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They bought a home on Idyllic Terrace. Since the explosion, things have been anything but

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Aim├йe Nzaba’s family was planning a special celebration for their first night in their new home on Idyllic Terrace.

Nzaba, a hospital nurse who has worked through the COVID-19 pandemic, and her self-employed husband, D├йsir├й Ndongo, had helped design their roomier second home in Ottawa’s Orl├йans suburb. They were set to get the keys March 1, and planned to camp out that night alongside┬аtheir two boys in the master bedroom.

“It┬аwas our way of celebrating:┬аsleep all four┬аtogether on the the duvet and eat junk food,”┬аNzaba said.┬а

But all that got upended on Feb. 13, when the family was thrust┬аinto what Nzaba called a┬а“miserable” period of uncertainty.

According to police and court documents, that was the day 35-year-old Kody Crosby allegedly stole water heaters┬аfrom a pair of homes on Blossom Pass Terrace┬атАФ only steps away from Nzaba’s new home.

Police say Crosby, whom they knew for having previously broken into other construction sites across the city,┬а left the natural gas supply open. The resulting┬аexplosion sent several people to hospital and damaged many homes at Minto Communities’ Avalon Vista development.┬а

Charges against Crosby include┬аcriminal negligence causing bodily harm, arson against people and property, and breaking and entering.┬аNone of those allegations┬аhave been proven in court, where Crosby is┬аnext slated to appear on Thursday.┬а

Nzaba says she doesn’t know what to think of Crosby. She’s got problems of her own,┬аlike the fact that her future backyard currently faces┬аthe scene of destruction.

While her family doesn’t know how badly┬аtheir house was damaged, Minto has told them it will need more time to get it┬аready, pushing the┬аclosing date to May 10.

Nzaba shows pictures of her future home on her phone. (Olivier Periard/Radio-Canada)

“I can’t imagine the anxiety that┬аwould┬аgo [with]┬аbeing displaced and [initially] not knowing when you might be back in your home,” said┬аOrl├йans South-Navan Coun. Catherine Kitts.┬а

When CBC interviewed Nzaba┬аon Thursday, she said the family had taken refuge at three separate places, including the home of a fellow parishioner, because they’d┬аalready sold their prior home and their belongings are in storage.┬а

Asking others for help was not easy.

“Every family has its own problems,” she said. “We have [pride] too.”┬а

Aimee and Valere
Nzaba and her husband, D├йsir├й Ndongo, grasp hands after their Thursday interview with CBC. (Olivier Periard/CBC)

‘Unavoidable delay’

Since the family hasn’t moved in, their new home insurance hasn’t┬аtaken effect.┬а

In the days after the explosion, they asked Minto about the possibility of being reimbursed for unexpected costs like the longer need for storage.

As early as Feb. 17, the day before Ottawa police’s arson unit took over the investigation and the explosion was deemed criminal, the company labelled the event an “unavoidable delay,” according to correspondence┬аNzaba┬аshared with CBC.┬а

While Minto expressed sympathy for the family’s situation┬аand stated┬аthe company offered the family accommodation in one of its rental apartments,┬аa company┬аrepresentative wrote on Feb. 19 that “an unavoidable delay does not mandate a builder to provide delay compensation.”

The family’s request, the representative said, would require┬аMinto to “act outside of what was committed in the agreement of purchase and sale.”

Minto needed to be fair to all its┬аhomeowners, the representative added.┬а

“Usually the builder won’t compensate you for an unavoidable delay,” echoed Nadia┬аCondotta, a Toronto-based real estate litigation lawyer.

The company said soon after the explosion that┬а30 families were living in Avalon Vista┬аwhen the explosion happened, six were planning to move in that week, and about┬а100 or so homes were┬аunder construction.

Minto Avalon Vista map showing area where explosion happened
Nzaba’s home is on lot 32 on Idyllic Terrace, while the explosion happened near the bend on Blossom Pass Terrace. (Minto)

Minto offers ‘goodwill’ money

On Friday,┬аNzaba┬аand her family got an update from Minto, including their revised┬аMay 10 closing date.

Police turned the neighbourhood back over to Minto on Feb. 21, allowing them to assess┬аthe family’s home. Minto┬аthen said it would be offering families some money “as a goodwill gesture to households who fall under the most extreme situations.”

That includes homeowners whose closing date came within less than six weeks of the blast and┬аfamilies┬аwhose homes will require so much repair work that their schedule is delayed by six months or more.

“While the circumstance of the explosion is a prime example of the exceptional conditions that trigger an unavoidable delay, and the situation does not qualify for delay compensation …┬аwe are volunteering an amount similar to what would be owed if the cause of the delay was within the builder’s control,” the company said Friday.

A cheque for $7,500 will be issued to┬аNzaba’s family after their closing, Minto┬аsaid.┬а

Valere touring house
Ndongo tours his future home during a visit last year. (Submitted Aim├йe Nzaba)

Company expediting┬аrepair material orders┬а

Ndongo┬аsaid he still wonders what kind of security Minto had at the site at the time of the early morning explosion.

When CBC┬аhas┬аasked about site security, Minto┬аhas declined to answer. On March 6, the company directed the question to the Ottawa Police Service, which then pointed CBC back to Minto.

“This is a legal matter in the hands of the authorities,” Minto said in a later statement. “As such we will not provide further comment on it at this time.”

On Sunday afternoon, a security car was keeping┬аwatch at the Avalon Vista entrance, and another security car soon came by. At least one surveillance camera could be seen just north of the entrance.┬а

In another statement Sunday on behalf of┬аMinto Communities Canada president Brent┬аStrachan, the company again declined to address the question.

“We know how important a closing date is to a household planning a move,” the statement read.┬а“Currently, we are assessing each home under construction individually,┬аincluding an additional inspection by a structural engineer.

“Our team is also working with suppliers to expedite replacement materials and reschedule trade partners as soon as possible. Our focus remains on the construction of our community so residents can move into their new homes.”┬а

entrance to Minto's Avalon Vista site, March 12, 2023
The entrance to Minto’s Avalon Vista site on March 12, 2023 (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

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