Pathways Abilities Society Executive Director Charisse Daley said they are in it for the long haul when it comes to supporting the residents of Hadgraft Wilson Place.
The society received notice from the Kelowna Fire Department on March 29 that an evacuation would be ordered for 1360 Bertram Street. Residents received notice the following Sunday.
Pathways has put more than 80 tenants up at the Prestige and Ramada hotels and provided them with food vouchers. All tenants are still required to pay rent for the month of April.
鈥淲e hope to know more on Thursday, Friday,鈥 Daley said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when we鈥檝e committed to making sure everybody has an update.鈥
It was noted that Pathways has been bringing up safety concerns regarding the building for some time. Daley said they never expected to get to the point of needing to evacuate the building.
Kelowna Fire Chief Dwight Seymour said the decision to evacuate wasn鈥檛 made lightly.
Seymour said the city forwarded information to him last week from engineers with concerns about ground movement and its impacts on Hadgraft Wilson Place. The fire department did an assessment of the building and brought in their own engineering experts.
The fire department noted two things of major concern. One concern is that additional shifting of the building risks the integrity of safety features. Seymour gave the example of a shift causing a pipe to break and impacting the fire sprinkler system in the event of an emergency.
鈥淭here have been issues with doors being able to open and close. So, we want to make sure there wouldn鈥檛 be a shift and all of a sudden the resident, in the event of a fire or an emergency, can鈥檛 get out of their suite.鈥 Seymour added it鈥檚 a problem in the event of a fire if the doors can鈥檛 close properly as smoke and fire can travel faster and allow less time for residents to evacuate.
Hadgraft Wilson Place started deteriorating as construction on the University of British Columbia Okanagan (UBCO) downtown Kelowna campus caused significant ground shifting.
A controlled evacuation was ordered of the apartment building giving residents until 6 p.m. on April 2 to leave the property. Seymour said the decision was made out of an abundance of caution to avoid an emergency evacuation or even worse, a recovery scenario.
UBCO has said construction on the project has been voluntarily stopped.
Neither project manager UBC Properties Trust nor engineering consulting firm Aplin Martin has responded to Black Press requests for an interview.
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