Skip to content

Radon mitigation changes to code praised by Chilliwack advocates

BC Building Code changes will see mandatory rough-in radon-mitigation in new home construction
web1_231012-cpl-radon-public-health-jillhall_1

The lurking dangers of radon gas in homes across the province are the reason for a key change coming to the BC Building Code.

Some prominent Chilliwack residents and real estate professionals have been pushing hard for changes.

Jill Hall, a Realtor and advocate for radon action, started speaking out publicly about radon after being diagnosed with lung cancer as a non-smoker. She’s been talking about the need for public health officials to take action, the importance of getting more Chilliwack homes tested, and the potential need for many homeowners to install radon mitigation systems.

The problem with newer home construction is the airtight nature of them, which is causing higher-than-safe radon levels in some residences.

Radon is an odourless gas that seeps out of the ground into cracks in the foundation and has been linked to lung cancer. Two Chilliwack city councillors, who are also involved in real estate and development, Chris Kloot and Harv Westeringh, have been amplifying Hall’s calls to action from Chilliwack.

They came on-board after Hall started blasting out information she and her brother Tony Gore had gathered about high readings in Chilliwack, and the relatively simple fix with mitigation. Coun. Kloot called for FVRD officials to make more tests available for citizens.

Westeringh fired off a letter to BC Financial Services Authority last month urging them to make a radon course mandatory for Realtors, as one way to educate more people on the realities of radon.

There is an existing “Radon for REALTORS” course online, but it’s not mandatory yet.

“Radon has recently been highlighted as a growing concern for our citizens,” Westeringh wrote in his letter to BCFSA dated Oct. 21. “In Chilliwack, for some reason, we were omitted from the BC Building Code requirements for radon mitigation systems.”

Making rough-in radon mitigation mandatory for all new home construction in B.C. is expected to be announced as a change to the BC Building Code in early 2024. It means the radon-control pipe leading to the outside will be installed but homeowners will still have to install a fan system to remove the gases.

Westeringh and others lobbied hard for these changes.

“I strongly believe that we should make ‘Radon Gas’ a mandatory course that all Realtors must take, once in their two-year cycle. This has worked well for ‘Money-Laundering’ and other issues that Realtors should be aware of,” Westeringh concluded in his letter.

BC Real Estate Association recently updated its course for Realtors and BCFSA is considering whether it should be mandatory.

That growing awareness about radon has not yet penetrated the public consciousness, or not in a way that sparks action.

When Hall and her brother, Tony Gore, a builder, started gathering testing kits and testing homes around Chilliwack with Take Action on Radon, they were shocked by what they found.

“With a population of 100,000, Chilliwack showed five per cent of homes testing for unacceptable radon levels,” said Hall told The Progress in June. “This would suggest 5,000 homeowners are breathing in highly carcinogenic radioactive gas.”

Many may not realize it is their responsibility to do due diligence by testing their own homes to see where the levels are at, and installing mitigation systems if need be.

For more info on testing for radon go to Take Action on Radon.

RELATED: Cancer-stricken Chilliwack residents sounds alarm on radon

RELATED: City councillor raises issue of high radon readings



Jennifer Feinberg

About the Author: Jennifer Feinberg

I have been a Chilliwack Progress reporter for 20+ years, covering the arts, city hall, as well as Indigenous, and climate change stories.
Read more