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Subcontractors steaming over Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge project

The partially complete 143-metre-long Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge. Joël Côté-Cright

The partially complete 143-metre-long Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge.

Courtney Symons
Published on July 13, 2012
Published on July 10, 2012
Courtney Symons  RSS Feed

Incomplete construction projects across the country abandoned by ConCreate USL Ltd. Partnership following its bankruptcy protection filing have been handed to Horseshoe Hill Construction Inc., a new company reportedly made up of senior members from the bankrupt firm headquartered in Bolton, Ont.

Topics :
The Guarantee Company of North America , CBC , Montacier International , Horseshoe Hill , Ottawa , Rideau River

It’s so new, in fact, that the company has a website with only one page (currently under construction) with only a P.O. Box number and a generic e-mail address, and a Facebook page without any posted content.

Bonding firm The Guarantee Company of North America picked Horseshoe Hill to finish the Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge linking Barrhaven and Riverside South, apparently placing the contract back in the hands of officials who ran the now-defunct company.

Several current Horseshoe Hill employees also list experience with ConCreate USL on their LinkedIn profiles. Furthermore, Bob Dempsey, president of The Guarantee Company of North America, told CBC that Horseshoe Hill is a new company made up of senior people from ConCreate USL.

While Mr. Dempsey did not return messages left by OBJ, several subcontractors say Horseshoe Hill will complete the projects on a time and materials basis, billing the bonding company for the hours and labour provided, rather than adhering to the budget outlined in the previous contract.

ConCreate’s bid for the $45.2-million eight-lane bridge across the Rideau River came in more than $1 million cheaper than the nearest competing bid from local construction company R.W. Tomlinson. Yet Tomlinson wasn’t called when the original company filed for bankruptcy, leaving various subcontractors in the lurch and on the hook for hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid labour and services.

“This is something new,” said Dale Harley, a spokesperson for the National Capital Heavy Construction Association. “It’s a little concerning for people in the business that it’s gone this way. It’s not good for business.”

 

UNPAID LABOUR

DCM Erectors was hired by ConCreate to erect the bridge, but faced construction delays. That’s because the bridge’s steel fabricator, Nova Scotia-based Cherubini Metal Works Ltd., never received the $4.5 million that the city paid for its services, even though several other subcontractors were told by ConCreate officials that the money was sent.

The delays left DCM Erectors to string out its subcontractor relationships without having any work for them. Eventually, Horseshoe Hill told the company its services were no longer needed and brought in Montacier International Inc. from Quebec to finish the job instead.

DCM now faces a construction lien lawsuit from Access Rigging Services, a Carp-based company that has yet to receive payment from DCM Erectors for its shoring services. Access Rigging is also taking legal action against ConCreate for unreceived payments.

DCM’s general superintendent, Gary Counsell, said that $2.2 million of its $3-million contract went unpaid, and that Horseshoe Hill didn’t give DCM the chance to complete the work it had been promised.

“These guys (ConCreate) went out the front door with two suitcases full of money because they knew every job in Canada was going to tank,” Mr. Counsell said. “Then they turned around, and came in the back door with empty suitcases.”

 

BRIDGE TO NOWHERE

Meanwhile, the City of Ottawa maintains the bridge is 60 per cent complete and will be finished by August 2013.

But that bridge is actually closer to 30 per cent complete, Mr. Counsell said.

The structure still needs to be erected and rolled over the water, with multiple steps remaining.

“That bridge is not going to be done next year,” said Frank Sved, general manager for Ottawa-based Dulepka Equipment Rentals Inc., which provided and maintained the cranes used on the project as a subcontractor under DCM Erectors.

 

DCM ERECTORS TO SUE THE CITY OF OTTAWA

The erector originally hired for the Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge said it has no choice but to sue the city after it confiscated equipment used on the project.

DCM’s general superintendent Gary Counsell said he built a specialized jig, a tent to cover it and an electrical container specifically for the bridge. Mr. Counsell said he was going to take the equipment with him after being fired from the job and replaced by Quebec-based erector Montacier International Inc. when Horseshoe Hill Construction took over the job.

Mr. Counsell said a city engineer approached him to purchase the setup, but shortly afterwards he received a solicitor’s letter saying the city owned the equipment – although it was built after the contract was signed and therefore not mentioned anywhere within it.

“I really don’t think that the city has a leg to stand on,” Mr. Counsell said. “I think that somewhere down the road, they’re going to be sorry for this.”

The company of 700 employees has an Ottawa office but is headquartered in Toronto.

“You stole my equipment, you stole the chance for me to make my money back, yeah I’m mad,” he said of the city and Horseshoe Hill.

The jig cost DCM around $200,000, the tent $6,000 and the electrical container $30,000.

The city could not be reached for comment.

Dulepka is taking legal action to reclaim the $90,000 it’s still owed by DCM, but its management feels the city needs to be held accountable for not questioning the holding company’s decision to hire Horseshoe Hill, rather than going to one of the original bidders, such as Tomlinson.

“These people were a very viable local contractor … Now millions of dollars have gone out of town, into the pockets of other people. Money was taken away from them, and it went where? We don’t know,” Mr. Sved said, referring to the unpaid labour of subcontractors.

The city did not reply for comment by press time, and neither the The Guarantee Company of North America nor Horseshoe Hill replied to OBJ’s phone calls and e-mails.

Comments

  • Username
    John Krasko
    - January 5, 2013 at 13:43:53

    Dear Citizens I am the project manager of the company that will complete this work. If you have any concerns please call me at Horseshoe Hill Construction. Thank you.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    James Munro
    - November 24, 2012 at 13:29:55

    another example of how the city of Ottawa screws up and eventually hands off the bill to city of Ottawa Tax payers. I don't plan to stick around to pay the bill and for any future screw ups.

    Submit a comment

    • Username
      Paul
      - January 3, 2013 at 12:34:57

      Everything this Council touches turns to s**t! They screwed up the watermain service in Manotick, clogging up the downtown for over a year resulting in the closure of several businesses. They screwed up the light rail plan (at outrageous cost), they screwed up the Presto card system. They have bungled parking in the downtown core hurting local business once again. Snow removal and garbage collection are now a joke. THEN THERE IS THE BRIDGE. Driving by there every morning it is clear that progress is virtually at a halt. No way it opens in 2013! Not with this group of clowns unning the show.

  • Username
    f bealle
    - September 9, 2012 at 23:51:12

    John's comments are true, but would have resulted in another ho-hum bridge. For 48 million, this would have been a beautiful bridge. The quality of material going into it was superb. Too bad that the Environmental authorities were so severe about safeguarding the purity of the water, which usually compares with a slough. Building the arches on land costs much more than building over the water. Brilliant design, but if the Rideau Canal footbridge cost 5 million (similar arches) how could this 125 metre bridge cost 48 million? Overall, the stiffing of excellent subcontractors derived from obvious cost overruns, and the tragic alliance with TriWest when ConCreate ran into problems in 2011. This will have a huge domino effect on Canadian projects. I wish the Ottawa Citizen would tell the whole story.

    Submit a comment

  • Username
    John Lofthouse
    - August 12, 2012 at 13:13:47

    There are hundreds of bridges already built that could have been used as an specimen for this bridge. whoever choose this design was an making a decision above his skill range. Whoever selected the builder is equally irresponsible. The whole project is misquided.

    Submit a comment

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