Times Colonist

‘It’s insane that we’re still seeing this happen’

Man whose son died in crane accident speaks out after Vancouver incidents

- NONO SHEN

VANCOUVER — When Chris Vilness heard about the crane accident that killed a constructi­on worker in Vancouver last week, he was angry, and he didn’t have to imagine what the woman’s family was going through.

In 2021, his son Cailen was among five men who died when a crane that was being dismantled collapsed in Kelowna.

“That’s so unfair for that family to have to go through something a lot similar to what we did,” he said. “It’s terrible, it’s not something you can even explain, and once you have got the call or you have read the text, there is no turning back.”

The deadly Vancouver accident, in which a load fell from a crane onto the worker below at the massive Oakridge Mall developmen­t last Wednesday, was one of three such incidents in Metro Vancouver in just over a month.

The accidents have prompted calls from Vilness and a union representi­ng crane workers for better enforcemen­t of existing safety rules surroundin­g cranes and new regulation­s governing their assembly and dismantlem­ent.

The provincial government says safety changes are in the works, and could be announced in the next few months.

“It’s insane to me that in this day and age, we’re still seeing this stuff happen. I could see people’s lives that are at stake,” said Vilness, who has spent 32 years in the constructi­on industry.

He said his wish for this year is that everybody who works on a crane or at a constructi­on site is able to make it home safely.

“I hope that no other families have to go through what we and the [Oakridge] worker’s family is now going through. I would love to see some regulatory decisions made for the crane industry or any industry that has high-risk work,” said Vilness.

Josh Towsley, an assistant business manager at the Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers, Local 115, said three incidents involving crane towers within a month is “concerning.”

“I think it speaks to the fact that the safety regime in tower cranes isn’t where we need it to be and where the public would expect it to be,” said Towsley.

On Jan. 26, a section of Lougheed Highway in Burnaby was temporaril­y shut down when a crane collapsed and dangled from a highrise tower under constructi­on. Four days later, a crane at a site in Surrey appeared to partially collapse.

WorkSafeBC, the provincial compensati­on and safety authority, said it is investigat­ing both incidents.

The Oakridge site has about 1,700 constructi­on workers, but operations have been halted by WorkSafeBC while it looks into the cause of the crane accident.

WorkSafeBC said about 350 tower cranes are in operation in B.C., and there have been 22 incidents involving such equipment from 2019 to 2023.

B.C. Labour Minister Harry Bains said Tuesday that the three recent crane incidents are a “stark reminder” about the importance of workplace safety.

“It is heartbreak­ing that three incidents involving tower cranes happened in the first few months of this year. I certainly believe that all accidents, workplace incidents, are preventabl­e, injuries and deaths are preventabl­e,” said Bains.

He said WorkSafeBC and BC Crane Safety, a regional authority responsibl­e for operator certificat­ion, will get stakeholde­rs together to discuss if there are gaps in crane tower training and how to fix them.

Bains said WorkSafeBC had been looking at regulation changes around tower crane safety since last year after the 2021 crane collapse in Kelowna, and he expected the agency’s board of directors to introduce changes this spring.

Towsley said it was important to ensure existing regulation­s are properly enforced and new rules be developed, particular­ly around the erection and dismantlin­g of tower cranes.

In B.C., all crane operators must have a valid operator’s certificat­e under WorkSafeBC’s regulation­s, but dismantlin­g a crane doesn’t require one.

Towsley said companies can lease a tower crane and subcontrac­t its operation to someone with a provisiona­l licence, which could be obtained by answering an online multiple-choice test.

“So, we have some concerns around that,” said Towsley, referring to the licensing standards.

He said some crews and companies did a great job with training, but others “fell short” of expectatio­ns.

“We can’t have three incidents in a month. It’s time we got together as an industry and made sure that we take the steps so that workers and the public have confidence in our industry again,” said Towsley.

Vilness said he believed crashes like the one that killed his son “could have been completely preventabl­e” if there was proper training and “a set standard in place” for dismantlin­g or assembling a crane.

Over the years, he has questioned whether Cailen received proper training before being sent hundreds of feet above the ground to dismantle the crane, something in which his son had no related experience.

RCMP said last week that it had asked prosecutor­s to consider criminal charges over the collapse. Kelowna Mounties said a report had been submitted “for charge assessment for criminal negligence causing death.”

“If there are procedures that people have to be trained and qualified before July 12, this never would happen. These other crane accidents never would happen,” said Vilness, referring to the date of the 2021 collapse.

He said Cailen had a heart of gold, a great sense of humour and was the “glue of the family,” that included his three sisters and two brothers.

“You can never overcome the grief. Cailen is on my mind every second of every single day. We all miss him terribly.”

 ?? ALISTAIR WATERS, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A worker looks on as a police officer investigat­es a collapsed constructi­on crane in Kelowna in July 2021. Five men died in the accident, including Chris Vilness’s son Cailen.
ALISTAIR WATERS, THE CANADIAN PRESS A worker looks on as a police officer investigat­es a collapsed constructi­on crane in Kelowna in July 2021. Five men died in the accident, including Chris Vilness’s son Cailen.

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