Nova Scotia·CBC Investigates

Family of firefighter who died after accident at training school appalled at persisting safety issues

The family of a Truro firefighter who died in 2019 after an accident at Nova Scotia's only firefighter training school say they're appalled to learn that serious gaps at the school continued as recently as this spring.

March 2024 inspection found ‘significant gaps’ at facility, 5 years after fatal accident

A portrait of a young firefighter wearing his dress uniform, standing in front of a Canadian flag.
Skyler Blackie died after a training accident in March 2019. He was 28 years old. (Robert Short/CBC)

The family of a Truro firefighter who died in 2019 after an accident at Nova Scotia's only firefighter training school say they're appalled to learn that serious gaps at the school continued as recently as this spring.

"I was expecting obviously quite a few infractions," said Jessica Gillis, the sister of Skyler Blackie. 

"I didn't think one of the top ones would be exactly the problem that took my brother's life. That is just so disheartening, and goes against every claim the school has made about how they keep safety in the highest regard."

Blackie was critically injured when the fire extinguisher he was using during a training exercise exploded, propelling the top of the extinguisher into his face. He died in hospital 11 days after the accident, which happened in March 2019. He was 28 years old.

Before the accident, Blackie told his instructor the fire extinguisher had rust on it, but he was told to use it anyway. The family was given a summary of the incident that stated the extinguisher's required inspection tests were out of date by more than three years.

A Caucasian woman with brown shoulder length hair and blue eyes stands in front of a wall of family photos.
Jessica Gillis is Skyler Blackie's sister. (Robert Short/CBC)

In March 2024, Safety Services Nova Scotia visited the school and wrote a report based on what it saw, detailing numerous safety problems and making recommendations for change.

CBC News obtained a copy of the report through an access-to-information request and shared it with the Blackie family. 

The report identified "significant gaps" in the processes to remove out-of-service items from use by tagging and isolating them from "in service" items. It also concluded there were problems with the frequency and documentation of equipment inspections, with some employee training and with investigating incidents to prevent reoccurrence.

The school released a statement on Facebook on Friday after CBC News contacted its executive director, John Cunningham, requesting an interview to respond to the report.

Three portraits of firefighters killed in the line of duty hang on the wall of a hall. Nearby is a shadow box with the brown jacket of a firefighter, with Skyler Blackie's name on it.
Skyler Blackie's firefighter jacket and portrait hang on the wall of the Truro fire hall. (Robert Short/CBC)

The statement said the school has made numerous changes to its occupational health and safety policies, and that investigations "will include direct, indirect, and root causes, with a follow-up process to assess the effectiveness of corrective actions." 

It said it has added new systems to address the points raised in the Safety Services Nova Scotia report, but did not include specifics about what would change. 

Cunningham did not respond to CBC's request for an interview. 

'Too little, too late'

"My personal opinion is too little, too late," said Errison Blackie, Skyler's younger brother, adding that he sees nothing in the school's statement that gives him any confidence in its management. 

Errison is also a career firefighter with the Truro Fire Service and was on the same training course the day the accident happened. 

"They have been aware of their lack of professionalism and accountability for at least five years since my brother's death — and probably long before that," Errison said.

A firefighter with brown hair sits on a couch wearing a black shirt with a firefighters union logo on it.
Errison Blackie, the younger brother of Skyler Blackie, is also a career firefighter with the Truro Fire Service. (Robert Short/CBC)

The Blackie family believes the school is necessary for training but that the school's executive director and board of directors should step down. 

"I would like to see the management gone, the board of directors gone and the school to be reopened," said Blaine Blackie, Skyler's father. 

The family also believes the province can improve laws to govern firefighter training. Blaine and his wife went to the provincial legislature on the first day of its fall session to meet with provincial politicians and the premier. 

"They're willing to sit down with us and all the firefighters to try to come to a solution on what legislation is going to look like," Blaine said.

A Caucasian man with short hair and glasses sits on a couch, looking into the distance.
Blaine Blackie is the father of Skyler Blackie. (Robert Short/CBC)

The Nova Scotia Firefighters School falls under the province's Private Career Colleges Act. 

Classes were suspended in August, but in early September the province ended a stop-work order for the school, allowing it to reopen under certain conditions. However, according to the Labour Department, the school was not permitted to offer entry-level occupational training when it reopened. 

Skyler Blackie's fire department in Truro has refused to send any firefighters to the school for training since the accident happened, and Chief Blois Currie does not feel that situation will change unless he sees a change in the school's leadership.

"It was very disturbing," he said of the report obtained by CBC. "One of the biggest things that stood out to me is that these things are still happening after five years." 

A man wearing a firefighters uniform stands in front of a white fire truck.
Blois Currie has been the chief of the Truro Fire Service for 14 years, and worked in Halifax before that. (Robert Short/CBC)

Blackie's family says he was always safety-conscious and fought to improve conditions for other firefighters, which is why they continue to speak out about the issue. 

"In this province, firefighters and the public deserve better than the fire school. We deserve a safe training facility under proper management, and we need to work in a combined effort to make that happen," Errison said. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shaina Luck

Reporter

Shaina Luck is an investigative reporter with CBC Nova Scotia. She has worked with local and network programs including The National and The Fifth Estate. Email: shaina.luck@cbc.ca

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