Tag: 上海娱乐地图2019

Fog advisory for Innisfil, New Tecumseth, and Angus: Environment Canada

Environment Canada has ended the fog advisory for areas including Innisfil, New Tecumseth, and Angus. 

If you’re travelling, be advised the advisory remains active for Orangeville, Grand Valley, Southern Dufferin County,

Shelburne, Mansfield, and Northern Dufferin County.

“Persons in or near this area should be on the lookout for adverse weather conditions and take necessary safety precautions,” states Environment Canada. 

Weather alerts are available at the Environment Canada website. 

Alliston hospital clarifies comments about building’s fire safety status

Stevenson Memorial Hospital (SMH) and the local fire chief are providing clarification and context to some questions that came up recently at Queen’s Park regarding the building’s fire safety status.

On Nov. 23, Simcoe-Grey MPP Jim Wilson received support for his private member’s resolution calling on the government to continue to support planning work for the construction of SMH in Alliston and Collingwood General and Marine Hospital.

, he talked about how a “massive investment” would be needed in order for the building to have a proper sprinkler system and how staff are forced to store equipment in the cramped hallways.

He even said the fire chief has officially put the hospital on notice about the building being in contravention of the Ontario Fire Code.

The hospital’s facilities manager, Wayne Willcott, told Simcoe.com the building is not in violation of the code, but it has been given a deadline of Jan. 1, 2025, to install a sprinkler system in the 56-year-old building.

He noted that when the hospital was constructed in 1964, it was not a requirement at the time to have a system. There is only one small area that has a sprinkler system, the CT diagnostic imaging area, which was built more recently.

He said the hospital was “grandfathered in” as new safety regulations were passed over the years.

Hospital communications officer Rachel Ogorek said it has been estimated to cost between $850,000 to $2 million to outfit the building with sprinklers.

“It’s certainly not something we can manage without the support of the ministry supporting the redevelopment plan and packaging it all together,” she said.

As for the equipment being left in hallways, Willcott said these are the mobile work stations used by nurses. He said when the building was originally constructed, nurses did all of their paper work at the nursing station.

To ensure there is still access through the halls, he said the equipment is kept to one side.

He said this won’t be an issue with the redeveloped hospital, noting it will contain cubicles in the halls to store the work stations.

New Tecumseth Fire Chief Dan Heydon told Simcoe.com that his staff met with hospital management last year to discuss how the facility can achieve full compliance of the fire code come 2025. He said the code was updated in 2014, requiring sprinklers to be provided in health-care facilities, care occupancies and retirement homes by Jan. 1, 2025.

Heydon said space has been a long-standing challenge at the hospital, noting how the hospital is servicing many more patients than it was designed for.

“New Tecumseth Fire and Stevenson Memorial staff have been working co-operatively for many years to quickly address any concerns that arise to maintain compliance with the Ontario Fire Code,” he said. “There are no outstanding fire code violations at Stevenson Memorial Hospital.”

Willcott said the annual fire inspection was recently completed, and only some minor issues were found, like faded stickers on doors.

He said many things have been done over the years to make sure the building meets the code, like installing door openers on fire exits and providing evacuation chairs to move patients safely down stairwells.

Barrie man convicted of running over ex-best friend in jealous rage

A Barrie man who drove his truck into his best friend in a fit of jealousy faces a sentencing hearing Dec. 4.

Isidoro Pacheco pleaded guilty Sept. 14 to dangerous driving causing bodily harm.

The court heard Pacheco had suspected his wife and friend were having an affair during the summer of 2018. 

On Sept. 18, Pacheco’s pickup truck struck his estranged friend while he was helping his wife pack up her belongings on Pacheco’s driveway.

The court heard Pacheco’s truck jumped the curb as he returned home early from work at about 11:30 a.m. to see his ex-friend carrying “something” from the house.

“At about that same moment, his truck veered left, jumped the curb and drove diagonally across a driveway, a boulevard, a sidewalk, and his next-door-neighbour’s front lawn,” a court document states. “It struck (the victim), causing him to fly through the air and make a hard landing, face down, some distance away.”

Although Pacheco pleaded guilty, he testified that he did not intend to run over his former friend.  

Pacheco told the court he lost control of his truck when he stuck his head out the window to get a better look at the “person” he saw at his front door.

But Justice Cary Boswell ruled the evidence showed the crash was intentional.

“I do not believe or accept Mr. Pacheco’s version of events leading up to the collision,” Boswell said in a written decision. “Indeed, I consider his account impossible to accept.”

After the collision, Pacheco’s wife knelt beside the victim and said, “Oh my God, you’ve killed (him).”

When Barrie police officers arrived, they found Pacheco hiding under a pool cover in the backyard holding a steak knife. He was arrested without incident.

Barrie police were also at Pacheco’s home the night before the crash, when officers told him to stop throwing his wife’s belongings onto the front lawn.

The case resumes Dec. 4 in Barrie Superior Court of Justice.