Engineer suspended in N.B. and P.E.I., lawsuits allege flawed apartment-building designs
Dieppe case alleges structural failures that included 'significant cracking in foundation walls'
A Moncton structural engineer has been suspended in two provinces, and lawsuits have been filed alleging design flaws in three apartment buildings she helped design.
A May 17 notice from the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of New Brunswick says Hélène Thériault has had her licence to practise suspended.
"Clients of Ms. Hélène Thériault are advised to obtain new Professional Engineering support for their projects immediately," the notice states.
Association CEO and registrar Lia Daborn told Information Morning Moncton that its complaints committee received information about "a number of buildings in the province" serious enough to suspend her licence until further information gathered and a disciplinary hearing held.
A disciplinary hearing had been scheduled for June 10 in New Brunswick, but has been indefinitely delayed.
Notifying municipalities, building owners
Asked how many buildings are affected, Daborn said they're still gathering information and notifying municipalities and building owners.
Some apartment buildings were already occupied, while others are still in the construction and development process. Daborn said they have made those builders or owners aware of potential issues.
"As far as I am aware, there have been no evacuations or requirements for people to be evicted or told to move out," Daborn said.
"Our understanding is that the building owners are taking the appropriate action to ensure that the buildings are safe for people."
Jim Landrigan, executive director and registrar for Engineers PEI, said the organization suspended Thériault after being notified by counterparts in New Brunswick.
"We were told there was an issue with some of the structures that had underground parking, that it wasn't properly designed and there could be a failure as a result,"