| In May 2001, high levels of lead and hydrocarbon vapours were discovered in the soil beneath the south-east Calgary residential suburb of Lynnview Ridge, the site of a decommissioned oil refinery. This study analyses how the community reacted to the disruption and how it affected individual households. Qualitative interviews were conducted with thirty-one current and former residents to ascertain their response to the disaster. A stage model is used to understand the evolution of the crisis from the pre-disaster community to the post-resettlement period. In contrast to most of the disaster literature, Lynnview Ridge presents a significant case study of how a buyout offer creates a form of involuntary displacement and separates a community into "stayers" and "leavers."... |