Category: ythytbu

Is your power out in Simcoe County?

For Alectra Utilities outages see this To report a power outage with Alectra, call 1-877-963-6900.

To find out up-to-date information about where power is out in Simcoe County and estimated restoration times for Hydro One power outages view their . To report a power outage to Hydro One call 1-800-434-1235.

For Orillia Power, view its

For InnPower (Innisfil) click on the

Collingwood residents can check Epcor’s list of . Contact Epcor at 705-445-1800 and press 7.

For Wasaga Distribution Inc., look at this list of scheduled and unscheduled or call 705-429-2517.

For Tay Township, see the Newmarket-Tay Power Distribution Ltd. or call 905-895-2309 and press 3.

To contact , call 705-526-9361.

Bruce Arthur: Doug Ford gives up on Halloween, and even epidemiologists say this message will haunt us

Time to egg Queen’s Park. Ontarians could TP it, but we can’t risk toilet paper shortages again. If we can learn lessons from this pandemic, we should.

But now that Ontario in the province’s four COVID-19 hot zones — Toronto, Ottawa, Peel and York — we should consider why that decision is being taken, and what we haven’t learned.

“I understand the intention, and I don’t think there are more people more concerned about the epidemiological situation than I am,” says Dr. Andrew Morris, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of Toronto, and the medical director of the Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at Sinai-University Health Network. “But there is no reason why this cannot be done in a safe manner.”

Living life safely and as normally as possible is, even , the goal of public health. For months we have been told to get outdoors, maintain social distance, stick to our immediate family units in serious situations such as this one, and wear masks.

Which sounds a hell of a lot like Halloween.

“It’s like the worst PR moves you can possibly construe for a public health movement that is suffering badly to maintain public confidence,” says Dr. Abdu Sharkawy, an infectious disease specialist and ICU doctor at Toronto Western Hospital. “I’m sure what they’re thinking is we’ll be the stewards of caution, we’ll be extra-safe … I look at it from the point of view that you’ve given people a lot of poor messaging, you didn’t exercise restraint when you needed to, and now you’re taking away something that multiple experts deem safe.”

It’s not the end of the world, but it’s a mess. Ontario didn’t close strip clubs until Sept. 25, opened the casinos on Sept. 28, left spin classes open until after the Hamilton super-spreader event, and has agonized over and waited too long to close businesses even when it’s clear they can be venues of transmission. Heck, it just reopened indoor dance studios.

Oh, and our kids are still jammed in schools. Dr. Eileen de Villa, Toronto’s medical officer of health, said schools did not appear to be significantly contributing to community spread. So why would Halloween? We should be able to make this safe.

“If you think about risk and risk reduction, we have — what, two million kids in schools?” says Morris. “Where we have them sitting in a classroom all day, masked, static, indoors. And we’re suggesting that having likely a smaller collection, outdoors, and again, we should be doing this masked. And encouraging them to do small groups, outdoors; to me, this is not a good balance of the risks and benefits. And once again I think we are unfairly targeting kids here.”

Nobody, anti-maskers and the White House perhaps aside, wants more people to get the virus. So what are we worried about, exactly? People opening their doors to 100 people, said Premier , or rummaging in a bowl or bag of candy, or lining up to get into apartment buildings. Dr. David Williams, the chief medical officer of health, said he worried about people congregating on sidewalks and exchanging candy.

De Villa spoke about people coming together. Dr. Lawrence Loh, Peel’s medical officer of health, said “(I) agree that if perfectly done, the risk can be minimized. The reality, much like mask wearing, is that it’s not likely this will be perfectly done.”

The entire provincial strategy has been about assuming people will follow rules, and now they seem to assume nobody will. Getting the virus from surface transmission is less and less likely: the first real-world evidence of this involved someone wiping their nose and touching an elevator button, and another man picking his teeth and doing the same. There’s a reason we reopened the playgrounds, right?

And Halloween seems purpose-built to be safe, with just a little effort. Give out candy outside, without getting too close. Use tongs, a tube, a slingshot, whatever. Pre-wrap gift bags. Keep to your family only. Keep your distance. We’ve been doing it for seven damned months.

“It’s not like kids are going to congregate in a huddle on the sidewalk like it’s a football game, with masks off, exchanging candy,” says Sharkawy. “That’s not how trick-or-treating happens. Every parent who takes their kids out knows: they’re going to scuttle from house to house. The risk is that they come inside.”

“Everyone knows how to line up and physically distance in our society, right?” says Morris. “There’s no reason we can’t do this here. I’m extremely disappointed by this.”

Look, the province was two to four weeks late in imposing restrictions. Testing was allowed to crash into a reset that may still be muddying the data. It’s unclear if the chief medical officer of health understands some fundamental things about the virus, much less Halloween. We are doing better than we have a right to, in Ontario.

But cancelling Halloween is indicative of the lack of a coherent plan, or coherent communication, or perhaps even fundamental understanding of what we are facing. It we can learn lessons from this pandemic, we should. Get outta here with telling kids to dress up and go on Zoom or whatever.

“The problem with the vernacular that they’re using is it almost invites people to say FU,” says Sharkawy. “I mean, I heard this, and I was frustrated, and I am the most conservative person (on safety) you will meet. I cancelled my kid’s 10-year-old birthday party. All my close friends hate me because I’ve been in Stage 2 for the last four months. And I am saying this is overkill, and you’re going to lose public favour, and create more acrimony, and take more away when there’s no science behind it, no basis. This is an optics decision, 100 per cent.

“We have got to win the battles that we need to, to not extinguish their resolve, their hope.”

This pandemic has been a long, hard time, and now winter is coming. It has taken so much away. Halloween was one we could keep, and even win. The province can still change this. We can still make this safe. We should, at the very least, try.

Bruce Arthur is a Toronto-based columnist for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 November 27

In a news conference at Queen’s Park, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and provincial Health Minister Christine Elliott provide an update on their government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) pandemic.

They are joined by retired general Rick Hillier, chair of the province’s new COVID-19 vaccine distribution task force.

The update comes as the province sets a single-day record of 1,855 new confirmed cases of COVID-19.

Governments must get on the same page on fighting COVID-19

More than almost anything else, is public trust. Trust that we will (mostly) pull together to do the right thing. And trust in the public officials who are calling on us to make sacrifices.

In the first wave of the pandemic, Canadians mostly heard a clear and consistent message from the top. Public health officials were on the same page, and it helped mightily to rally support for collective action against the virus.

But now that we’re well into the second wave, the message is fragmented and confusing. Just as bad, the medical experts charged with guiding us through the crisis aren’t nearly so united. They are sounding different notes, with a discordant result.

Predictably, public trust is eroding — and at just the wrong time. The numbers speak for themselves: new cases of COVID-19 are at record levels in Ontario and Quebec and the experts warn we may be on the brink of exponential growth in the disease. The health care system, they say, once again risks being overwhelmed.

Yet governments are clearly not united on what to do about this. This past week, for example, on restaurants, banquet halls and gyms in so-called hotspots like Toronto and Peel Region, and urged people to limit their social contacts.

The new rules on socializing, though, are far from clear. At one point on Friday, Premier Doug Ford was asked a straightforward question: is it OK for someone to have Thanksgiving dinner with his mother?

The premier passed this on to his health minister, who passed it on to the chief coroner, who in turn passed it on to the province’s chief medical officer of health. Many words later the straightforward answer still didn’t have a straightforward answer. Dr. David Williams, the chief medical officer, only urged that people “hunker back down.”

Perhaps it’s too much to expect precise answers in a situation that is inherently ambiguous. But if the future course of the pandemic really does depend on our collective actions, it would be helpful to have more than broad advice on how to conduct ourselves.

More serious, though, is the open disagreement between the province and the City of Toronto as to next steps.

The city, through Dr. Eileen de Villa, its top public health official, It wants to ban indoor restaurant dining and sports activities for four weeks. And for the same period it wants people to leave their homes “only for essential purposes” — work, school, health care, buying food, and the like.

Whether such an appeal will work is a big question. People stayed home back in March and April for a simple reason: just about everything was closed and there was hardly any point in going out. Expecting them to stay home when offices, shops, restaurant patios, playgrounds and such are open is a very big ask.

But behind de Villa’s recommendation is the hope that by taking those steps now, the most draconian scenario of another general lockdown can be avoided. If only for that reason, it’s worth a try. Being responsible now and limiting your social contacts may be tough, but if it heads off a repeat of the dark days of March and April, it will be well worth it.

Still, even those measures may not be taken. The city insists it doesn’t have the legal power to do what it wants to do, and is calling on the province to either enforce those measures for Toronto and other hotspots, or give the city the power to do that itself. On the other side, the province says the city already has all the legal authority it needs.

We’ve seen this kind of legal buck-passing — you go first, no you go first — between the two levels of government before, and it’s tiresome. In fact, at this point it’s more than tiresome; it’s dangerous.

COVID-19 doesn’t care about these squabbles. It’s on the march, and governments need to get on the same page on how to battle its second wave. Their failure to do that is putting that vital public trust at risk.

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 October 15

Watch Premier Doug Ford’s daily COVID-19 update now.

In a news conference at Queen’s Park, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and provincial cabinet ministers Christine Elliott (health) and Peter Bethlenfalvy (Treasury Board president) provide an update on their government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 government’s response. They are joined by Jamaal Magloire, Assistant Coach and Community Ambassador for the Toronto Raptors.

A controversial hiring rule that is unpopular with school boards and principals — and even some teachers — is being revoked, Education Minister Stephen Lecce announced Thursday.

‘There just wasn’t enough time to save it’: Unique-looking log house demolished in Barrie

Logwood House is part of Barrie’s history now.

The unique-looking log house on Henry Street was torn down by the Ministry of Transportation Sept. 29, to make room for the eventual reconstruction of a Highway 400 interchange at Dunlop Street.

Sandra Lawrence-Trottier, whose grandparents Grace and Wally Lawrence built the home by hand in the 1940s, was permitted access to the property for about a week leading up to the demolition. She took good advantage of the opportunity — removing plants and rocks from the garden and salvaging several handcrafted doors.

She also removed a small bathroom window that was broken but had been built by hand. It holds fond memories from childhood, when Lawrence-Trottier’s grandmother would hold her up to the window to see a robin, which built a nest and laid eggs on the sill every year.

“I did the best I could do under the circumstances; I think I broke all of my family’s backs,” she said. “There just wasn’t enough time to save it. They’re not doing the highway for another couple of years. But because of all the vagrants and things that were going on in that house, it just had to come down. If I had just a bit more time, we would have been able to come to a resolution. But it wasn’t mean to be.”

Logwood was inherited by Grace and Wally’s son, George, who in turn gave it to his six children in 2004.

The siblings chose to sell the home soon after because they all live in Waterloo Region.

But it is believed the house had been used for squatting recently. During a visit to the property , Simcoe.com observed knobs for the back door were removed and a screen had been taken off its hinges. Inside, there were cardboard boxes set up like tables and a bed sat in the corner.

Though demolition is an undesired outcome for Lawrence-Trottier, she is thankful for the co-operation shown by the ministry and the demolition company.

“It is what it is,” she said. “That’s progress, I guess.”

More information on the project can be found at .

Cocaine, pistols and vehicles seized in Innisfil, Tay Township drug raid

Southern Georgian Bay OPP have released at Friday Harbour Resort and two Tay Township homes Dec. 3.

Officers called in the tactical response unit and emergency response team to search a Friday Harbour condo on Sea Ray Avenue, and a home on Old Fort Road and Lumber Road in Tay Township at 6 a.m.

Once inside, officers seized 2.5 kilograms of cocaine, one kilogram of phenacetin (a analgesic and fever-reducing drug), 174 grams of cannabis resin, a 9-mm Norinco semi-automatic pistol, a 9-mm Smith and Wesson semi-automatic pistol, 164 rounds of ammunition and $55,195 in cash.

They also seized drug trafficking paraphernalia, a 2015 BMW sedan and 2006 Dodge Ram pickup truck.

A 27-year-old Innisfil man and 26-year-old Innisfil woman were charged with possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking, possession of property obtained by crime, two counts each of unauthorized possession of a firearm, knowing the possession was unauthorized, possession of a restricted firearm with ammunition, possession of a firearm obtained by crime, and careless storage of a firearm and ammunition. They were also charged with possession of cannabis for the purpose of selling.

They were both held for a Dec. 4 video bail hearing.

A 27-year-old Tay Township man was charged with possession of cocaine for the purpose of trafficking and possession of property obtained by crime. He was given a future court date in Midland.

New app will help OPP pinpoint your location

The OPP is going to start using a new app to locate where you’re calling from in an emergency.

The will help staff in the provincial communications centre tag your co-ordinates if you’re lost in a forest or waterway, or need assistance in a collision.

The app labels every three squared metres with an unique three-word location tag. Using that information, the call taker can use that to direct officers to your precise location.

If you don’t already have the what3words app downloaded on your mobile device, a link can be provided when you call for help. If you already have the app downloaded on your device, it works without internet or data.

“The what3words app offers precise location information when a caller cannot describe, or does not know, where they are,” Acting OPP Chief Karen Meyer said. “This exciting technology may help save precious time in an emergency and enable a more rapid front-line response.”


A new phase at marina-based resort Friday Harbour in Innisfil

Builder Jim De Gasperis remembers being a young fan of TV’s The Mickey Mouse Club. But what really fascinated him were the commercials featuring show founder Walt Disney as he described his plans to transform a vast expanse of land in Orlando, Fla. into a dazzling resort and theme park: Walt Disney World.

“In a small scale, this is the Walt Disney story,” said De Gasperis during a patio lunch this fall at Friday Harbour, a 600-acre, $1-billion waterfront resort at Lake Simcoe’s Big Bay Point. Minutes from Barrie, the four-season resort’s centrepiece is a 1,000-boat slip, state-of-the-art marina — at about 35 acres, it’s the largest in-land marina in Canada. De Gasperis is a managing partner of Friday Harbour Resort, as well as president and CEO of Con-Drain Group, one of the largest infrastructure companies in North America.

man being interviewed

“We wanted to redefine Old Ontario,” explained Boaz Feiner, president of Geranium’s home-building division and a partner in Friday Harbour. Marc Muzzo, of Pemberton Group is also a partner in the development. “We didn’t want people’s secondary residence to emulate their primary residence.”

Feiner said buyers at Friday Harbour are not traditional cottagers; they are mainly urbanites who enjoy a resort-like, waterfront escape and want activities and conveniences such as restaurants, coffee shops and stores.

And, on this sunny day, people of all ages — socially distant and most wearing masks due to COVID-19 — stroll along the boardwalk in the European-style pedestrian village. They have a range of destinations: a coffee at Starbucks, a bite at FH Fine Foods. Some headed to the Outdoor Adventure Centre to swim in the pool, play basketball, or paddleboard or kayak on Lake Simcoe. As well, walking and biking trails thread through the 200-acre Nature Preserve. And The Nest is an 18-hole golf course designed by Doug Carrick to meet with Audubon International environment standards, and shaped from 1.8 million cubic metres of dirt taken from the marina basin .

So far, 1,000 housing units have been built at Friday Harbour, including luxury townhouses that sit on “islands” in the marina and midrise condominiums in the pedestrian village. When complete, the community will have 3,000 units, including hotel rooms.

“This is not like any other project. It’s a unique proposition to Ontario, a marina-based resort,” said De Gasperis. “Friday Harbour is an urban cottage lifestyle,” he added about the modern design of the community where most buyers — like him — have never owned a traditional cottage.

building

Nearly 20 years since first envisioned, Friday Harbour has been designed with respect for its lakeside environment. Runoff that could affect water quality and fish habitat is collected and treated before it’s released into the marina basin, where healthy populations of fish have been monitored. Village runoff is pumped to a pond on the golf course and used to irrigate the greens. Wildlife habitats have been restored and new ones created. An extensive planting and monitoring of endangered butternut trees was undertaken.

Feiner and De Gasperis are more than partners in the resort. They both own homes at Friday Harbour and on this day, one of Feiner’s four kids whizzes past on inline skates. “We are also users here so we can pay more direct attention and we have a willingness to pivot, based on the demands of the community,” he said.

The resort’s vision was conceived by Geranium Corporation principal Earl Rumm from a sketch he saw in the boat shop of the old Big Bay Point Marina. The project really gained traction when De Gasperis and Muzzo joined as partners six years ago.

De Gasperis has been hands-on from the start; Con-Drain built the marina and he was on-site constantly during construction. He pays attention to details — such as the design of the streetlights and drain covers. After seeing a marina boardwalk built of Ipe wood in Florida, he wanted the same for Friday Harbour’s 4.5-kilometre boardwalk and sourced it directly from Brazil. He handpicks the retailers for the resort to reflect homeowners’ needs: FH Fine Foods was created specifically for the resort and De Gasperis insisted that Friday Harbour own the on-site Starbucks — normally, the company doesn’t franchise its shops. There’s a Crockadoodle pottery studio where kids and families can create. Restaurants include Avenue Cibi e Vini Italian restaurant, there is Mediterranean-inspired Fishbone Kitchen and Bar, the waterfront Beach Club and Beavertails; Zaza Italian coffee bar will be opening soon. As most homeowners have dogs, a pet food store will be coming, as well as a salon/spa, pharmacy and walk-in clinic.

View of development from the sky

“There are 4,500 cottages on the lake and Friday Harbour is becoming the hub and meeting point for Lake Simcoe,” said Feiner. “Some people come just for the LCBO or Starbucks, some come to play golf or to eat at one of the restaurants. What is most exciting is seeing people’s reaction the first time they come here.”

Some homeowners use their condos or townhouses as vacation homes; others live most of the year there. What they can’t find on the resort is minutes away in Barrie, including a GO train station.

Currently, there are townhomes and condo suites available from the high $300,000s to more than $2 million. The available townhomes are on the water and have 10-foot ceilings. They include private boat slip, elevator and hot tub. The newest residential offering is High Point, a four-storey condo under construction in the Village with more than 200 suites, starting from the high $300,000s.

Also under construction is the Lake Club, a stunning glass and wood amenity building that will include indoor and outdoor restaurants, full-service bar, private boardroom and dining room, fitness centre, outdoor pool and hot tub, and indoor and outdoor Kids Zone.

The Lake Club reflects the partners’ goal that the resort be a place where people of all ages can enjoy themselves. “It’s a legacy for us and our kids and grandkids,” says De Gasperis.

FRIDAY HARBOUR

Developer: Friday Harbour

High Point: A four-storey condominium now under construction with 200-plus suites; 520-2,220 sq. ft., one- to four-bedroom units with one parking spot. Priced from the high $300,000s to $2 million plus. Monthly homeowner fees. Occupancy fall 2022.

Features: Stainless steel appliances, quartz countertops, 12-by- 24-inch porcelain tile in kitchen and bath, stacked washer/dryer, laminate engineered flooring, patio or balcony (as per plan)

Amenities: Landscaped interior courtyard, swimming pool, party room and pet wash stations plus access to all Friday Harbour amenities

Info: Website . Email , ext. 5, or toll free ext. 5. General information:

SIU determines OPP officer acted appropriately to subdue New Tecumseth woman who injured herself with blade

An OPP officer who used a stun gun to subdue a New Tecumseth woman who injured herself with a blade has been cleared of any wrongdoing by the Special Investigations Unit (SIU).

The incident happened Oct. 6 in Innisfil on Highway 89, near the northbound on-ramp to Highway 400.

The SIU said the 27-year-old woman was heading from Mississauga to Manitoba, where she intended to die by suicide, but had stopped her vehicle at the on ramp and exited the vehicle.

The police officer who attended the scene had a brief interaction with the woman at a distance, and at some point she used a box cutter to slash one of her wrists.

The officer used the stun gun to immobilize the woman and place her into custody, so she could be brought to hospital for treatment.

SIU Director Joseph Martino issued the following statement.

“Based on the SIU’s preliminary inquiries, it is apparent that the woman is alone to blame for her injuries,” he said. “As there is no question on the aforementioned-record of any potential criminal liability on the part of the officer in connection with the woman’s injuries, the investigation is hereby discontinued and the file is closed.”