Toddler missing in Ontario flooding
Mom lost grip on child as car swept off road
BRA NT FORD, ONT .• Local officials near the town of Orangeville, Ont., were bracing for tragedy as they scoured the swollen Grand River for a three- year- old boy who went missing after the car he was riding in was swept off a washed-out road.
Ontario Provincial Police Const. Paul Nancekevell said the boy’s mother was driving near the river around 1 a.m. on Wednesday when her vehicle plunged into the rapidly rising waters.
“His mom got out of the car, she pulled him from the car but she lost her grip on him and he was swept downriver,” Nancekevell said. “They were in the middle of fast-flowing water.”
Police are combing the area for the boy using helicopters, dive teams and ground search crews, he said, adding they are “keeping a good thought” about his ultimate safety. One other local official, however, said the effort was being viewed as a recovery operation rather than a rescue effort.
Grand Valley District Fire Chief Kevin McNeilly said weather conditions were treacherous at the time the mother and son, believed to be from the area, went into the water. McNeilly, whose department was handling the search before police took over, said would-be rescuers were contending with dramatic spikes in the level of the river.
“It was extremely foggy. Very, very violent river last night,” McNeilly said.
“At one point it raised up three feet ( about 90 centimetres) in a matter of 20 minutes.”
The unexpected surges prompted a different kind of crisis nearly 100 kilometres downriver in Brantford, where officials declared a state of emergency.
About 4,900 people in roughly 2,200 homes are under an evacuation order covering neighbourhoods surrounding the river after the unseasonable conditions dislodged an ice jam near the city.
Brantford Mayor Chris Friel said flooding has closed many local businesses and schools as well as city trails.
Danielle Beaudoin, who lives less than a kilometre from the river’s shore, found out that she and her son would have to leave their home at about 9 a.m. on Wednesday.
“I had already taken him to school and I was getting ready for work myself when one of his older babysitters brought him back,” she said.
After rounding up the family cats, Beaudoin hastily packed food, water and a change of clothes for her and her son before driving out of the evacuation zone. She said the river had risen so high that chunks of ice from the water surface were now resting on shore.
The mayor urged all Brantford residents to steer clear of the river and surrounding areas for the foreseeable future.
The river was expected to peak sometime Wednesday.