Monday, 4 May 2020

Breathing asbestos and dangerous substances in an apartment

WHAT ARE A TENANT'S RIGHTS?

The topic of this blog article comes up due to several recent cases I've worked on and a recent newspaper article about an Ottawa tenant who fears having been exposed to asbestos fibres in her apartment while the landlord was carrying out a repair.    My cases involved asbestos, silica, and electromagnetic fields.

Exposure to dangerous substances in a rental unit causes a fair bit of anxiety.  It is not uncommon for the tenant to have a more serious view of the risk posed by the dangerous substance than the view of the landlord or the view of the contractors hired by the landlord.   It seems that many tenants fear that the landlord is indifferent to the health and safety of the tenant and that shortcuts are being taken in dealing with dangerous substances.  The shortcuts are intended to save money by avoiding the safety protocols to do the job correctly.  Further, it seems, that certain contractors appear to be indifferent to the "dangerous" substances and that they don't perceive the risks that the "dangerous" substances pose.

This last statement about the "perception of risks" is a dominant feature in cases about dangerous substances.   Invariably, the landlord side of the case will often argue that the tenant is over-reacting due to a false appreciation of the actual dangers posed by the substances.  The argument is that a tenant hears a word (like "asbestos") and over-reacts out of a needless panic.  The suggestion that the tenant is neurotic and hence unbalanced is the underlying thrust of the argument.  The tenant's overreaction may be fueled by a "google" search that gives up horror stories in the countless number of search results that seem to prioritize the bad news stories and this in turn feeds the narrative that the tenant's appreciation of the circumstances is inaccurate.

So what is the right approach to "dangerous substances" in a rental unit?  Oddly enough, there isn't a clear cut and dried approach.  Tenants, and people generally, are surprised to learn that there is very little legal guidance in how to deal with exposure to substances like asbestos, silica, EMF, in residential apartments.  As you go looking for law and regulations what does pop up are Occupational Health and Safety requirements and guidelines.  How substances like these need to be dealt with in the workplace is in fact addressed in quite some detail.  The significant legal protection is apparent when you see a workplace dealing with asbestos and negative pressure rooms, full personal protective equipment, air filtration, and bagging of asbestos containing materials with disposal to special sites for dangerous substances.   However, aside from finding law dealing with these substances in a work setting there is very little (to nothing) in the context of a residential apartment/rental unit.

EXAMPLE OF A TYPICAL PROBLEM

How about some examples of the context of what I'm taking about.  Imagine an apartment where there is a water leak in the bathroom.  The leak appears to be behind a wall or perhaps in the ceiling as the wall is getting soft and pliable.  The landlord attends the unit and figures that the only way to determine what is going on is to "open up" the floor/wall/ceiling in the area where there is water/wetness/dampness.  Doing so requires cutting into the materials to expose the interior of the wall or floor or ceiling.  That cut might be through plaster, drywall, ceramic tiles, pliable tiles, paints (think lead), and other substances.   The extent of the cutting really depends on how much is needed to find the source of the problem.

So, imagine a wet ceiling in an apartment in the bathroom with the wall getting soft behind ceramic tiles that seem to falling from the wall.  The landlord sends a contractor who cuts the wall and ceiling around a shower handle/faucet and the shower head.  The source of a leak isn't immediately apparent, there is a stack in the wall that is opened and now the landlord goes to the unit above and opens the wall and piece of the floor.  All of this to hunt for the source of the leak which surprise surprise has nothing to do with the plumbing but instead is coming from the flat roof and pooled water that has found a hole to the inside of the building.   Now that the source of the water is identified we look around and see--cut ceramic tile, cut floor tile, cut plaster, cut drywall, cut grout, and layers of other materials that had been covered in years past during renovations.  The cutting process leaves a fine dust like powder settling all over the apartment.  Is any of this stuff dangerous?

It turns out that many people will research whether this dust is dangerous.  Inevitably, they find references to mold, asbestos, silica, lead, and other toxic substances.  Now worried about their health, they approach the landlord and/or the contractor to ask for information and confirmation that their health is not in jeopardy.  A fairly typical and flippant response is "there is nothing to worry about".  For many, this answer does not inspire confidence.

Sometimes however, the landlord or contractor will say, "you're right".  Before we start work on repairing or renovating this space we will need to take the necessary safety precautions.  Therefore we will have a "Designated Substances Survey" conducted.  This will involve the gathering of samples from all around the apartment from all of the things we intend to move/disturb/replace/repair.  The samples are collected and sent to a lab that will test the samples (scientifically) and prepare a report indicating which samples contained any of the dangerous substances.

This kind of a response is reassuring, however, the tenant is left wondering "what about the fine dust all over my apartment that you caused while looking for the leak"?   Shouldn't the tests have been done before you ripped open the walls/floor etc.?  

If a contractor/landlord goes through the process of doing a "designated substances survey" my experience is that they will follow the processes necessary to handle any identified substances properly.  In essence if they go through the trouble of testing they are prepared to act in accordance with what the tests reveal.

The issue lies more with the work being done where the landlord or contractor feels that it is unnecessary to test for dangerous substances and where they avoid doing the "designated substances survey".  What rights does a tenant have then?  Does the Residential Tenancies Act provide any protection for tenants?

THE RESIDENTIAL TENANCIES ACT

There is nothing in the Residential Tenancies Act that specifically deals with designated substances in a rental unit.  By this I mean, if you search the entire Residential Tenancies Act and the Regulations thereto you will not find the word "asbestos" anywhere.  You will have a similar result when you search for other dangerous substances.  The RTA does not specify specific rules for specific substances.  Does this mean that the tenant is simply out of luck and subject to the whim of the landlord and its contractors?

It turns out that there is, in fact, protection for tenants from dangerous substances like asbestos, in the Residential Tenancies Act.  Unfortunately, the protection is somewhat indirect and there is no explicit direction or clear set of rules that deal with the specific things that a tenant sees in their apartment--for example, the white dust settling all over the unit, debris from construction materials, mold spores entering the air, or any of the other things a tenant sees as a result of construction work.  The protections available to a tenant arise from general obligations and duties imposed on a landlord under the Residential Tenancies Act.

How it works

The Residential Tenancies Act, at section 20, sets out the "Landlord's Responsibility to Repair".  This section requires the landlord to maintain a rental unit in a good state of repair and fit for habitation and for complying with health, safety, housing and maintenance standards.  These phrases, as you can see, are rather open ended and broad.  What exactly does the phrase "good state of repair" mean--I'd suggest it means an awful lot and can include a great many things that are beneficial for a tenant.  Likewise for the phrase "fit for habitation" and complying with "health, safety, housing and maintenance standards".   These phrases are, in my opinion, very broad and open ended and therefore impose a rather significant burden on a landlord.  The wording is broad and general so that a landlord can't easily avoid the obligations through technicalities.

Using for a minute, our asbestos example and the cutting of the wall/floor/ceiling.  If the act of cutting open the walls/floor/ceiling resulted in friable asbestos fibre being dislodged and put into the air capable of being breathed would you not conclude that the apartment was NOT "fit for habitation"?   If the asbestos fibre can be inhaled is the landlord complying with health and safety?   If open walls are exposing black mold into the rental unit and tenants are breathing the mold spores is the unit "fit for habitation"?  I think that the answer very clearly is that it is not.  The broad wording of section 20 RTA is easily engaged (and breached) if you can demonstrate a dangerous activity happening in the rental unit (i.e. breathing in asbestos fibres, mold spores, etc.).

Accordingly, we need to look at section 20 of the Residential Tenancies Act as establishing a very high burden on the landlord to fulfill its maintenance responsibilities in accordance with the duty described in this section.  The duty, for sure, is broadly worded and in that breadth it will capture all sorts of actions and situations that should not occur.  This is the case even though the word "asbestos" does not appear (nor any other dangerous substance) anywhere in the RTA.

So what is a tenant to do if the fine white dust covering everything is suspected of being a dangerous substance and the landlord or its contractor is indifferent and unwilling to do anything about it?   What if the landlord says that the dust is harmless and there is nothing to do but get out the Swiffer?

The first steps will be to see if an official inspector can be found to make Orders against the landlord.  This is the preferred course of action (if possible) because it results in immediate action without much effort or work for the tenant.  Therefore, if the premises are an active work site then the Ontario Ministry of Labour may exercise its administrative and/or regulatory enforcement powers under the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA).  There can be "stop work" orders and prosecutions as necessary.  A tenant could benefit from such inspections and orders even if the Ministry's mandate is the workers and OHSA and not specifically tenants in the housing sense.

If appealing to officialdom (Ministry of Labour) is not possible or impractical, what should a tenant do then?  The first step, I think is to collect samples and send them to a lab for testing.  The question to be answered is whether there actually is a risk and a dangerous substance in the rental unit.  Without scientific proof (test results), that the substances being identified by a tenant are dangerous the presumption will be that they are not.  If a tenant wishes to compel the landlord to treat a unit as containing designated and harmful substances the tenant will have to prove that those substances exist in the rental unit.  If the landlord denies that the powder, dust, mold, fibres, paint chips, etc., are dangerous and that special handling is not required it is up to the tenant to prove that indeed the powder, dust, mold, fibres, etc., are indeed dangerous and designated substances because in the absence of doing so the tenant will not meet the burden of proof that is applicable in any application.  This is the first critical step that needs to be done.

With a report in hand identifying the presence of "asbestos" or "dangerous mold" or "lead paint", a tenant can then link the handling of these dangerous substances, inside the apartment or rental unit, with the duty imposed on a landlord under section 20.    The tenant's concerns, once the presence of a dangerous or designated substance is identified, are given credibility as it can't be said that you should be indifferent to the presence of "asbestos" that you prove as present based on the lab report testing the materials from inside the apartment.

The next step is for a tenant to establish what the presence of the designated substance in their rental unit means to their health, safety, and personal circumstances.   There may be "asbestos" but what does this mean for habitability of the apartment and the tenant's health?   That there is asbestos in a rental unit is not at all a surprise and that a test result of materials in a unit would reveal a designated (and dangerous substance) is not in itself shocking.  Asbestos is in many materials and it is "safe" because it is bound to other materials and not airborne capable of being inhaled.  So what is it about the presence of the designated substance, (proven to be in the rental unit by the lab report), that makes it dangerous to the tenant?

Answering this last question can be done in many different ways.  If we are talking about disturbed asbestos fibre (from cutting, drilling, scrapping or chipping), in a dust that has settled through the apartment  onto carpet, furniture, fixtures, I would be inclined to seek a medical report/opinion about the risks of exposure to asbestos in this form.  The manner of the asbestos containing dust getting onto everything is indeed relevant.  Asbestos that was combined in a floor tile that now is airborne as a result of cutting, drilling etc., has a very different safety profile that needs to be addressed by the right professional.

The right professional may be the tenant's family doctor, who might themselves have consulted with a specialist, to answer the question:  "Is my patient exposed to any risk if they inhale white dust that has been shown to contain asbestos fibres"?  Perhaps the doctor is given a copy of the lab report showing the concentrations of the substances identified.  The doctor can then identify the health risk to the tenant and provide advice.  That advice might include a direction not to disturb the dust, not to inhale it, to have the dust professionally cleaned, and for the tenant to not to remain in the unit pending the dust being cleaned up.  The opinions expressed by the doctor should be grounded in their knowledge and expertise as physicians.

Other experts can also be consulted and a series of opinions can be obtained that explain the nature of the substance, how it is a danger, how it should be handled, and what a person who has been exposed can do to mitigate the risks of exposure.

Once this evidence has been obtained a tenant should continue to try and work with the landlord to have the issue addressed.  On the assumption that the landlord and its contractor remain indifferent to the situation the next step is to file a T6 Application with the Ontario Landlord and Tenant Board.  The T6 Application is a tenant's application about maintenance.   In that application a tenant is setting out the maintenance problems (from our example--the wet wall) and what the landlord did (cut the wall) and how that action caused a dangerous substance to be distributed around the apartment (proven to be a dangerous substance by the lab report).

The application (T6) will continue to explain that the presence of the dangerous substance is a breach of the section 20 RTA obligation because it exposes the tenant to serious health risks and that while the serious health risks are present the unit is not "fit for habitation".   The serious health risks are explained in the doctors report.  Additional reports (engineers, specialists, health inspectors, etc.), can be referenced to prove these points.

The second part of the T6 application will then be to claim the appropriate remedies.  If the tenant has proven the existence of the duty (easy--because that's section 20), the breach of the duty (being exposed to the dangerous substance as explained in the lab report) and that the breach amounting to a serious health danger (proven by doctor's report), the question will be what should the LTB order/award the tenant.

The LTB's powers in a T6 application are fairly broad and the LTB can Order the landlord to do certain work, clean up, repair, and do things in a way that makes the rental unit safe.  The tenant can be awarded a rent abatement, replacement costs for damaged personal property, and there is a broad power to make other appropriate awards.   What is appropriate really depends on the facts of the case.

A word of caution when bringing T6 applications (and/or the associated T2 Tenant's Rights application).  The Landlord and Tenant Board has a maximum jurisdiction of $35,000, and it is not well set up as a venue for personal injury claims.  If the exposure to the designated substance has potentially caused significant personal injury it may be wise to pursue the claim in the Superior Court where there is no monetary maximum to the award.  While splitting claims is generally frowned upon and there is a risk of losing the right to sue (section 207 (3) RTA), it may be worth exploring having the LTB make orders in relation to clean up only and nothing with respect to the health impacts of the incident with the intent of preserving the personal injury aspect of the claim to the Superior Court.


 Michael K. E. Thiele
www.ottawalawyers.com



   

2 comments:

  1. Hi. Your blog spot is very informative. Tenants lease starts not on first of month, but after first, say near end of month. If tenant is then month to month,
    is tenant in arrears if they leave end of June and do not pay for the difference
    if month end then ends June 23? That is June 24 to June 30. Appreciate response.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi: A lease does not have to be a calendar month. You can go from 15th to 14th, or any other combination. That being said, it sure makes life easier if you run on a calendar month and simply pro-rate the start. Once the first term of the lease is up (usually a year) and the lease becomes "month to month" this does not mean it changes from whatever it was to a calendar month. The same "period" continues even on the month to month.

      Michael K. E. Thiele
      www.ottawalawyers.com

      Delete

IMPORTANT NOTICE

Any answers provided are intended to reflect the Law of Ontario, Canada. The answers are not legal advice and no one should rely on the answers provided as legal advice. The answers are intended to be general information about Ontario Law and are the personal view of the author based on the limited facts provided to the author. The answers may not be legally accurate and may indeed be contrary to the law of Ontario. Answers and conclusions drawn may have been different if facts had been shared that have not been disclosed in the comment/question. This blog is intended to assist people in learning about Ontario Landlord and Tenant Law. However, if you have actual legal problems this blog should under no circumstances replace proper legal advice obtained by retaining a lawyer or licensed paralegal to advise you. Nothing in this blog, comments submitted or answers provided, gives rise to a solicitor and client relationship. Comments are published as submitted and commenters should be aware that if they identify themselves in a comment that their identity will become public upon the comment being published. Comments that have been published may be deleted upon request to the author.

The content of this article and any responses to comments are intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Search This Blog