excavation

Egan: The pipes froze, burst, flooded the basement — Wendy's woes continue

Egan: The pipes froze, burst, flooded the basement — Wendy's woes continue

The excavation next door stopped 15 months ago but Wendy Richards is still digging out of the hole left behind. The Manotick woman has been fighting to have her property — and peace of mind — restored after unauthorized construction removed mature trees and a pile of earth within inches of her 1886 foundation. And, just when it looked like things couldn’t get any worse, my, how they did. “I don’t even know what to do anymore.” Richards woke up Jan. 11 to discover there was no water in the taps — frozen pipes, which she is convinced are a side-effect of her foundation now broadly exposed to the winter elements.

Egan: 'The capital of Canada and we're fighting for clean water'

Egan: 'The capital of Canada and we're fighting for clean water'

“Each time there’s construction, there’s contamination,” said Crosby, pointing to projects like the Montfort’s expanded parking garage or the new Shepherds of Good Hope building. He counts perhaps 10 spikes in the past 15 years, leading to a need to “shock” his water system with cleansing chemicals. “We shocked it so often that it corroded the fittings on the pressure tank.” Over the years, there have been vibrations strong enough to rattle dishes and knock a connecting pipe off the septic system. “This has always been a concern,” said Parent, a retired public servant. “It raises the spectre of our wells drying out. With all this development, the danger becomes increasingly more serious.”