Quebec woman who lost husband in Legionnaires' outbreak wants to sue province - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec woman who lost husband in Legionnaires' outbreak wants to sue province

Solange Allen's husband Claude Desjardins died of Legionnaires' disease during the 2012 outbreak. Now Allen is seeking permission to launch a class-action suit seeking compensation from Quebec.

14 people died, 167 others got sick from 2012 outbreak traced to Quebec City building

Solange Allen is seeking permission to launch a class-action suit aimed at public health officials, the province of Quebec and the owner of the building where Legionella bacteria flourished in 2012. (Catou MacKinnon/CBC)

A lawyer requesting permission to filea class-action lawsuit over the 2012 deadly Legionnaires' outbreak in Quebec City says public health officials weren't properly prepared to deal with the situation.

Jean-PierreMnardargued at the Quebec City courthouse on Tuesday that mismanagement bypublic health officials made the outbreak last longerand led to more deaths.

Mnardis representingSolangeAllen, who lost her husband Claude Desjardins to the severe pneumonia caused bytheLegionellabacterium.

Desjardinswas among the 14 people who died that summer.

Public health officials said 167 other people were infected by the bacteriumover the course of the summer.

An up-closed electron micrograph image of a pink-coloured bacteria on a teal blue background
The deadly bacteria grow in the stagnant water of cooling systems and spread in droplets through air conditioning. (Janice Haney Carr/Centers for Disease Control/Associated Press)

It took more than two months to find the source of the bacteria, which turned out to bewater in the rooftop cooling system of a downtown building.

The proposed lawsuit contends the province should have established a mandatory list of all buildings with cooling systems, as recommended in the late 1990s after an earlier Legionnaires' outbreak in the city.

Allen said her husband was 64 when he died and four months away from retirement.

She was joined in court Tuesday byothers who lost a relativeto listen to legal arguments about whether the class-action should be allowed.

The proposed lawsuit isaimed at public health officials, the province of Quebec and the owner of the building where the bacteria flourished.Quebec's attorney generalis also named in the proposed suit.