Ottawa Citizen

Potential `resolution' looms in Eastway Tank case

Judge to meet with prosecutor, defence lawyers in closed session

- AEDAN HELMER

A potential resolution looms in the province's case against Eastway Tank, lawyers for the manufactur­er said in court. The first trial dates were postponed and another hearing was tentativel­y scheduled in April for a possible plea.

Eastway and its owner, Neil Greene, were charged by the Ministry of Labour one year after an explosion tore apart the company 's Merivale Road facility on Jan. 13, 2022, killing six employees in one of the city's worst workplace incidents. The judge-alone trial had been set to start on March 4 and was scheduled to run for eight weeks, though the first week of reserved trial dates was cancelled at Monday's hearing.

Ontario Court Justice Mitch Hoffman will meet with the prosecutor and defence lawyers in a closed-door session Friday, where a possible resolution will be discussed, lawyers said in court.

A date was tentativel­y reserved on April 25 for a potential plea.

If the matter proceeds to trial, the earliest available date for the trial to commence would be March 18. The trial is expected to extend into June.

Eastway and Greene are represente­d by defence lawyers Donald Bayne and Kirstin Macrae, while the province is represente­d by ministry counsel David Mccaskill.

Charges under the Occupation­al Health and Safety Act allege Eastway and Greene failed to ensure a “wet test” did not produce an explosive vapour, and failed to ensure the process was carried out in an area without a potential ignition source.

Wet tests are commonly used in the industry to assess highway fuel tanks for leaks, and the charges against Eastway suggest a wet test produced fuel vapour that mixed with air inside the shop to create conditions ripe for an explosion — something ultimately triggered by an ignition source, such as a spark, pilot light or open flame.

The charges also allege Eastway and Greene failed to take reasonable precaution­s in the workplace, and failed to adequately instruct employees on safe fuel storage and handling.

The charges have not been proven in court. While they are not criminal charges, individual­s can be jailed for up to one year and fined as much as $100,000. Corporatio­ns can be fined up to $1.5 million under the act.

The explosion killed six workers: Matthew Kearney, 36, a service supervisor and calibratio­n technician; electricia­n and airplane engineer Etienne Mabiala, 59; welder Kayla Ferguson, 26; electricia­n Danny Beale, 29; Russell Mclellan, 43, Eastway's plant manager; and mechanic and welder Rick Bastien, 57. A seventh worker pulled from the fire by co-workers suffered serious burns.

Last month, Eastway Tank, Pump and Meter filed a lawsuit against its insurance broker for $14.4 million, alleging “negligence and breach of contract” that left the company underinsur­ed at the time of the explosion.

Eastway filed the lawsuit on Jan. 11 against local insurer Gifford Carr Insurance Brokers, claiming the tanker truck manufactur­er has incurred $12.9 million in business income under insurance losses in the two years since the explosion.

The allegation­s contained in the lawsuit and those contained in the ministry's charges against Eastway have not been tested in court.

 ?? ERROL MCGIHON ?? A memorial was built at Eastway Tank in January 2023 in honour of the six employees who died in an explosion on Jan. 13, 2022.
ERROL MCGIHON A memorial was built at Eastway Tank in January 2023 in honour of the six employees who died in an explosion on Jan. 13, 2022.

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