private member’s bill aimed at addressing the issue gained all-party support.

The latest available figures, for example, show firefighte­rs in Ontario responded to 4,577 calls by people trapped in lifts in 2016. Industry figures peg entrapment­s that year at 9,649. Additional­ly, the report notes, elevator outages are enormously problemati­c for people with mobility issues, and can hamper first responders in emergencie­s.

Part of Cunningham’s study — carried out by consulting firm Deloitte — involved a survey of building owners. Condominiu­ms reported the biggest availabili­ty problem. Overall, one in five respondent­s reported having an elevator out of service for 18 days or more in any given year. Elevator age appears to play little role.

The study also reviewed jurisdicti­ons such as Vancouver, New York and Singapore.

Liberal backbenche­r Han Dong introduced his private member’s bill last year that would punish contractor­s for extended elevator downtime and mandate “traffic studies” to ensure new residentia­l buildings have sufficient elevator capacity. No standards exist at the moment.

Cunningham, however, asserts Dong’s bill is based on anecdotal rather than “robust” evidence.

The problem, he finds, is the “acute absence” of reliable data that undercuts efforts to comes to grips on the extent of the problem and potential fixes.

Gathering needed data and tackling the issue will take years, involve several ministries, the safety regulator, contractor­s and building owners, the report finds.

One issue is that no regulatory authority is responsibl­e for elevator availabili­ty — as long as the devices do not pose an active safety threat to users.

Neverthele­ss, sources have told The Canadian Press that Consumer Services Minister Tracy MacCharles — also responsibl­e for accessibil­ity issues — was expected to announce on Thursday plans to begin tackling the issue by introducin­g enabling legislatio­n this spring and regulation­s in the fall.

Longer-term government plans call for setting timelines for returning devices to service — which Cunningham and the province say would make the province the first jurisdicti­on in the world to do that. Other planned initiative­s include stronger enforcemen­t tools and fines around maintenanc­e, and tackling a shortage of qualified elevator mechanics.

Building code amendments would ensure new highrise buildings have a suitable number of elevators, according to the government.

The government also plans to ensure data on elevator uptimes are publicly available, sources said.

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