National Post (National Edition)

Ford pledges support as cleanup begins following EF-2 tornado in Barrie

ONTARIO PREMIER SAYS IT'S A MIRACLE NO ONE WAS KILLED

- NICOLE THOMPSON AND PAOLA LORIGGIO in Barrie, Ont.

Residents whose homes were badly damaged or destroyed in a twister that tore through Barrie, an hour's drive north of Toronto, got a closer look at the wreckage Friday as they ventured back to retrieve key possession­s, while the Ontario premier vowed to support the recovery efforts.

Premier Doug Ford toured the south Barrie neighbourh­ood where the tornado touched down and pledged Friday to “step up” if insurance companies didn't cover the costs of repairs.

“It's a shock, it's shocking, it's heartbreak­ing,” Ford said as he stood on a street littered with debris, with several homes cordoned off.

“These people, within minutes, literally, their lives changed. But we're going to get them back on their feet.”

Ford expressed relief, however, that no one had been killed in the disaster, calling it a “miracle.”

Uprooted trees, toppled fences, pieces of building insulation and roofing materials remained strewn on lawns and into the streets in the area where the tornado cut its path Thursday afternoon. Several people were injured.

For some, the brief return home to fetch medication, prized possession­s or pets highlighte­d the extent of the damage and its fallout, Barrie Mayor Jeff Lehman said in a video statement Friday morning.

“That's one of the real difficult things about this morning, is folks finding that their lives are gone, their possession­s are gone or heavily damaged by the storm,” he said.

“But the cleanup efforts are beginning.”

Tyler Musgrove, his brother Jacob and their roommate, Kelly Trinh, were surveying what remained of their backyard Friday morning.

What used to be their shed was reduced to a wooden foundation and a pile of debris, and there was nothing left of their gazebo.

“This is the first time I'm seeing the damage,” said Trinh, who stayed with her boyfriend overnight because access to the home was blocked by the time she arrived there Thursday evening.

“It does not feel real,” she said. Inside, the damage is “not that bad,” Jacob Musgrove said. His window was broken by a twoby-four, which he's considerin­g keeping as a memento, he said.

Tyler Musgrove said he and his brother were home when the tornado hit. He recalled running out to close the door to the shed, which had been left open, and suddenly seeing “stuff flying” all around him.

“The shed behind me started to break apart, it flew up and around me. Then I ran inside as fast as I could,” he said.

He needed stitches on his arm after getting cut by glass and wood shrapnel, he said.

Paramedics have said eight people were taken to hospital, and several others were treated for minor injuries. The mayor said Friday that 11 people were injured in total, but none were critically hurt.

Environmen­t Canada has given the tornado a preliminar­y rating of EF-2, meaning it had maximum wind speeds of 210 kilometres per hour. The damage path was about five kilometres long and up to 100 metres wide, the weather office said.

Roughly 20 homes are considered uninhabita­ble, with two or three destroyed, fire Chief Cory Mainprize said.

Crews were expected to start making some repairs Friday, including patching up roofs.

Mayor Lehman said the community had already started coming together to support those who lost the most to the tornado.

He noted it's a familiar scene to many longtime Barrie residents. A tornado killed eight people and injured more than a hundred others in the city in 1985. Hundreds of homes 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.”

Thursday'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 a driveway when the tornado ripped down the street. 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,” Arksey said, “and I thought, here goes our car with my grandkids in it.”

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

 ?? EDWARD LOVELESS / SOCIAL MEDIA VIA REUTERS ?? An aerial view shows damage to buildings in the aftermath of a tornado in Barrie in this still image obtained from video.
EDWARD LOVELESS / SOCIAL MEDIA VIA REUTERS An aerial view shows damage to buildings in the aftermath of a tornado in Barrie in this still image obtained from video.
 ?? JACK BOLAND / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? An F2-Category tornado tore through south Barrie on Thursday afternoon leaving a swath of destructio­n to homes and vehicles.
JACK BOLAND / POSTMEDIA NEWS An F2-Category tornado tore through south Barrie on Thursday afternoon leaving a swath of destructio­n to homes and vehicles.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Roughly 20 homes are considered uninhabita­ble.
CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV / THE CANADIAN PRESS Roughly 20 homes are considered uninhabita­ble.

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