Cockroaches infest SQ's Montreal headquarters

They're finding them on nearly every floor, near elevator shafts, in hallways, bathrooms and offices. Sometimes they're dead. Many times, they're not.

The Sûreté du Quebec headquarters in Montreal has a cockroach problem.

The Sûreté du Québec has called in exterminators about 50 times since 2017 to fumigate for cockroaches at its rented building located at 701 Parthenais Street, near Logan Street.

Radio-Canada obtained details of the infestation through an access to information request.

Combating the problem has cost tens of thousands.

In May 2017, the Société québécoise en infrastructures (SQI), the provincial agency that owns the building, retained extermination services with a Blainville-based company, Orkin Canada, for $20,340.

That annual extermination allowance was boosted in May 2018 to nearly $36,000.

The SQ, citing that it is a tenant of the building, declined to comment on the situation.

Cockroaches captured and detained

The access to information request revealed details of cockroach sightings dating back to August 2017. In some cases, employees reported capturing and keeping as evidence the six-legged trespassers.

One report from June 4, 2018, documents a sighting on the third floor: "Can you come to treat please. We captured it if you need to see it."

The problem is not alarming, but the provincial police union is taking the case seriously, said union president Pierre Veilleux.

"We are following the evolution of this problem and we are in contact with the various stakeholders, particularly those from the Sûreté du Québec and Public Health, to find the best possible solutions," he told Radio-Canada.

Renovations in the works

The SQI claims that the SQ's headquarters is not a dilapidated public building. The building, it says, has been well maintained in recent years.

"The building is also the subject of frequent maintenance work, including the replacement of elevators, the repair of the electrical entrance, the replacement of controls for heating, ventilation and air-conditioning equipment", said SQI spokesperson Martin Roy.

Jaela Bernstien/CBC News
Jaela Bernstien/CBC News

With none of those repairs eliminating the roaches, the SQI is now taking aim at Montreal's sewer system — blaming the aged underground infrastructure for the bugs.

The next step will be a complete overhaul of the building's plumbing.

"This intervention is part of its plan for asset maintenance and the Public Health Department is in agreement with the proposed parameters," Roy concluded.

"This is a challenging job as it is about 68,000 square meters and, as you know, people work 24 hours a day, 365 days a year."

Change of strategy needed, exterminator suggests

To put an end to the problem, the SQI must change its strategy, said Frank Pulcini, the owner of Central Extermination, a Montreal-based service.

Changing the plumbing, he said, may not be the ultimate solution.

"The piping of a building can also serve as a gateway, but it is not the only reason to explain their presence," he said. "American cockroaches are mostly transported by humans before settling in buildings."

At this rate, he believes that the number of requests for the services of an exterminator could be just as high in the coming months.

"The problem with going one piece at a time is that the products used to decontaminate all have an expiration date," Pulcini said.

"Considering that cockroaches can survive for a long time in the walls, without food, you return to the same places three or four months later."