Yellowknife company helps Behchoko elder with faulty furnace - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 04:33 AM | Calgary | -12.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Yellowknife company helps Behchoko elder with faulty furnace

A Yellowknife electrical company has decided to help out a Behchoko elder with a dying furnace - free of charge.

Polar Ice Mechanical stepped in to help Adele Camile for free

Patrick Bedingfield (second from left) was assigned the furnace repair at Adele Camile's house in Behchok. He said the repair was 'very necessary' and could have resulted in a house fire if left untouched. (Polar Ice Mechanical/Facebook)

A Yellowknife electrical company has decided to help out a Behchok elder with a dying furnace free of charge.

Doreen Wedzin-Brazeau, the co-owner of Polar Ice Mechanical, heard elder Adele Camile's story on CBC and decided to take action.

Camile, 82, had a dying furnace and was pleading for a professional electrician to take a look at it before her house burned down.

Doreen Wedzin-Brazeau, the co-owner of Polar Ice Mechanical, re-organized her client's schedules on Dec. 12 to make sure Adele Camile's furnace could be repaired.

Wedzin-Brazeau said a technician was already headed to Behchok Thursday morning to do other repairs in the community. She rescheduled her four other clients to make sure there was enough time to do Camile's repair.

"She's an elder and she has no money," Wedzin-Brazeau told CBC. "There is no one who is certified in her community to help repair her furnace."

Patrick Bedingfield was that technician. He crawled underneath Camile's house to inspect the furnace. When Bedingfield took it apart, he found a dead ignition, the motor pump was almost completely stripped away, and the nozzle needed to be replaced.

He explained the situation to Camile, who understands limited English, and some of her relatives who came to the house once they found out a mechanic was coming.

"[Camile] wasn't going to immediately get heat back without the repair," Bedingfield said. "It was a very necessary repair."

Bedingfield said fuel could have flooded the furnace and caused a fire, which could have burnt her house down. At best, without the repair, Camile would be without heat indefinitely.

Adele Camile, 82, sits in her home in Behchoko. The elder said her furnace has not worked properly for over a month before Polar Ice repaired it. (Anna Desmarais/CBC)

Bedingfield said Camile was thrilled when she found out that the company was not going to charge her for the repair.

"She was all smiles, she was obviously very happy," Bedingfield said.

CBC was not able to immediately reach Camile or her family to get their reaction.

This isn't the first time that Wedzin-Brazeau said she's waived repair fees for elders. There have been a handful of cases in Yellowknife where the company has said repairs are on the house.

"I don't ask who is going to pay for the job," Wedzin-Brazeau said. "We just get the job done."