Category: nskiorhji

No injuries reported in Springwater barn fire overnight

Springwater Fire and Emergency Services was busy with a large barn fire that happened overnight.

Emergency crews were called shortly before midnight Nov. 25 to Flos Road 5 between Crossland and Vigo roads.

No injuries were reported, but crews are still on the scene this morning.

Wasaga Beach and Tiny Township fire departments were also called to assist.

It’s the second fire in as many days, as a . That fire started around 4:30 p.m. at a barn on the 11th Line. The cause of that fire remains under investigation.

Clear off the snow: warns Barrie police

Barrie police are reminding motorists to make sure they clean the snow off their vehicles before hitting the road. Barrie police took to Twitter to send out the reminder. 

“#BarriePolice remind you that not properly cleaning the snow from your vehicle is dangerous. Driving without a clear view to the front, rear or sides may cost you $110 or it may cause someone else their life. Plan ahead & give yourself enough time to properly clear all the snow!”

The OPP launches its Festive RIDE campaign tomorrow, so expect to see more officers on the roadways. 


Four rescued from Lake Simcoe after boat catches fire

Four people were rescued from Lake Simcoe after the boat they were on was destroyed by fire.

Firefighters and police worked together to extinguish a blaze that destroyed a boat in the water off Oro Beach.

Firefighters from Oro-Medonte, Rama, and Orillia, along with the OPP, Barrie Police, and York Regional Police, were called out to the scene just before 3 p.m., Oct. 11.

The four on board were rescued by a passing boater, according to a Tweet by the OPP.

According to a Tweet from York Regional Police, the operators were cruising across Lake Simcoe when an electrical issue turned into an uncontrollable fire.

There were no injuries.


Susan Delacourt: Donald Trump’s health is a national concern. So why is Justin Trudeau’s top secret?

would never trade jobs with , but right now, the U.S. president might opt for Canadian-style privacy around the health of political leaders.

The U.S. is currently awash in contradictory reports on just how badly Trump has been hit by . The actual details may conflict, but they are at least details — the type that would likely not be disclosed in Canada about any political leader.

Trudeau, in fact, only revealed on Monday that he had been tested for COVID-19 a month ago and did a brief time in self-isolation because he had a “raspy” throat and his doctor recommended that the prime minister get checked out.

As well, it was only a couple of weeks ago when Canadians learned that members of Parliament had a separate COVID-19 testing system available to them — and only after Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole stood in a public lineup first.

Canada may be in a public-health crisis, but there is nothing really public about the health of our politicians, even in the age of COVID-19. So far, Canadians seem fine with this distinction, some even proud of it.

This contrast between Canadian and American standards surrounding political leaders’ health was hard to ignore this past weekend with all the Trump drama unfolding south of the border. Journalists and political commentators in the U.S. fumed that they were not being told enough; that Trump owed Americans every scrap of medical data available. To some extent, Trump’s doctors obliged that outrage, emerging from the hospital to clarify the sketchy information they initially provided.

Here in Canada, even that first, vague report from the Trump doctors went well past the standards of health disclosure. Then again, Canada is also a country that does not expect political leaders to make public their tax returns or even their detailed daily itineraries. The none-of-our-business policy stretches past medical issues.

On Saturday, for instance, while Americans were trying to find out blood oxygen levels from Trump’s doctors, Canadians knew only that their prime minister was in “private meetings.”

Trudeau, to be fair, is the first Canadian prime minister to issue any kind of daily itinerary tod reporters and the public, but it’s usually extremely light on details, especially in comparison to the itinerary that comes out of the White House. In the U.S., reporters know when, how and where Trump is spending his days off (usually on the golf course) but Canadian media is normally notified with one word — “personal” — that Trudeau is not on the job that day.

When I made the observation on Twitter this past weekend about the different standards for health disclosure in Canada and the United States, various theories were offered: it’s the difference between a republic and a parliamentary democracy, or the fact that the president, unlike the prime minister, can trigger a nuclear war.

Actually, the difference is rooted simply in two different political cultures. Americans, and particularly the U.S. media, basically expect a much greater degree of openness from political office-holders.

Stephen Harper was annoyed when the media learned about a visit to the emergency room shortly before he was sworn in as prime minister in 2006; Jean Chrétien disappeared for a while when he was opposition leader in 1992 to have an operation on his lung. Neither leader said more than the bare minimum about these medical dramas.

The closest that Canada came to debating the lack of transparency here was in 2011, when New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton, after battling cancer, went into an election campaign brandishing a cane to deal with a broken hip. Layton died several months after that election, prompting a large discussion about whether enough hard questions were asked and answered about his fitness to run for the prime minister’s job.

One of the most thorough analyses of how Canadians deal with politicians and their health was done by Radio-Canada journalist Catherine Lanthier, in an investigation that also was .

Seven years later, it’s still an enlightening exploration of the questions around whether Canada want to be more American in what citizens are allowed to know about the health of our politicians. Lanthier talked to many experts about how we could be more transparent here without going wide-open American style — requirements that office-holders privately file their medical-health data with someone like an ethics commissioner, for instance.

Trump is no poster boy for political transparency, but his COVID-19 diagnosis has shown that even the most powerful leaders owe the public some assurances about their fitness for office — healthwise, anyway.

Canada’s none-of-our-business approach seems almost quaint in the age of COVID-19, when politicians are not just human beings but potential superspreaders, too.

Susan Delacourt is an Ottawa-based columnist covering national politics for the Star. Reach her via email: or follow her on Twitter: @susandelacourt

Large barn fire breaks out in New Tecumseth

Emergency crews were called out to battle a large barn fire Nov. 23 at a farm property on the 11th Line.

The blaze broke out around 4:30 p.m. at the property, located between 15 and 20 Sideroad.

New Tecumseth Fire Chief Dan Heydon said the barn contained a large amount of hay, but no animals.

The cause remains under investigation and a dollar loss has not been estimated yet, he added.

Several firefighters attended the scene and tanker support was provided by neighbouring fire departments.

Simcoe Muskoka health unit to provide immunizations, after school clinics cancelled

With school clinics cancelled, immunizations for Grade 8 students who missed Grade 7 vaccines due to COVID-19, are now being offered by appointment by the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit (SMDHU).

“It’s important that students complete the immunization series for Hepatitis B (Hep B) and Human Papillomavirus (HPV),” said Dr. Colin Lee, associate medical officer of health for SMDHU. “They need both doses of each vaccine for the best protection against these diseases.”

Clinics begin the week of Nov. 2 in health-unit offices across Simcoe Muskoka, one to two days a week as needed through to the spring. It’s estimated upwards of 2,200 students will need to be immunized.

School immunization clinics will not be held during the 2020/2021 school year due to COVID-19. Instead, they will be offered for both Grade 7 and 8 students in the 2021/22 school year.

To book an appointment, call Health Connection at or ext. 8827, weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Or visit.


New legal challenge filed against proposed Simcoe County waste facility

Legal battles continue for the County of Simcoe’s plan to build an Environmental Resource Recovery Centre in Springwater.

Recently, the plan to build an organics sorting plant in the Freele Tract of the Simcoe County Forest, after a (LPAT).

But now, the Friends of Simcoe Forests has filed a new divisional court challenge after learning that issues related to the Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe were stricken from the appeal.

“We believe (this decision) was intended to circumvent the normal planning rules from applying to our case,” Friends president Mary Wagner said in a press release. It “has eviscerated our core grounds of appeal.”

Plans for the facility at 2976 Horseshoe Valley Rd. W. have been on hold since the Friends group filed the appeal in 2019, taking aim at the site-selection process, noise, odour and noting that the woodland is home to endangered species and should remain untouched.

Construction on the project is set to begin in January 2023.

Ontario teachers say they’re ‘June tired,’ but it’s only October. Such is the toll of COVID-19

As a kindergarten teacher, Michelle McKay used to revel in the lively, open classrooms that are the hallmark of early childhood education.

But that ended abruptly for her and countless other teachers in March when schools shut down amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, with schools open again, and in a new role as a support worker for students with autism spectrum disorder, McKay typically visits two schools a day in Mississauga, where, instead of the lively squeals of youngsters, her workday begins with a series of safety protocols that just a few months ago she could not have imagined.

After donning her personal protective gear — usually a face mask and shield — she is screened at the door for COVID-19 symptoms. Once inside, she follows arrows on the floor and sanitizes her hands on the way. When she finally reaches the classroom, she focuses on maintaining a careful distance between herself and the students in a bid to keep everyone safe.

Like most of her colleagues, McKay’s job these days is a big departure from what it once was. But even with a new school year and a new role, her level of exhaustion is at an all-time high.

“We’re feeling June tired,” McKay said. “We don’t normally feel like this at this time of year.”

Many of Ontario’s 160,000 teachers say burnout is running rampant. They’re overwhelmed with a barrage of new responsibilities outside of teaching, including rigorous cleaning of classrooms, navigating technological issues for online classes and trying to maintain physical distancing between younger children.

All this, while being responsible for the education of Ontario’s two million students — a process that’s become increasingly complicated as more parents opt for online education at the eleventh hour. About 7,500 students recently switched from in-person to at the Toronto District School Board, while 3,000 opted to switch back from virtual to in-person classes.

Despite more students learning online, physical class sizes have remained the same, teachers and their unions say, because of a shortage of teaching staff that has

The stress is also evident in numbers. A survey by Mental Health Research Canada, a national non-profit organization, found the number of teachers with high levels of anxiety increased, from five per cent reporting anxiety before COVID to 25 per cent amid the pandemic. Those teachers were surveyed in the last week of August, prior to Ontario schools reopening for the fall.

Teachers also stated through the survey that they are pessimistic about their levels of anxiety for the next two months

The pandemic is showing no signs of slowing down, and public health officials forecast up to 1,000 cases per day in Ontario by mid-October — 40 times the average of around 25 daily cases when schools were shut down in March. More than 480 coronavirus cases have been reported in Ontario schools, with one elementary school in Scarborough closing temporarily on Sept. 28 due to an outbreak.

McKay said she fears the anxiety will force more teachers to go on unpaid leave or long-term stress leave in the coming months.

“It might be working right now,” she said. “But long-term, I’m not sure how the current plan is sustainable.”

Gail Bannister-Clarke, president of the local union representing Peel District School Board’s 7,000 teachers, said the number of teachers on extended leave is now 94, much higher than usual.

“We know at this point of the year, people usually aren’t off,” Bannister-Clarke said. “People usually come back from the summer refreshed.”

Ryan Reyes, a spokesperson for the Peel District School Board, confirmed there is a higher than usual number of staff on leave. Their reasons include looking after their kids or immunocompromised family members and personal health issues.

Bannister-Clarke said teachers are fed up with what she describes as a “chaotic situation,” fuelled by inadequate support from the province, a constant cycle of unknowns and safety guidelines that are changing rapidly. Some are forced to juggle multiple roles, or teach subjects they’re qualified for but haven’t taught in years.

Even for the most seasoned educators, teaching while maintaining physical distancing and with the threat of the virus always looming means reimagining their profession, said Peel District School Board teacher librarian and kindergarten instructor Klara Redford.

Redford’s students are assigned a space or desk. They can’t share materials and supplies. It is starkly different from the collaborative learning environment early childhood educators have often relied on and cherished, she added.

“It’s been really, really difficult, and it’s stressful for teachers who, especially in the early years, are rooted in that philosophy of inquiry and play,” she said. “They can’t do that anymore.”

Redford said it’s still a challenge to get younger children to distance themselves, especially during activities like story time. “To maintain a two-metre distance in a kindergarten class is actually impossible,” she said.

This is compounded by the added pressure on teachers to keep their classrooms clean. Armed with a spray bottle, Redford endeavours to wipe down every surface touched, all while trying to teach her young students.

Even with rigorous cleaning, COVID-19 cases are still being reported in schools. Bannister-Clarke estimated she receives about three alerts per day from Peel Public Health notifying her of a COVID-19 case in a Peel school. This information is sent to teachers as well, she said, further fuelling their anxiety.

“Once you hear that someone in your building has COVID-19, you think, ‘Am I really safe?’”

Research shows the impact of COVID-19 on children is less severe than adults. Statistics from the Public Health Agency of Canada reveal only 1.4 per cent of infected kids and teens end up in hospital with the disease, compared to 13.5 per cent of cases involving all ages. Worldwide, COVID-related deaths in children are rare.

But even without the threat of the virus, Bannister-Clarke said online teaching comes with its own challenges.

Teachers like Dayna Platt, who instructs a Grade 1 class virtually in a Mississauga school, work around the clock. “The amount of planning that goes into an online day is intense, and we have no support right now,” Platt said.

Typically a homeroom teacher, Platt now spends all day teaching every subject: language arts, math, science, social studies, visual arts, drama and dance. She added her classroom of 21 has no support for special education or English as a second language (ESL) students. She estimated 18 of her students need ESL help, or about 85 per cent of her classroom.

Platt’s day begins at 7 a.m. and she said she often doesn’t log off until 11 p.m.

“I am exhausted,” Platt said. “It’s draining. It takes a toll on everything. It takes a toll on relationships. It’s hard.

“There’s no relief anymore.”

Her anxiety is further heightened by technology issues. Once, Platt said she tried to share her screen with students and the whole program shut down, leaving her six-year-olds confused as to what happened to their teacher.

Things that used to offer respite for teachers, like planning time or an open staff room where they can share their grievances, are no longer there, both Redford and Platt said.

Many teachers who couldn’t afford to take unpaid leave have also sacrificed seeing their elderly parents in the process, like Redford, who has limited her contact with most of her family since returning to the classroom.

“I go home and my stress relief is just hanging out with my dog,” she said. “Or getting some fresh air.”

School boards like Peel do offer some mental health resources for teachers. Reyes said teachers had access to virtual group support sessions to share challenges due to the pandemic and how they’ve coped with them. They also have continued access to a “Well-being Toolkit,” which includes resources and support for anxiety and recommended self-care activities.

Their union offers a benefits plan that covers $1,500 in fees for psychologists, social workers, clinical counsellors and psychoanalysts. Teachers also receive 11 days of medical leave with 100 per cent pay, or a short-term medical leave of 120 days with 90 per cent pay, Bannister-Clarke said.

But Cathryn Raman, a special education itinerant at the Peel board, said teachers have a hard time reaching out for help even when resources are there.

“We don’t like to be the ones to have to admit and ask for help,” Raman said. “We problem solve and we work through, and we’re the ones facilitating and helping as a general rule. That’s what we do.”

“To be the ones now feeling that sense of ‘Hey, I’m having a difficult time’ is hard.”

As she looks ahead, McKay said she sees no respite. The extended deadline for parents to opt out of physical learning and place their children in an online class has been set for mid-October. And while COVID-19 cases continue to rise, McKay said she anticipates more parents will end up making that decision, sending the system further into disarray unless more teachers are hired.

Teachers who spoke to the Star said they believe a reduction in class sizes and the hiring of more staff are key to offering educators the mental and emotional relief they seek as they head into the winter months.

No plans have yet been released by the government to directly address the ongoing issue of class sizes. , but Education Minister Stephen Lecce’s office maintains the plan in place is a good one.

“We must allow an opportunity for our students to return to school, combined with layers of prevention to maximize health and safety,” Caitlin Clark, a spokesperson for Lecce, said in an email. “We have done exactly that.”

Clark said $200 million of provincial and federal money has been given to school boards to hire more teachers, in addition to reserve money boards have access to. Peel’s board has used that money to “reduce elementary class size averages at physical locations to be below ministry targets,” Reyes said.

But the mental and emotional toll of teaching under an unprecedented global pandemic remains. Part of the exhaustion, teachers like Platt said, is being unable to do the job they love to the best of their ability.

“You feel like a crummy teacher when things fail or when you can’t support your students when you know you could if circumstances are different,” Platt said. “I can’t be the best teacher that I can be.”

Nadine Yousif is a Toronto-based reporter for the Star covering mental health. Her reporting is funded by the Canadian government through its Local Journalism Initiative. Follow her on Twitter:

LIVE VIDEO: Ontario Premier Doug Ford provides daily update on COVID-19 September 29

Watch Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s daily news conference on COVID-19 and the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

In a news conference at Queen’s Park, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and provincial cabinet ministers Christine Elliott (health) and Dr. Merrilee Fullerton (long-term care) provide an update on their government’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) pandemic. They are joined by Dr. David Williams, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health.

FEDERAL MINISTERS AND HEALTH OFFICIALS PROVIDE UPDATE ON COVID-19 RESPONSE

On Parliament Hill, Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, and Dr. Howard Njoo, the deputy chief public health officer, join ministers Patty Hajdu (health), Anita Anand (public services and procurement), and Dominic LeBlanc (intergovernmental affairs) for an update on the federal response to COVID-19 (coronavirus disease). They are expected to discuss the approval process for new COVID-19 testing methods in Canada.

Boaters who live year-round in a Queen’s Quay marina are getting tossed due to COVID-19. Harbourfront’s abrupt move has left some high and dry for the winter

For most of the past 16 years Kris Coward has lived aboard a 30-foot sailboat, cramming his life into a space smaller than the smallest bachelor apartment in Toronto.

He cooks in a galley kitchen and washes dishes with water drawn from a tank using a foot pump. He sleeps below-deck in the bow, in front of the hanging locker where he keeps his clothes and behind that, his wet suit and soldering iron — yes, soldering iron — because owning a boat is for people with a maintenance fetish, said Coward, a PhD mathematician and father of one.

“Everything on a boat is always breaking all the time, so you’re constantly fixing it,” said Coward, 40. “I’ve definitely got a maintenance fetish. I totally like fixing and tinkering with my own stuff.”

There are benefits. He gets to live both close to nature and in the heart of the city — he spends summers on the Toronto Islands and winters in a cozy floating neighbourhood, referred to as Marina Four, below the Simcoe WaveDeck on Queen’s Quay West.

It’s a popular sight with tourists, who like to walk the Amsterdam footbridge arching over the neighbourhood and take selfies with the gleaming white boats and the CN Tower in the background.

What the tourists don’t know — in fact, most residents don’t know — is that people live on those boats, winter and summer; have raised kids on those boats who attend local schools; volunteer in the neighbourhood and patronize the grocery stores and restaurants along Queen’s Quay.

Coward is one of them, and after 16 winters, he is facing eviction from Marina Four with no other place to go.

Boaters at the marina received an email from Harbourfront Centre on Aug. 26, explaining that Marina Four would be closed for the winter — perhaps permanently. They were told that in order to secure a winter berth at nearby Marina Quay West (MQW), also operated by Harbourfront Centre, they had to be able to quarantine on their boats if necessary, in the event they were to come down with COVID-19.

Boaters at MQW, near the old Canada Malting Co. silos, also had to re-apply for a berth.

To be considered self-sufficient during a quarantine, boaters must have on-board showers and flush toilets, neither of which Coward has on his sailboat.

“I am in housing limbo — I don’t know what my housing situation is going to be in a month’s time,” said Coward, who is trying to negotiate an agreement with Harbourfront Centre that would allow him to stay at MQW this year, even if he can’t shower while self-isolating.

Having just returned from a two-week back-country trip, Coward said a shower is not strictly necessary if he ends up being quarantined for two weeks, and his composting toilet is preferable because it doesn’t clog the way marine flush toilets do.

Ben Angus, 35, an architect from Nova Scotia who lives on a 34-foot sailboat at Marina Four in winter, said Harbourfront Centre waited too long to advise boaters of the changes this winter.

Luckily Angus, who first moved onto his sailboat in 2017, was able to find an apartment in Parkdale for the winter. He was able to schedule a haul-out date for his boat.

“It was just a complete scramble,” he said.

Angus believes that live-aboards at Marina Four provide the eyes-on-the-street protection that celebrated urbanist Jane Jacobs wrote about and endorsed. The boaters are the ones, late at night, who witness the drunken vandals breaking glass, and can report it, or sometimes move to stop it, Angus said.

“I think that live-aboards have a lot of value.”

Whether and when Marina Four will reopen are questions that have yet to be answered with certainty.

Coward and dozens of other boaters at Marina Four and MQW — the two urban marinas run by Harbourfront Centre, the not-for-profit organization that programs and oversees activities along the waterfront — were stunned by the email that arrived on Aug. 26.

“There is a possibility that the elimination of Marina Four as a winter dockage location may be permanent though we cannot confirm this at this time,” according to the letter.

They were told that if they were interested in returning, they should notify the office before 5 p.m., Aug. 28. They had to prove their boats met the new COVID-19 criteria.

Harbourfront Centre’s chief operations officer, Martin Kenneally, said he agrees the boaters were notified late and he regrets that the idea of a permanent closure was ever raised.

“They think they’re being evicted,” said Kenneally. “I understand their concern. We don’t think that’s actually the case. We think they’re being relocated.

“I think in our minds — certainly mine — we see them being able to be back in 2021 in the summer, and in the winter we’ll have solved whatever the problems are by then and hopefully the COVID situation will also have eased.”

A big issue is the facilities provided to boaters at Marina Four.

It costs $111 per foot per six-month season, according to Harbourfront Centre’s website, plus hydro, to berth at Marina Four. That includes access to a common laundry, bathroom and showers in the former PawsWay building at 245 Queen’s Quay West. Boaters get a key to the facilities.

PawsWay operated as a store and event centre for people and their pets for 10 years. The building has been empty since Purina moved out in 2017. Harbourfront Centre is trying to attract a new tenant, and getting rid of the facilities for boaters is part of a possible deal.

Kenneally said it will also be easier for Harbourfront staff to maintain one set of facilities for boaters during COVID, instead of two.

There is no easy answer for where to relocate the facilities for boaters. An engineering firm has been hired to investigate the possibilities, but on the face of it, there don’t seem to be any simple options, according to Kenneally. They can’t locate the facilities next to the Harbourfront bandshell, or where the Simcoe WaveDeck sits now, on city property. They could rebuild the Harbourfront Centre Powerboat and Sailing building located past the Amsterdam Brewhouse and past the Toronto Police Service Marine Unit, at the foot of Rees Street — but it’s a bit far to be considered convenient.

COVID may have been the trigger for the evictions, but there are other issues with Marina Four. The docks need repair and the hydro in the area needs to be updated, said Kenneally.

Marina Four can handle about 70 recreational boats in the summer — depending on the size of the boats, and MQW has berths for 157. In winter those figures are drastically reduced, mainly because boats require significantly more hydro in the winter, in part to keep equipment running that prevents their crafts from becoming iced in. Between 10 to 14 people live at Marina Four in winter and about 40 to 45 people at MQW.

Kenneally said not all boats at MQW made the cut and not everyone made the cut at Marina Four. He didn’t specify how many.

If the boaters were covered by the provincial legislation governing landlords, and repairs were cited as the reason for the move, the boaters would be entitled to a 120-day notice, three-months’ rent or the equivalent, and would have the right to return to the space, said Toronto lawyer Caryma Sa’d.

While the standard contract between the boaters and the marina specifically states they are not covered by the legislation, the Act does not allow tenants to bargain away their rights, said Sa’d.

If the matter were to become the subject of a legal dispute, it would by no means be a slam dunk for either side, she added.

“It could go either way. I would say that, without providing legal advice, obviously, those who have a stronger claim are the ones who live there year-round.”

For the boaters who are being asked to leave, moving is more than just a shift in location — going back to renting an apartment represents a significant change in lifestyle.

“I never really saw myself as being a sort of big-city guy,” said Angus, whose grandfather was a ship captain in Nova Scotia.

“I was always drawn towards more rural, wild settings, but work found me here in Toronto and being able to live on your boat is definitely a connection with nature.”

Like many of the winter residents of Marina Four, Angus summers on the Toronto Islands.

“Being over on the Island, I see all sorts of wildlife, and I’m in tune with what the moon is doing. I can look at the stars at night and it almost feels like you’re camping in a way — but in a comfortable way.”

David Loney was one of the winter boaters at Marina Four who won a berth at MQW for the winter, but he’s not happy with the way the situation has been handled.

Loney, a provincial public servant, lives full-time on his 40-foot NAVSTAR motor yacht, purchased second-hand after he realized he liked living on a boat enough to sell his house in Ajax.

He fell in love with sailing at summer camp, when he was eight, and has been living on his boat for 10 years, full-time for six years.

His boat has two bedrooms and his two daughters have grown up spending summers and weekends on the Toronto Islands and visiting the city sites in winter — many of which, like Ripley’s Aquarium, are in walking distance of Marina Four.

“The people who live in tents under the Gardiner Expressway were given more notice of their eviction,” said Loney, pointing out it takes a while to find a place to relocate for winter or store a boat and make arrangements to have it hauled out of the water.

Despite the difficulties, Loney has no plans to give up the lifestyle, and every intention of fighting to keep Marina Four afloat if that is what it comes to.

“I just like the uniqueness of it. It’s so different. It’s almost like camping. Most people who live on their boats year-round would never go back.”

Francine Kopun is a Toronto-based reporter covering city hall and municipal politics for the Star. Follow her on Twitter: