November 14, 2024

Eight people injured, buildings destroyed, as tornado leaves ‘catastrophic’ damage in Barrie, Ont.

Barrie #Barrie

a view of a city: Barrie police confirmed the tornado that touched down on Thursday afternoon damaged 25 buildings and injured 8 people. © Grant Linton/CBC Barrie police confirmed the tornado that touched down on Thursday afternoon damaged 25 buildings and injured 8 people.

Four people were hospitalized with serious injuries and about 25 buildings damaged in Barrie, Ont., Thursday, after a tornado tore through a southeast neighbourhood in the city north of Toronto, leaving a path of destruction in its wake. 

Aside from the four people who paramedics took to hospital, at least four others were treated for less serious injuries, said Andrew Robert, chief of Simcoe Paramedic Services, at a news conference Thursday night. Paramedics also set up a triage area at Saint Gabriel the Archangel Catholic School on Prince William Way, in the southeast neighbourhood of the city that was most severely affected by the tornado. 

Of the 25 buildings that were damaged, three were completely demolished, officials said at the news conference.

“I can’t tell you how incredible it is that nobody has been killed,” Barrie Mayor Jeff Lehman said.

Residents emerged from their basements to find caved-in walls, roofs torn off destroyed buildings, flipped cars, broken gas lines and downed wires — and sirens wailing all around them.

“This is an incredibly difficult day,” Lehman said at the conference. “We will respond and rebuild, most of all we want to make sure everyone is safe.”

Lehman said he was heartened to see “incredible offers” from people showing up with water, food, and other supplies for their neighbours.

After the tornado touched down, emergency workers responded to “multiple reports of damage” in the southeast part of the city.

‘The damage is catastrophic’

“The damage is catastrophic. It is significant. It is major,” Barrie police spokesperson Peter Leon said during the emergency response, urging people to stay away from the area.

Environment Canada had issued tornado warnings across the region throughout the afternoon, but downgraded those warnings across Ontario in the hours after the twister tore through Barrie.

Flipped vehicles, destroyed fences

In the hours after the tornado touched down, Barrie residents took to social media, posting photos and videos of destruction caused by the storm. Many homes had damage to roofs, backyards and fences. 

Those images on social media along with Environment Canada’s own data helped confirm the storm was a tornado, said the agency’s warning preparedness meteorologist Geoff Coulson. He said the tornado touched down around 2:30 p.m., just minutes after Environment Canada upgraded its tornado watch to warning.

“We don’t have a sense of the damage path, the length or width of the path” that the tornado took when it touched down in Barrie, he said, but the agency is sending a team to investigate, as is the Northern Tornadoes Project at Western University.

a group of people walking down a street next to a house: At the corner of Monarchy and Majesty in Barrie, families flee their destroyed homes after the tornado hit. © Martin Trainor/CBC At the corner of Monarchy and Majesty in Barrie, families flee their destroyed homes after the tornado hit.

Neighbourhoods near Mapleview Drive East and Prince William Way in the southeast part of the city took the brunt of the damage.

After the storm, some residents drove around assessing damage, which included flipped vehicles, and destroyed fences.

“There is extensive damage from the tornado touchdown in the area of Prince William Way and Mapleview in SE Barrie,” Lehman said in a tweet. “Please avoid the area as emergency crews are focused on making sure everyone is safe.”

Barrie Police, with assistance from OPP and fire services, said they were going door-to-door to check on residents in the Mapleview area.

“My thoughts are with everyone in Barrie and Innisfil affected by the severe weather today,” Premier Doug Ford said in a tweet. “A big thank you to our first responders that are currently on the ground helping the situation. Please stay safe everyone!”

The tornado impacted GO Transit, the public transit service for the Greater Toronto and Hamilton areas. All trains on the Barrie Line were ended at Bradford GO Station as crews inspected tracks north of Bradford.

‘Houses that have come off their foundations’

“There’s houses that have come off their foundation, obviously lots of roofs that have been blown off,” Barrie-Innisfil Member of Parliament John Brassard told CBC News. “I’ve seen trampolines in people’s pools, so the damage is quite devastating.

Brassard is in the area checking on friends and residents. He noted the smell of gas near several homes as barbecues had been “ripped right from the gas line,” he said.

“Gas crews are here, water crews are here. They’re doing everything they can to shut things down,” Brassard said. “And right now, police are going door to door just to make sure that everybody is accounted for.”

“This is going to be a long operation because the damage is that extensive,” he added.

Ward 6 city councillor Natalie Harris was visiting her son and ex-husband when the tornado hit their neighbourhood. They quickly ran to the basement just as it struck the house.

“We could hear the tornado above us,” she said. “The house was shaking. It happened so fast, we had no idea when it would finish.”

Harris assessed the house and neighbourhood after and said there was “so much destruction,” and that the entire street was damaged.

“Everything’s just destroyed,” Harris said. “I can’t believe it.”

Environment Canada had first issued a severe thunderstorm watch just before noon for Barrie, Midland, and Orillia. That was upgraded to a tornado warning by early afternoon which ended just before 3 p.m. ET.

By 3 p.m., Environment Canada issued another tornado warning for Newmarket, Georgina, Uxbridge and surrounding areas, but had ended it by 3:30 p.m. A tornado warning was also in effect for the Peterborough-Kawartha Lakes area.

The storm also touched down in nearby Keswick, Ont., but whether that was also a tornado remains to be determined, Coulson said.

“It looks like, as it’s moving further east, it will start to weaken somewhat, but it is still going to be a very dangerous storm for the next little while,” he said.

“It is also important to remind folks that it does continue to be an ongoing situation, (thunderstorm) watches continue to be in effect for much of southern and eastern Ontario, and there is still a potential for damaging storms to occur through the late afternoon and evening hours in parts of the province.”

Residents in area recall the moment tornado hit

Residents in the area recalled the moment when the tornado struck.

“My buddy said he’ll go check on his boat. He came back home and his house was totalled,” Shane said. “Roof ripped off, and his trailer was in the neighbour’s driveway.

Olivia Michalski was on the way home when the tornado tore through the area. When she arrived her neighbour told her she had seen the tornado’s funnel clouds and ran into the basement.

“It just went by us by a couple streets,” Michalski said. “Thankfully, I wasn’t near where the tornado touched, my parents were home at the time and they didn’t even know what was happening.”

Tracy Miller remembers the tornado that hit Barrie in 1985, and she experienced her second tornado Thursday. Her grandmother’s house, she said, was demolished.

“You don’t think you’ll be in that twice in one lifetime,” she said. “My heart goes out to all those in Barrie today.”

Various severe thunderstorm warnings and watches continued to be issued as the storm moved east across the province.

Much of southern Ontario beyond Toronto remained under a severe thunderstorm watch Thursday, according to Environment Canada later that afternoon. 

Hazards include damaging wind gusts of 90 to 110 km/h, nickel-sized or golf ball-sized hails, and heavy downpours.

Environment Canada said it was continuing to monitor for possible tornadoes.

The Ontario SPCA and Humane Society said it would offer support to anyone affected by the tornado who may be struggling to care for their animals following the damage.

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