Clean-up begins in Barrie after EF2 tornado damages homes, injures people

By Nicole Thompson, the Canadian Press and News Staff

Barrie will turn its attention to clean-up on Friday after a twister tore through a neighbourhood, damaging homes and injuring several people.

Paramedics have said eight people were taken to hospital, and several others were treated for minor injuries.

Fire Chief Cory Mainprize said roughly 20 homes are considered uninhabitable, with two or three completely destroyed.

Crews are expected to start making some of the repairs today, including patching up roofs that weren’t too badly damaged.

Environment Canada has confirmed that the tornado was an EF2 with maximum wind speeds of 210 km/hr.

The agency says the damage path of the twister was about 5 km long and up to 100 m wide.

Premier Doug Ford arrived in Barrie around 1:00 p.m. Friday, telling residents they have the government’s full support moving forward.

“If insurance doesn’t cover [costs], we’re going to be here to step up. We’re going to be here for them.”

Mayor Jeff Lehman says the community has already started coming together to support those who lost the most to the tornado, donating food and supplies.

Barrie Police provided an update on Friday thanking everyone who shared donations. They say the outpouring has been so great that they are no longer able to accept any more donations.

“We thank everyone who has shared donations for those affected by the tornado in Barrie yesterday afternoon,” said Barre Police in a tweet. “Updates will be provided if further donations are needed.”


Lehman noted it’s a familiar scene to many long-time Barrie residents. A tornado killed eight people and injured more than a hundred others in the city in 1985. Hundreds of homes in the Allendale neighbourhood were destroyed.

“The scenes today are reminiscent of it,” Lehman said. “I lived in that neighbourhood as a boy. I mean, it’s shocking, you know, you never expected to see it again.”


RELATED: At least 8 injured, ‘catastrophic’ damage after tornado hits Barrie


Yesterday’s tornado brought back memories for 70-year-old Judy Arksey, too.

“It was like deja-vu,” she said. “I got one look at the sky and I knew what was coming.”

She was in her daughter’s car in the driveway when the tornado ripped down the street yesterday. Her two grandkids — aged six and 16 — were with them.

“I remember the horses being lifted up out of the racetrack during the other tornado, and I thought, here goes our car with my grandkids in it,” Arksey said.

As soon as she saw the sky, she said, she told them to look down so they wouldn’t see what was coming for them.

 

Luckily, she said, the car stayed on the ground despite taking a beating in the strong wind, and she and her family escaped injury.

She said the community has come together in the wake of yesterday’s destruction, just like it did 36 years ago.

Arksey spent two weeks volunteering after the 1985 tornado, she said, helping out however she could at the church.

“I’m too old to do that this time,” she said.

Top Stories

Top Stories

Most Watched Today