N.B. inspecting AIM sites as fire code compliance deadline passes - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. inspecting AIM sites as fire code compliance deadline passes

The New Brunswick government says it is inspecting a metal recycling company's sites to see if it is now in compliance with the fire code.

Scrap metal company's sites in Moncton, Saint John and Fredericton had until Feb. 7

Empty train cars with piles of scrap material and several buildings.
American Iron and Metal's site off Toombs Street in Moncton had noticeably smaller piles of scrap material when viewed from above on Wednesday. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The New Brunswick government says it is inspecting a metal recycling company's sites to see if it is now in compliance with the fire code.

American Iron and Metal was given until Wednesday to comply with the code at its scrapyards in the province's three major cities.

"American Iron and Metal (AIM) has until today to reach compliance with National Fire Code provisions at their facilities on Toombs Street in Moncton, Recycling Street in Saint John, and Carman Avenue in Fredericton," Allan Dearing, a spokesperson for the province, said in an emailed statement Wednesday.

"The Office of the Fire Marshal will be conducting inspections this week to ensure full compliance."

Dearing said the department won't provide any other comments until the inspections are complete.

An overhead view of piles of scrap material with a yellow excavator and loader.
AIM's Saint John location on Recycling Street on Wednesday. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The statement didn't answer what consequences the company could face if inspectors determine the sites haven't complied.

CBC News went to look at the three sites Wednesday morning, andall three appeared to have less scrap material than before.

The sites were among 10 locations issued compliance notices by provincial inspectors last year during checks of87 scrapyards around New Brunswick.

Heavy equipment near piles of snow covered scrap material.
The company's site in Fredericton off Carman Avenue on Wednesday. (Mike Heenan/CBC)

The provincewideinspections were carried out following the release of a report on amassive fire at AIM's west Saint John port site on Sept. 14. That fireburned for roughly 40 hours andprompted a city-wide shelter in place order because of hazardoussmoke.

The AIM sites were ordered to fix various issues.

TheMoncton site was ordered to develop a fire safety plan and ensurepiles of material are stored in compliance with the 2015 National Fire Code of Canada. That code restricts piles of scrap to no more than six metres in height.

The Saint John location was ordered to install a fence.

AIM went to court in December to challenge the deadline to comply with the orders. The company in a court filing said it couldn't meet the timeline previously set by the province because of the amount of material it would need to move and the availability of trucks and railcars.

Before a judge heard the case, the company and province reached an agreement to extend the deadline to Feb. 7.

AIM also agreed to stop accepting new material at the three sites.

The company has yet to respond to a request for comment.

The deadline doesn't affect AIM's port site where the fire burned in September.

Public Safety Minister Kris Austin revoked the company's approval for that location under the province's Salvage Dealers Licensing Act in late December. The company also has a separate approval from the provincial Environment Department,which wassuspended after the fire.

The company had 90 days to challenge the minister's decision in court, a timeframe that ends in late March.