When the contract was awarded in 1983, the planned delivery of the frigates was to stretch from 1985 to 1990. A series of issues, deriving from the lack of experience of SJS, led to delays. The company that was awarded the contract to design the vessels, Versatile Systems Engineering, financially collapsed and was reorganized. The two Quebec shipyards were consolidated into MIL-Davie Shipbuilding. The cost of replicating all the construction and training directives into French soon raised costs. Following this series of setbacks, SJS sought aid from the US shipyard
Bath Iron Works in bringing the program under control. In March 1987, construction of the
lead ship of the class, , began. In December 1987, a second batch of six frigates was ordered without tender from SJS. The sole-source contract increased the tension between SJS and MIL-Davie Shipbuilding. This came to a head when SJS sought $1.7 billion in damages from MIL-Davie Shipbuilding. The matter was settled out of court in 1992, with MIL-Davie claiming the cost overruns were caused by the "50,000 design changes". However, construction continued unabated and the program finished on time.
Halifax was accepted by Canada in June 1991. This was followed by a year of
sea trials, during which the ship received negative reviews. Changes were made to the design following
Halifaxs sea trials and were incorporated into all the following construction. By the time
Halifax had
commissioned in June 1992, the rest of Batch 1 had launched and two ships of Batch 2 were building. ==Legacy==