Ottawa Citizen

Resignatio­n letter cited mall hazards

Ex-manager called owner unethical slave-driver

- COLIN PERKEL

ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. A former manager of the ill-fated Algo Centre Mall accused its owner of being an unethical, slave-driving employer and sleazy landlord, a public inquiry heard Friday.

In her letter of resignatio­n displayed at the inquiry, Henri Laroue laid out numerous grounds for quitting May 3, 2011, one year before the mall’s roof caved in, killing two women.

Among them, Laroue complained she was on call 24 hours a day and, despite being called in regularly, received no extra money.

“When I spoke to you ... that I am sometimes working 60 hours per week yet I am in trouble if I am one day late, you advised that you could make me work 90 hours per week,” she wrote in the letter.

“If I am sick one day, this day’s pay is deducted from my pay.”

In response, Bob Nazarian, on his fourth day testifying into the mall’s collapse last summer, said his former employee was dishonest.

Laroue, who testified without a lawyer in May, also accused him in her letter of ordering her to break into a tenant’s store to change the locks.

Nazarian, 68, of Richmond Hill, Ont., played fast and loose with safety rules, she said.

He ordered her to leave the hotel unstaffed at night — which would be illegal — and told her to ignore orders to comply with the fire code because they had taken enough of her time.

“This is very dishearten­ing to realize your priorities do not include a safe work environmen­t,” she wrote.

Nazarian defended himself as an honourable businessma­n who never did anything illegal.

He did concede to commission counsel Peter Doody that he did not comply with fire regulation­s for years.

Efforts to stop the mall roof from leaking had failed, Nazarian explained, so any new fireproofi­ng would have washed away again.

Nazarian said his company was in financial straits, in part because mall tenants were leaving or refusing to pay rent over the appalling conditions.

“We were trying to cut corner, it was management decision,” Nazarian said, his voice rising.

“Fire department, every day, was sneaking into the mall, with permission or without permission, finding an excuse, giving us an order, ‘Do it or else’.”

Nazarian later pleaded guilty to fire code infraction­s and paid a fine.

As was the case throughout his testimony, Nazarian clashed frequently with Doody on Friday, prompting him at one point to appeal to Commission­er Paul Belanger for a time out.

“I have a severe headache. I cannot take this kind of harassment from Mr. Doody,” he said.

In earlier testimony, Nazarian made the startling admission he did have money to fix the roof, but opted to buy another property because the mall was a financial “black hole” that was “doomed” from the outset.

‘You advised that you could make me work 90 hours per week.’

HENRI LAROUE

Former Algo Centre mall manager

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The inquiry into last summer’s deadly collapse of a Northern Ontario mall on Friday dealt with a letter written by a former mall manager who quit over working conditions.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The inquiry into last summer’s deadly collapse of a Northern Ontario mall on Friday dealt with a letter written by a former mall manager who quit over working conditions.

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