Decade after fatal fire, some Quebec seniors’ residences unable to install sprinklers
MONTREAL — Ten years after 32 people died in a fire that ripped through a residential complex for seniors in rural Quebec, around a quarter of all private seniors’ residences in the province are still struggling to comply with a requirement to install sprinkler systems.
The January 2014 fire at the Résidence du Havre in L’Isle-Verte, Que. — nearly 200 kilometres northeast of Quebec City — sent shock waves through the province. A subsequent investigation and 2015 report by the Quebec coroner’s office led the provincial government to mandate sprinklers in all seniors’ residences, with exceptions for institutions housing fewer than 10 people.
Now, time is running out for some residences to meet the requirement. In his report, Coroner Cyrille Delâge suggested giving residences five years to comply. The provincial government eventually extended the deadline to Dec. 2, 2024.
As of the end of last year, 353 of Quebec’s 1,413 private seniors’ residents had still not installed sprinklers, according to data shared with The Canadian Press by the office of the provincial minister responsible for seniors, Sonia Bélanger.