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House destroyed by heavy snow in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, owner says

Randy Anthony, 52, lost the house his parents handed down for him, with snow burying precious memories and his retirement plan.

Randy Anthony, 52, lives in Toronto but planned to retire in the home

A house at the corner of Palliser Crescent and Hunt Street crumpled beneath the weight of the snow early in the morning on Jan. 25, according to neighbours. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

The weight of record snowfall in Happy Valley-Goose Bay has destroyed a man's house, burying priceless family valuables in the home where he planned to retire.

"[It's] hard, very hard," homeowner Randy Anthony, 52, told CBC. 

"I wish it didn't happen, but unfortunately you can't mess with Mother Nature and snow."

There is a record amount of snow on the ground in Happy Valley-Goose Bay this season. According to Environment Canada, the amount of snow on the ground Jan. 31 hit 199 centimetres, breaking the previous January record of 183 centimetres in 2006.

Anthony's neighbours, who declined to comment on the record, told CBC they heard a rumbling noise early in the morning of Jan. 25, and came outside to find the house collapsed.

Samantha Morgan spoke on behalf of the neighbours who heard rumbling early on the morning the day the house collapsed. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"Everybody is safe, thankfully. Thankfully, there was nobody living in it," said Samantha Morgan, a family friend of the neighbours.

Anthony, who now lives and works in Toronto, said the heavy snow — coming earlier than usual this year — caught him off guard, and it wasn't easy to find a way to keep it clear from so far away.

"One of the load-bearing walls just couldn't take the weight," he said.

"I'm surprised — it's not even snow month in Goose Bay yet. That'll be March."

Homeowner Randy Anthony says he believes a load-bearing wall on the outside of the house couldn't hold beneath the weight of the heavy snow Happy Valley-Goose Bay has been seeing this season. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

Starting over

Anthony said he had invested thousands of dollars into renovating the house, near the corner of Palliser Crescent and Hunt Street, where he planned to retire. Now he has to find a way to rebuild.

"That was my little getaway when I'm done here in the city," he said.

Can't go backwards got to go forward now. I'm hopeful to get all the material saved that I can and start afresh.- Randy Anthony

"[Retirement] isn't right around the corner but I was prepping for it. That was my project to prep, and I was going to get in there some time this year and start a different phase of it, and now I have to start it over."

Anthony said he wasn't able to insure the house because he wasn't occupying it. He is planning to get back to the house before things thaw out for the summer with the hopes of digging out some of the materials he was using to renovate the house.

Anthony says there were lots of new items buried in the collapsed house as well as items that belonged to his parents. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"It's going to be all out of my pocket, more savings," he said.

He didn't just lose the money he had put into it; the house was passed down to him from his parents and many of the belongings they passed down to him are now buried.

"Everything was in there, like, the furniture, the cups, the cabinets, stuff like that," he said. "It's old stuff with memories, you know what I mean?

"Can't go backwards. Got to go forward now. I'm hopeful to get all the material saved that I can and start afresh," he said.

Stacking up

With snow stacking up on roofs all over town, that means busy times for contractors.

"Some of the roofs we've been on have five or six feet on them, a lot of weight," said Jeremy Anderson, who works in construction but makes a few bucks on the side clearing off roofs..

Jeremy Anderson clears snow off a building in an industrial area of Happy Valley-Goose Bay. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

This year, he said, it's been flat-out. 

"Usually we just do our own construction buildings and stuff but we've been on roofs pretty much every night of the week the last few weeks.

It's an important chore, he said, that needs to be done for safety's sake.

"It's dangerous.… Snow could fall off on somebody,"  Anderson said.

Anderson says he's been flat-out clearing off roofs over the past few weeks. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"Sewer pipes or drain pipes, if that freezes up then you've got problems inside your house and of course, the obvious one: collapse."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jacob Barker

Videojournalist

Jacob Barker is a videojournalist for CBC Windsor.