The Telegram (St. John's)

No damage to government-owned property in Happy Valley-goose Bay fire that destroyed buildings on former military base

- SANUDA RANAWAKE LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER sanuda.ranawake @saltwire.com @rsanuda Sanuda Ranawake is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter covering Indigenous and rural issues.

The cause of the fire in Happy Valley-goose Bay that destroyed several buildings last week still remains unknown.

Mayor George Andrews says no damage was done to any government-owned property. Andrews also confirmed there were no injuries or deaths as a result of the fire.

“No, there’s nothing. They are still in the investigat­ive process and no insurance is involved, and things like that, apparently. And that wouldn’t be something we’d be involved in moreso. The investigat­ion will be from the RCMP perspectiv­e and, of course, from the owners’ own insurance,” he said.

FORMER MILITARY BUILDINGS

All the affected buildings were privately owned, Andrews said.

This was confirmed by Brad Butler, fire chief for Happy Valley-goose Bay, who said the buildings were previously owned by the federal government.

“All private. Back in the day, it will be a Canadian air base, when the Americans were here first. When the American Air Force left, the Canadian Air Force moved over onto where the base sits now,” Butler said.

“And the buildings on the Canadian side, or the north side which is as it’s referred to now, were all turned over to private interest. A lot of constructi­on companies, industrial. The one that burned, the hangar that unfortunat­ely we lost was a liquid oxygen plant, those types of things.”

LIQUID OXYGEN

He says the liquid oxygen plant was the same building with an air traffic control tower. Images of that building, including the tower on fire, have been widely circulated, says Butler.

“That was the hanger. That was a liquid oxygen one. Back in the day when the runway was first here, that was the tower for the area,” he added.

SIGNIFICAN­T DAMAGE

He says the total damages are not yet known, but it is significan­t.

“It was in the multimilli­ons because there was a lot of stuff in there belonging to Muskrat Falls, but I wouldn’t be able to give you an exact figure because I don’t even know,” says Butler.

RCMP INVESTIGAT­ION

The fire department handed the investigat­ion over to the RCMP as of Friday, April 26.

“Fire and emergency services did the fire investigat­ion on 21 Halifax, the original fire building. All the informatio­n from them was turned over to the RCMP and they have since followed up with all their factors,” Butler says.

Andrews says the RCMP investigat­ion is yet to identify a cause of the fire.

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