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Asbestos exposure and 91Ƶhorrendous91Ƶ jackhammer noise mean $30K award for B.C. tenant

Building91Ƶs owner challenged Residential Tenancy Branch decision in court and lost
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A Victoria tenant will be compensated more than $30,000 due to a prolonged building renovation that included a 91Ƶloss of quiet enjoyment91Ƶ due to noise from a jackhammer and exposure to asbestos. (Pexels photo illustration)

A Victoria tenant will be compensated more than $30,000 due to a prolonged building renovation that included a 91Ƶloss of quiet enjoyment91Ƶ due to noise from a jackhammer and exposure to asbestos.

The owner of a 13-storey building at 435 Michigan St. in Victoria, IMH 415 & 435 Michigan Apartments Ltd., plus Devon Properties, had asked for a judicial review of a 2022 B.C. Residential Tenancy Branch decision to award the tenant $30,721.75. The money was awarded by the RTB for 91Ƶfor rental abatement and damages due to the Landlord91Ƶs lengthy and extensive renovation of the apartment building in issue.91Ƶ

The award included rent abatement for a 91Ƶloss of quiet enjoyment from jackhammering and other noise,91Ƶ plus $10,000 in aggravated damages for 91Ƶongoing health concerns from asbestos exposure during construction.91Ƶ

The tenant called the noise from the jackhammer, drilling and table-saws 91Ƶhorrendous91Ƶ as it continued until 8 p.m., six days a week, read the court decision.

The landlord took over the building in 2015 and performed renovations between 2016 and 2017.

91ƵThe renovations consisted of repairs and capital work to many of the common areas (corridors, lobby and entrance), unit renovations, security and elevator upgrades, painting (building envelope, balconies, windows and doors), and installation of energy-efficient systems and mechanical equipment,91Ƶ according to a B.C. Supreme Court decision.

91ƵThe Landlord does not challenge the awards for failure to maintain the premises in reasonable condition, loss of balcony use, or for clean-up, totalling approximately $11,500,91Ƶ said the decision, but challenged the rest of the award.

As for the asbestos exposure, the court decision said the tenant claimed that it was 91Ƶimpossible for tenants and workers to avoid dangerous exposure.91Ƶ

91Ƶ(The tenant) described the Building as loaded with contaminated airborne dust while it was wrapped in a construction 91Ƶshroud91Ƶ from July to December 2016,91Ƶ said the court decision. 91ƵAfter a fourth stop work order, on December 14, 2016, the asbestos levels were so high that, on January 24, 2107, the Landlord was forced to evacuate all tenants for six weeks of remediation and cleaning of the Building.91Ƶ

91ƵI now lay in bed at night considering the possibility that I may 91Ƶ have my quality of life rapidly decline and quickly end 91Ƶ,91Ƶ the tenant said to the RTB arbitrator, according to the court decision. 91ƵThere is no doubt my lungs are loaded with asbestos fibres and silica crystals, it91Ƶs not possible to have occupied this building in 2016 and avoided exposure, that is now clear91Ƶ. After exposure to asbestos or silica there is never an 91Ƶall clear91Ƶ diagnosis 91Ƶ I will now forever suffer a lingering fear that one day, prematurely, my lung health will rapidly decline as a result of the asbestos, lead and silica I91Ƶve been exposed to.91Ƶ

The landlord challenged the tenant91Ƶs claims and the RTB decision.

91ƵThe Landlord submits this award was patently unreasonable because it failed to identify what findings were relied on regarding jackhammering and concrete drilling. It also submits the arbitrator erroneously placed the onus on the Landlord to demonstrate mitigation of the construction noise, whereas the onus to mitigate is actually on (the tenant) who never raised his noise complaints during construction,91Ƶ said the court decision.

The court disagreed with the landlord.

91ƵIn my view, the landlord has not demonstrated anything approaching patent unreasonableness for this award. The award reasonably reflected the arbitrator91Ƶs findings about (the tenant91Ƶs) loss of quiet enjoyment due to the lengthy, severe construction noise he endured. The findings she made, and conclusions reached therefrom, were all available to her on the evidence,91Ƶ read the decision.

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Chris Campbell

About the Author: Chris Campbell

I joined the Victoria News hub as an editor in 2023, bringing with me over 30 years of experience from community newspapers in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley
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