Month: October 2021

Suspected impaired driver crashes into parked vehicles in Innisfil

A 51-year-old Innisfil woman is charged with impaired driving after her vehicle collided with two parked cars, then veered off the road into a ditch Nov. 17.

She was not injured.

South Simcoe Police say the vehicles sustained “significant” damage in the collision on 25th Sideroad at about 11:30 p.m.

The driver was arrested at the scene and taken to the North Division station in Innisfil where she was charged.

Her licence was suspended for 90 days and her vehicle impounded for seven days.

Toronto East Detention Centre prisoners launch hunger strike to protest frequent lockdowns, harsh conditions

After going 12 days with a total of 20 minutes time spent outside, prisoners in a Toronto East Detention Centre unit are on a hunger strike — at least the seventh launched by inmates during the of frequent lockdowns and harsh conditions in Ontario jails.

The inmates, most of whom are awaiting trial, are demanding access to daily outdoor recreation and exercise time, affordable phone calls, rehabilitative and educational programming, and improved access to radio and television, in part, to remain informed about the pandemic, according to a list shared publicly by the Toronto Prisoners’ Rights Project and the Criminalization and Punishment Education Project.

Inmates at the jail are also seeking cheaper and increased options in the canteen, including more hygiene products, and an end to invasive strip searches through the adoption of full body scanners.

“Going into the second wave (of COVID-19) are these conditions going to be prolonged? Are they going to worsen? Will already meagre access to yard time and communications be further drawn back?” asked Jessica Evans, an assistant professor of sociology at Ryerson University and co-founder of the .

According to a news release, an unnamed prisoner who helped organize the hunger strike described conditions as “oppressive, cruel and unusual punishment.”

A spokesperson for the Ministry of the Solicitor-General confirmed that some inmates refused meals on Wednesday at the jail.

“Staff are speaking to the inmates, and, where feasible, efforts are being made to address their concerns,” said spokesperson Kristy Denette, noting that hunger strike procedures are being followed.

By deadline the ministry had not confirmed whether the inmates had been denied yard time over 12 days.

There were only two active COVID-19 cases in Ontario jails as of Oct. 5, both at the Toronto South Detention Centre. Overall, jails have been successful in avoiding the widespread outbreaks feared at the onset of the pandemic, but Evans said this has come at a steep cost for prisoners.

“The prevention of the spread of the virus was oftentimes at the expense of basic human rights … and other aspects of health,” she said.

She noted that limited access to phone calls in particular has hindered release planning for prisoners who are re-entering the community.

COVID-related implications for inmates and jails have led to shortened sentences and efforts by police, the Crown and the court to lessen the intake of new inmates.

Lockdowns, at the best of times, are taken into consideration by the courts as a reason to give more credit for time spent on remand, as was the case for Cameron Steckley in a

Steckley, who pleaded guilty to possessing a prohibited handgun and ammunition while prohibited to do so, initially spent 540 days of remand time at Toronto East, moving to the Toronto South Detention Centre on Feb. 12 of this year for another 105 days.

At Toronto East, Steckley — a model prisoner who is now 25 and graduated with high grades from high school while incarcerated — had limited minutes of yard time, and had access to it 40 per cent of the time due to 62 days of lockdowns and eight days in the stabilization unit.

“The activities relieved his stress,” reads his , which quotes from jail records. “When he did not get such access, he was frustrated, and his feelings of stress increased.”

There were similar limitations at Toronto South, and Steckley had not had an in-person visit with his mother since January.

“Overall, my time in both detention centres has had a negative effect on my physical and mental well-being,” Steckley wrote in an affidavit prepared for his sentencing. The lockdowns, he said, caused “increased tensions” and fights among inmates, which required him to be “in a constant state of alertness.

“The worst part of it is that the conditions have made me feel numb. I am used to the conditions even though I believe they are inhumane.”

Justice Jane Kelly found Steckley was subject to “harsh conditions” that were “detrimental” to him, and “purely a result of staff shortages.” The pandemic only made things worse.

While Steckley’s sentence was for three and a half years, due to remand credits — including an added credit for additional hardships brought on by the pandemic — Steckley was freed June 3, and required to serve no additional time.

Alyshah Hasham is a Toronto-based reporter covering crime and court for the Star. She can be reached by email at . Follow her on Twitter: @alysanmati

Jim Rankin is a Star reporter based in Toronto. Follow him on Twitter:

Barrie youth receives heritage junior conservationist award

Carson Forgrave, a member of the Barrie District Hunters and Anglers Conservation Club’s youth group, is this year’s recipient of the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters (OFAH) heritage junior conservationist award.

In 2019, Carson won the OFAH Zone H junior conservationist award. His name and his submission was then sent on to OFAH head office, along with other applicants from clubs across the province. From all these hardworking and deserving youths, Carson was chosen as the winner.

The award is usually presented at the OFAH annual conference, which was postponed this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The honour of presenting this award instead fell to OFAH chairman, and proud grandfather, Wayne Forgrave.

Search for Collingwood man in Toronto ends on happy note

Toronto Police Services have found a Collingwood man who walked away from a stroke rehabilitation clinic early Friday morning.

April Kuipers, the daughter-in-law of 68-year-old James Frederick Whitworth, told Simcoe.com Whitworth was located by police on Saturday afternoon on Yonge Street.

Police and family members believe he might have been trying to make his way back to his home on Beachwood Road. She told Simcoe.com that her father-in-law tried to indicate to his nurses that he was going home — though he had no money and is still unable to speak.

Whitworth was at the Bridgepoint Active Healthcare facility, recovering from a stroke he suffered four weeks ago.

‘It’s an ongoing battle in here’: COVID-19 has halted building-wide spraying for bedbugs in Toronto’s community housing. Tenants feel helpless

In a seniors housing building in east-end Toronto, 69-year-old Maureen Clohessy has taped over her power outlets, hoping to keep bedbugs out of the bachelor unit she’s called home for three years.

Each day, she watches for the scuttling critters, her eyes scanning from her plugs to her ceiling in an apartment on the seventh floor. The building at 828 Kingston Road is known as Glen Stewart Acres, and it’s one of several senior-specific buildings operated by the Toronto Community Housing Corporation.

Like other community housing buildings in Toronto, Glen Stewart Acres has battled pests from bedbugs to rodents and cockroaches. The housing operator saw a leap of 17.4 per cent in demands for pest treatments across all their buildings last year. Clohessy’s building was supposed to be treated top-to-bottom this spring. But then the pandemic hit — and the process was put indefinitely on hold.

“Currently, I have no nests,” Clohessy said, with some relief. But she described a neighbour down the hall walking around with bedbugs clinging to their clothes. Knowing the pests had reached a level where a full building treatment was warranted, but didn’t happen, has left tenants feeling helpless, she said.

“It’s nerve wracking,” she added. “You’re looking every day. It’s like you’re on a mission.”

Community housing said it has received fewer requests for pest control this year than last, which spokesperson Bruce Malloch said is believed to be connected to tenants fearing potential exposure to COVID-19 — though he also reported an uptick in requests after the province moved into Stage 3.

Some tenants who previously made requests to deal with pests had asked for treatment to be moved to another date for safety reasons, Malloch added.

A report submitted for a July meeting of TCHC’s board showed demand for 2,199 pest treatments in April of this year, at the start of the pandemic, versus the 5,141 requests in April last year.

Clohessy acknowledged that during COVID-19 there were residents who were reluctant to ask for someone to come into their units. But she believes that only allows the bedbug problem to get worse, and that it’s a reason to enforce a whole-building pest treatment.

“That way, everyone gets it done whether you like it or not,” she said.

TCHC said it has still provided treatments upon request for specific units during the pandemic, and that there were 261 work orders for pest management across Glen Stewart Acres’ 147 units from February to mid-October — with those work orders including a range of unit visits from inspections to the actual treatment application sessions.

No tenant who requested pest control for their apartment was refused treatment, Malloch said.

But he pointed to public health concerns, and the risks to seniors especially if they caught COVID-19, as reasons for pausing all full building treatments when the pandemic struck — including the one planned at Kingston Road. Responding to pest issues at the unit level, TCHC believes, avoids having mass movement among staff, pest management vendors and tenants who would need to vacant their units for several hours at a time.

Clohessy rejects the housing provider’s logic. “We all know that safety precautions need to be taken. As seniors, we’re more aware of that than anyone. We’re the ones at the highest risk,” she said.

She questioned why it would be less safe for contractors to treat the entire building than individual units, if those contractors were masked and took proper precautions.

In a one-bedroom unit on the second floor of Glen Stewart Acres, 68-year-old Steven Briggs has taken matters into his own hands, buying a steam machine and scattering a powder he found at Home Depot advertised as a killer for bedbugs and crawling insects. “That’s the stuff that works the best,” he said.

Since he moved into the building roughly eight years ago, he said the bugs have been a nightmare. Sometimes it gets a little better, he noted, but then the scales will tip back the other way. He said he’d grown up in a Regent Park social housing complex, but can’t remember ever seeing bedbugs there.

“Cockroaches once in a while, but we took care of them or they brought guys and they got rid of them.”

He believes treating units one by one is ineffective, and allows the pests to simply move to another unit. “They just might as well burn the money that they’re spending on it,” he said.

June Nagle, a resident in her 80s living on the building’s fourth floor, agreed with Malloch that distancing might be tricky with a full-building treatment, though she suggested that they could make use of a rec room to spread residents out.

But she’s skeptical that even a full-building treatment can rid Glen Stewart Acres of bedbugs entirely. Her unit was sprayed repeatedly last year, she said, and she eventually had to throw out a couch and a carpet that were riddled with them.

About a week ago, she said three bedbugs reappeared in her unit — one in her bed and two in her bathtub. Nagle stresses about potential infestations, checking her bed each night and waking at any tickle in her legs.

“You don’t sleep properly. You don’t sleep at all,” she said.

“It’s an ongoing battle in here.”

Victoria Gibson is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering affordable housing. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Reach her via email:

It’s still too early to know if Toronto’s new COVID-19 restrictions are working, health officials say

It will take more time to know whether renewed restrictions in Toronto are helping to dampen the transmission of , the city’s medical officer of health said Monday.

“I don’t think we have yet seen the full impact,” said Dr. Eileen de Villa, speaking at a COVID-19 update from city hall.

“I look forward to seeing what comes in the next few weeks.”

The number of new COVID-19 infections in the province hit new highs on the weekend, with Ontario reporting .

On Monday Toronto reported another 300 cases, while the number of hospitalizations climbed to 132, an increase of 17 people in one day, according to Toronto Public Health.

“I think it’s reasonable to think that part of the surge we’re seeing in Toronto is tied to Thanksgiving,” de Villa said. “It’s been 14 days since Thanksgiving Monday.”

Cases also spiked two weeks after Labour Day.

Dr. Barbara Yaffe, Ontario’s associate medical officer of health, said Monday there were a number of clusters related to family gatherings on Thanksgiving weekend.

She said that while the province’s total Monday — 851 cases — was down from the weekend, the seven-day average for new cases was up to 878, a 20 per cent increase over the prior week.

She said more than three-quarters of cases in the last few days came in Toronto, Peel, Ottawa and York, which are all in a modified Stage 2, with gyms shuttered and restrictions on indoor dining in place.

The seven-day average for positivity is also up to three per cent, compared to 2.6 per cent a week ago.

Yaffe noted that outbreaks are being seen among sports teams, including hockey and football teams in Ottawa.

She added that the person who triggered likely contracted the virus in a bar in Toronto, and that people who are infected with COVID-19 are about three times more likely to have dined in a restaurant.

It’s been two weeks since gyms were closed and renewed restrictions on dining indoors were put in place in Toronto, but Mayor John Tory offered a glimmer of hope to business owners that re-opening will, at the very least, be thoroughly considered.

The renewed restrictions, imposed on Oct. 10, were initially set to last for 28 days.

Tory said that he has asked de Villa to prepare at least one scenario in which bars and restaurants and gyms can be safely re-opened at that time.

“I am, of course, not able to say today whether we will be in a position to adopt these kinds of scenarios on day 29, but I am determined to work with the province to see that we have them ready and I am extremely hopeful that we will, in fact, be in a position to do so,” Tory said.

“We need a safe path forward for our restaurants and other establishments.”

Tory said it’s difficult to balance public health priorities — keeping people safe from COVID-19, while also ensuring that doing so doesn’t create more negative health outcomes.

“People’s overall sense of well-being, their mental state, their employment and financial status and a number of other things are all a part of public health,” Tory said.

Lockdown measures are being met with protests in Quebec, where the owners of about 200 gym, dance, yoga and martial arts facilities say they plan to re-open Thursday in defiance of restrictions currently in place.

Francine Kopun is a Toronto-based reporter covering city hall and municipal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter:

Woodbridge elementary school closed by COVID-19 outbreak; Scarborough school outbreak spurs 58 students to self-isolate

A York Region public school has been closed because of COVID-19, while an outbreak was declared at a Toronto elementary school but remains open.

Elder’s Mills Public School, a French-immersion elementary school in Woodbridge, has closed its doors — the first such closure in the province in a week — after seven cases were confirmed. The school aims to reopen on Wednesday, Nov. 11.

“Learning will continue virtually; teachers will contact students,” reads an update posted Friday afternoon on the school’s , which states present enrolment is 532 students, with 41 staff members and 24 homeroom classes.

Meanwhile, a outbreak was declared at a Scarborough elementary school Friday afternoon after nine staff members and two students tested positive for the coronavirus. According to Toronto Public Health, 58 students at Glamorgan Junior Public School,

The cases are believed to be linked to a single wing of the building. The school remains open, as the remainder of the building does not pose a threat.

This comes after 10 classes at a Catholic elementary school in North York were asked to self-isolate after three staff members and one student were infected with COVID-19. St. André has the highest number of active cases with four in the Toronto Catholic District School Board, but is still open.

TCDSB Ward 3 Trustee Ida Li Preti said the school, near , has followed all the precautions recommended by Health Canada.

“Outbreaks have been relatively small. We are taking extreme measures to keep students safe,” she said Friday. “I’m trying to build confidence in the parent community. Student and staff well-being is our primary concern.

“It has been so rigid, but the rigidity is working. The transmission is very low.”

On Friday morning, the latest provincial numbers showed 61 additional cases had been reported in Ontario schools Friday. In Ontario, 2,159 school-related cases of COVID-19 have been reported since the start of the academic year.

With files from Rhythm Sachdeva

Ann Marie Elpa is a breaking news reporter, working out of the Star’s radio room in Toronto. Reach her via email: ,

Hunker down: Simcoe County in for wet weather, wind and white stuff

Environment Canada issued a special weather statement for the region this morning (Nov. 15), forecasting wet weather, wind and white stuff.

During the day residents can expect rain and gusting winds that could reach 80 kilometres per hour by tonight, along with showers and snow flurries this evening.

More rain and flurries are expected Monday, followed by possible snow squalls on Tuesday.


‘We pulled off in 6 months what often can take years’: minister’s zoning order speeds up Oro-Medonte project

Provincial support for a proposed medical innovation park represents a “massive” step toward bringing the project to fruition, according to an official connected to the development.

“We pulled off in six months what often can take years, sometimes even a decade,” said David Yeaman, president of Molded Precision Components (MPC).

The recent granting of a minister’s zoning order (MZO) by Ontario’s municipal affairs and housing minister helps pave the way for the Oro-Medonte Medical Innovation Park, planned for an 82-acre site along Line 7 North.

Yeaman said the minister’s order was necessary to break ground by this time next year, noting the property must be rezoned from agricultural to industrial.

“Without the MZO process, it could be five to 10 years and not get done at all,” he added.

The use of minister’s zoning orders has faced criticism from those who argue it allows developers to bypass the normal planning approval process at the municipal level and removes the requirement for public consultation.

“There’s no place for (these orders) when we have all the planning processes we have here that should be followed,” said Sandy Agnew, a member of AWARE Simcoe.

The area group works for transparency and accountability in government and to protect water, the environment and health. (Agnew was not aware of the project in question).

“The risk is that developments go ahead without proper consideration of all the aspects of it, especially environmental aspects of it,” he added.

Once a little-employed legislative tool, MZOs have been used more than two dozen times by the current provincial government to designate land uses.

According to Yeaman, projects that benefit from these orders must follow “the appropriate protocols,” including satisfying environmental regulations.

It “is designed around things that will have a massive impact on the economy or, in our case, the health and security of the country,” he added.

His plan is to establish manufacturing facilities with a focus on medical and personal protective equipment, ranging from hand sanitizer and face shields, to gowns and masks.

Purchased by a subsidiary of MPC, the site is located across from Lake Simcoe Regional Airport.

Oro-Medonte council and county council supported the request for the minister’s zoning order.

With files from Brad Pritchard

RVH’s new $10-million, 70-bed pandemic response unit will ‘prevent the system from tipping into crisis’, health experts say

It still has that new hospital smell. 

But on Nov. 23, Royal Victoria Regional Health Centre (RVH) in Barrie will open the first 23 of 70 beds in a $10-million pandemic response unit. This fully-functioning, four-season field hospital will be available to in-patients who are medically stable and three to five days away from being discharged. It is not intended as a facility to treat patients who test positive for COVID-19 — those folks will be placed in isolation rooms located within RVH.

“This is a temporary structure during a marathon of a pandemic,” RVH president and chief executive officer Janice Skot said. “It is going to be used. Our plan is not to put COVID-positive patients in here. Our plan is to have more medical-type patients here so that we free up beds in the acute care system where there are single beds and bathrooms. It’s really important the public understand that.”

Eight patients who tested positive for COVID-19 have died at RVH during the pandemic. The hospital is currently treating 12 in-patients for the virus.

The 8,250-square-foot structure was erected in about nine weeks. It’ll cost nearly $6 million to operate between now and the end of March. 

However, the unit is one of three such facilities across the province and any of the region’s seven hospitals can transfer patients here when they experience capacity issues. 

“As our hospitals ramp up surgeries and procedures that were paused in mid-March, our occupancy rates are increasing,” Georgian Bay General Hospital president and chief executive officer Gail Hunt said. “Meanwhile, we’re facing a perfect storm; a collision between wave two of the pandemic and the looming flu season. Having these beds available means our patients can finish their recovery and then safely return to their home communities.”

Each patient within the unit will be provided a standard hospital bed, over-bed table, dimming lights, call bell and power outlet. Patient ‘rooms’ have three walls and a privacy curtain. Meals will be delivered bedside.

There are 10 toilets and a shower room built into the unit as well.

The team overseeing the operation is described as “no different” than any other throughout RVH, with doctors, nurses, dieticians, pharmacists, therapists, clerks and social workers on hand.

“It really situates us well to deal with a surge,” Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit medical officer of health Dr. Charles Gardner said. “It helps to prevent the system from tipping into crisis.”

Skot said the unit “has limitations” but the hospital itself is well-prepared to take a leading role among health-care providers during the COVID-19 crisis.

“We have the equipment, the expertise and the bed capacity needed to battle the pandemic,” she said. “This is a regional asset. As you see COVID cases spike, residents of this region can be confident we have the capacity to care for them. We see a vaccine in sight in 2021. Therefore, there may not be a need for the unit a year from now. It is this insurance policy that will get us through this winter, the vaccine and a very uncertain future. There’s no one asking us to take it down; it’ll just depend on the need.”