Mice infest Winnipeg woman's $1M house - Action News
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Manitoba

Mice infest Winnipeg woman's $1M house

A Winnipeg woman says she was shocked to find the $1-million house she recently bought has a mouse infestation so severe, that she has to pay big money to have all the insulation ripped out.

'All you see is just feces and urine,' Carrie Forsythe says about new home

Mice in million-dollar house

12 years ago
Duration 2:07
Winnipeg woman says she was shocked to find the house she recently bought has a mouse infestation so severe, she has to get all the insulation ripped out.

A Winnipeg woman says she was shocked to find the $1-million house she recently bought has a mouse infestation so severe, that she has to pay big money to have all the insulation ripped out.

Carrie Forsythe said that after she took possession of the south Winnipeg home in September, she started opening up the walls to renovate it.

The house, which Carrie Forsythe purchased in September, will have all its drywall and insulation ripped out so exterminators can remove the soiled material. (CBC)

That was when she discovered her5,000-square-foot house was a massive mouse nest, she told CBC News.

"All you see is just feces and urine, just puddles and piles," Forsythe said.

"The whole vapour barrier is just filled with this nest."

Forsythe said that for health reasons, she will have to spend at least tens of thousands of dollars to have the mess cleaned up properly.

Every centimetre of drywall has been torn out so that exterminators can remove all the soiled material, and disinfect the building studs and other areas where there was mouse activity.

The house will then have to be reinsulated,andthe vapour barrier anddrywall will have to bereplaced.

"Now I have a shell, which I love, and it will be clean. But someone's got to help me," Forsythe said.

'Years in the making,' says pest control expert

CBC News went on an independent tour of Forsythe's home with Abell Pest Control's Shaun Jeffrey, who said the mouse infestation is the worst he has ever seen.

"Oh my Godthis is years, years in the making. This is not new,"he observed.

Much of the house, which had been under renovation, is now gutted to the framework to get rid of the mouse problem. (CBC)

Both Jeffrey and the CBC News crew had to wear respirators while walking around the gutted house.

Jeffrey said the insulation on every level of the house contains mouse feces and urine, and all of it must be removed.

He estimated it would have taken about five years for the infestation to reach this state.

Forsythe said thatafter she bought the home in May, the previous owner and his familywere still living there until she took over possession in September.

Forsythe said she did not get the home inspected before purchasing it, but shedid go in with contractors, engineers and architects several times before the handover and no one noticed anything wrong.

Now, she said she will likely have to sue the previous owner.

Previous owner says he didn't know

The previous homeowner told CBC News he did not know anything about a mouse problem, adding that he would have never sold the house if he did.

Forsythe believes he had to have known, but Jeffrey said it is possible the previous owner may not have seen mice in the house, which was constructed with thick walls and thick insulation.

A spokesperson for the Manitoba Real Estate Association says the issue will likely have to be settled in court.

The association is urging all homebuyers to get an inspection done before making their purchases.

Ari Marantz, a certified home inspector in Winnipeg, said a proper inspection might have caught the mouse problem, although it is not normally on the checklist.

A home inspector would have seen red flags suggesting a mouse infestation, and a followup might have identified the problem further, Marantz said.

Marantz said a mouse infestation of this magnitude is rare in Winnipeg, but it occurs more frequently in rural areas.

Forsythe's house is located just outside the Perimeter Highway, on the outskirts of the city.

With files from the CBC's Sean Kavanagh