Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Engineer Didn't Check For Right Materials On Stage That Collapsed, Inquest Hears

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2019 09:39 PM

    TORONTO — An engineer who approved the plans for a stage that collapsed before a Radiohead concert in Toronto didn't check that the right materials were being used to support the roof because he trusted the contractor, a coroner’s inquest heard Friday.


    Domenic Cugliari testified at an inquest into the death of Scott Johnson, a drum technician who was killed when the structure came crashing down just hours before the show was set to start on June 16, 2012.


    Cugliari said he visited the site where the stage was being constructed on the two days leading up to the show, but didn't closely examine a critical component of the roof to ensure it matched the plans. He said he looked up at the pickup trusses from the stage floor and believed they were the correct size.


    In fact, the four pickup trusses — metal structures bearing the weight of the roof grid — were thinner than what the plans called for, which meant they couldn't handle the load placed on them, he said.


    "I couldn’t distinguish between the two-inches and the three-inches, so I thought it was the right one," he said. "I relied on the contractor."


    The three-inch pickup trusses could each bear up to roughly 7,700 kilograms, he said. But the two-inch ones that were used could only handle up to about 3,600 kg, he said.


    Cugliari told the inquest that his colleague, another engineer, visited the site the day of the show after the contractor expressed concerns that one of the secondary trusses making up the roof grid appeared to be bending slightly once it was loaded with stage equipment.


    He said his colleague assessed the bend — called deflection — from the ground and deemed it to be within the acceptable range. But under questioning from the coroner’s counsel, Deanna Exner, Cugliari acknowledged it was unlikely that could be determined by the naked eye at such a distance.


    Cugliari, contractor Optex Staging and the show's promoter, Live Nation, were charged under provincial health and safety laws in connection with the incident but the case was halted because it took too long to get to trial.


    The case was thrown off course when the presiding judge was appointed to a higher court, prompting another judge to declare a mistrial. The court eventually agreed with the defence that the delays had violated the accused's rights to a timely trial.


    The inquest, which began Monday, will examine the circumstances around Johnson's death but cannot assign blame. Jurors may make recommendations aimed at preventing such incidents in the future.


    Cugliari, who was a certified engineer at the time but has since retired, reviewed and signed off on the plans for the Radiohead stage. The plans were drawn by a designer who worked with him after they received conceptual instructions from Optex more than a week before the show, he said.


    In his testimony Friday, Cugliari said the plans contained "very sloppy" mistakes.


    The plans didn't spell out how to attach beams to the trusses in the roof grid and included "conceptual drawings" that should not have been submitted to the contractor, he said. There were also inconsistencies that would likely have been caught if another engineer had reviewed the documents, he said.


    Cugliari suggested he may have gotten complacent because he was working with Optex, a client he knew well and trusted.


    "It's easy to miss something like this because you know the people putting (the stage) up," he said.


    Aside from having a second engineer look over any plans, Cugliari said it would also help to have an engineer on site for the entire construction of such stages.


    Had that happened, "we would have seen the critical components before they actually got lifted," he said. "If I had seen (the pickup trusses) at ground level, it would have raised a red flag … this is not the right truss."


    He said there should also be a way for engineers to examine the roof once it is lifted in place, either by building scaffolding stairs into the wings of the structure or by asking those trained to climb the scaffolding to take pictures.


    The inquest previously heard from a Ministry of Labour engineer who helped investigate the collapse, who testified the pickup trusses were "the weakest link" in the setup. Saeed Khoorsand said the pickup trusses were the first pieces to fail as the roof gave way.


    The inquest continues Monday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Fighter Jets Intercept Russian Aircraft Over Black Sea

    Canadian Fighter Jets Intercept Russian Aircraft Over Black Sea
    OTTAWA — The Defence Department says Canadian fighter jets in Romania have intercepted a Russian military aircraft that was approaching NATO airspace over the Black Sea.

    Canadian Fighter Jets Intercept Russian Aircraft Over Black Sea

    Enbridge Targets Mid-November To Complete B.C. Gas Pipeline Repair After Blast

    VICTORIA — The company that owns the natural gas pipeline that ruptured and burned earlier this month in central British Columbia says repairs should be complete by the middle of November.

    Enbridge Targets Mid-November To Complete B.C. Gas Pipeline Repair After Blast

    Thousands Of Swoop Passengers Inconvenienced As Airline Cancels Flights To U.S.

    Thousands Of Swoop Passengers Inconvenienced As Airline Cancels Flights To U.S.
    Thousands of Swoop passengers have been forced to make alternative last-minute flight plans after the WestJet Airlines discount subsidiary cancelled 16 flights in the coming days between Canada and the United States.

    Thousands Of Swoop Passengers Inconvenienced As Airline Cancels Flights To U.S.

    B.C. Jury Finds Man Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder Of Japanese Exchange Student

    B.C. Jury Finds Man Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder Of Japanese Exchange Student
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court jury has found William Schneider guilty of the second-degree murder of 30-year-old Natsumi Kogawa two years ago. 

    B.C. Jury Finds Man Guilty Of Second-Degree Murder Of Japanese Exchange Student

    Former Surrey, B.C., Mountie Dario Devic Gets House Arrest After Vigilante Sting

    Former Surrey, B.C., Mountie Dario Devic Gets House Arrest After Vigilante Sting
    Dario Devic has been handed a four-month conditional sentence to be served in the community and 12 months of probation.

    Former Surrey, B.C., Mountie Dario Devic Gets House Arrest After Vigilante Sting

    Greens Broker Changes To B.C. Government'S New Speculation Tax, Pledge Support

    Greens Broker Changes To B.C. Government'S New Speculation Tax, Pledge Support
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's minority government moved to change its key housing policy legislation on Thursday in an effort to win the support of the three members of the Green party.

    Greens Broker Changes To B.C. Government'S New Speculation Tax, Pledge Support