Corvette heads to the impound lot for stunt driving in Cookstown

A 44-year-old man’s Corvette is now sitting in an impound lot after police charged him with stunt driving in Cookstown Friday afternoon.

Police were conducting radar enforcement on Church Street around 3 p.m. July 20 when the office clocked the vehicle travelling 122 km/h in the 40 km/h community safety zone.

The driver was charged with stunt driving and speeding over three times the posted speed limit.

His drivers licence was suspended for seven days and his Corvette has been impounded for seven days.

Police are reminding citizens to drive with extra care during heavy congested roadways leading up to the weekend.

A grave situation: historian on mission to restore Clearview pioneer cemetery

Janie Cooper-Wilson rests herself on a canvas camp stool after wrestling with brush and weeds for the morning.

There’s still plenty of work to do at the before an Aug. 18 reblessing ceremony, and at the moment, she’s the only one on site.

“How in the hell did I get involved in all this?,” she asks with a laugh.

The Presbyterian cemetery sits on Hwy. 26, west of Sunnidale Corners. Aside from a wooden sign that’s leaning on its rotting posts, there’s little to distinguish what’s considered the area’s first established cemetery to passersby whizzing past on the highway.

The first burials on the one-acre site donated by farmer Samuel Lamont date back to 1833, and the last recorded burial was in 1901. The cemetery contains the remains of the area’s first postmaster and a veteran of the American Civil War.

In 1974, then-Sunnidale Township rearranged the gravestones onto a semicircular concrete base now crumbling from years of neglect and the infiltration of tree roots. Several of the stones bear the signs of haphazard repair efforts; others had fallen over into the underbrush, discovered when Cooper-Wilson and her small group of volunteers began cleaning up the site earlier this year.

“I was livid to see this, any cemetery that’s neglected, because I was raised to (believe) that when you bury your loved ones, that perpetual care was automatic, but it doesn’t work that way,” Cooper-Wilson said. “These people built the community we live on, we’re standing on their backs, and it’s the collective history of our country.”

More than 20 years ago, Cooper-Wilson led the effort to clean up the ; the cemetery contained the remains of a number of her own ancestors who had come to Canada to flee slavery in the States.

But even though she doesn’t share the same personal connection to the Presbyterian cemetery, Cooper-Wilson — who is also a director with the Ontario Historical Society, and chairperson of the OHS’s Cemetery Preservation & Defence Committee — believes those who are buried there deserve the same respect.

“People don’t realize the history that’s here,” said Cooper-Wilson as transport trucks rumble by on nearby Hwy. 26. “It’s an obsession with me.

“My people knew them. They were a community … my dad said everybody (at the time) had to depend on each other, no matter what their feelings were on race,” she said. “There will always be that element, but over time, families united, they had to to survive up here.”

For Cooper, the stones tell the stories of families struggling to establish a life for themselves in “the wild and wonderful world” of pre-Confederation Ontario.

She’s takes water with a little bit of vinegar to try and clean the stones so she can read them, and cross-reference that information with her research. She was able to find documentation from 1974 when the stones were moved to the current orientation, but even then, she said, there wasn’t much information to go on from cemetery records.

Cooper hopes to have the flower beds cleaned out in time for the service on Aug. 18, with the stones set on limestone screenings. However, she acknowledged, the work is limited to the funding that’s available; in 2017, township council established a $5,000 fund to address maintenance and repairs at the inactive cemeteries, of which $2,000 is being used to help with repairs at Old Zion.

There are nine inactive cemeteries in Clearview Township; according to the Ontario Historical Society, there are 1,500 unregistered cemeteries — and therefore have no protection afforded to them under the Cemeteries Protection Act.

“I would like to see stricter legislation. When I began, you took a lot of things for granted — a cemetery is supposed to be sacred, and that’s not the case,” she said.

The inactive cemeteries owned by the township are identified and protected by bylaws that have been approved by the Bereavement Authority of Ontario.

There are too many other priorities “that the taxpayer has entrusted the council with” to be concerned with funding the restoration of a long-disused cemetery, she acknowledged

“There’s a lot of history that will be lost,” she said. “To me, seeing this going go to pot is an insult to these people, it’s an insult to the dead, when you think of what they went through.”


ONTARIO COLD CASE: Family still searching for closure 31 years later

Aside from the miserable rain, Sept. 19, 1987 should have been a regular day for the Hunter family.

Russell had taken wife Leianne to the Preston Zehrs store at 11 a.m. to buy groceries for a future family fishing trip. That’s where any semblance of normal would end.

Leianne’s body was found the next day in Riverbluffs Park at the edge of the Grand River. Her head had been bludgeoned with a heavy object and she appeared to have been sexually assaulted — proven later to be false — as her underwear was lowered and her T-shirt and undergarments pulled up.

Eight years later, Russell was charged with her death when the head of the Waterloo regional police homicide department, Peter Osinga, reopened the case.

During the 1997 trial, new evidence came to light. Crown attorney Mike Murdoch asked for an adjournment to try and tie the new evidence to Russell, but was denied. Murdoch said they had no choice but to end the trial.

Thirty-one years later, Leianne’s killer still hasn’t been brought to justice.

WANTS RESOLUTION

Melanie Hunter was 12 when she last saw her mother, and at age 42, the years have faded many memories of her. She does recall Leianne as a woman devoted to her kids, who worked hard and loved all of her children’s friends.

“Our house was a revolving door,” recalled Melanie, sitting on a bench not far from her mother’s grave in Mountview Cemetery.

But the memories of Sept. 19 have stayed with her forever. She admits she’s had to retell the story so many times, to lawyers, to the press and probably to those with morbid curiosity, that she can recite a general picture without pause.

For her it was a quiet September day. Her mom and dad went to the grocery store and Leianne didn’t come back. They got a phone call that her brother Paul had fallen out of a tree and broke his arm, and it “went chaotic after that.”

Melanie was bitter for a long time. When her father was found not guilty, she wanted the person who killed her mother brought to justice. She insisted the case be reopened 19 years ago, but at the time, the head of the homicide department, Brent Thomlinson, said the police had “compelling evidence” against Russell and had no other leads.

Melanie felt police would have to admit they were wrong, with their sights set only on Russell, and that’s why they wouldn’t reopen the case.

Now, she’s come to terms with those feelings, which have turned more to sadness. She felt bad for her maternal grandparents, who didn’t receive closure for what happened to their daughter. That same sadness passed on to her father, who died in May 2017 in Iroquois Falls, where he moved less than a year after Leianne’s death.

“He just wanted it resolved,” Melanie said of her father.

“He kept asking me for years to go to the police and have it reopened. Most of us were nervous he would be re-arrested. So we just said, ‘yeah, OK, yeah, we will. We’ll talk to the detectives.’ But most of us just wanted to put it in our past. We wanted it resolved but most of us wanted to move forward and move on with our lives.”

THE TRIAL

In 1993, new evidence led homicide detectives to reopen Leianne’s murder case.

Originally, they believed Leianne was slain while walking home from grocery shopping, having left a note of her intentions in her husband’s truck with the groceries. She was last seen walking on Concession Road, where they lived, at 1:50 p.m.

But neighbours came forward saying they saw Leianne at home at 3:45 p.m., wiping out their theory she was abducted on the way home. In addition, semen found in her body was that of husband Russell, eliminating the belief she was sexually assaulted that day.

In 1995, Russell was charged with second degree murder. The motive — Trudy Legace testified that Leianne spoke to her on the morning that she disappeared, saying she was going to issue Russell an ultimatum about his drinking problem.

The Crown’s theory was he took Leianne in his van to an industrial area near their home, killed her and dumped the body later. However, no blood was found on Russell, in his van or in their home.

Police originally believed they had a time gap, from 3:30 p.m. and 5:50 p.m. — when Russell got to the tree that Paul fell from — that was unaccounted for. That evening, Russell took Paul to Cambridge Memorial Hospital, and then Hamilton.

Going through a chronology of Russell’s day, when he had been seen by witnesses and through phone calls received and made, that time gap had been whittled down to 15 minutes. Police still believed Russell returned home between 3:45 p.m. and 4 p.m., found his wife there and left with her. He then returned home alone.

Defence attorney Murray Ellies pointed out Leianne’s friend, Karen Fieldhouse, talked to Russell on the phone at his home at 4:20 p.m., and five minutes earlier she had talked to her daughter Tara, from the Hunter’s home. Putting Russell at home at 4:15 p.m. The defence argued that 15 minutes wasn’t a long enough time to commit murder and return home.

The trial was an emotional one, with friends and family members testifying at different times that Russell had told them he “killed” Leianne.

Russell, who had an alcohol problem, wasn’t taken seriously in any of the “confessions” because he was inebriated and those who testified took his words as him feeling responsible for what happened.

The trial came to a head when the defence introduced new evidence that two particles found on Leianne’s clothing were matched with those found in the car of Leianne’s brother, Shawn Grenier. Grenier had earlier been cleared by police as a suspect.

White metallic spirals found on Leianne’s underpants and bra matched similar particles in Grenier’s trunk.

Police said they didn’t receive that evidence from the Centre for Forensic Sciences until a week prior.

They also found a red paint chip on Leianne’s jeans that was indistinguishable from a red chip found in Grenier’s trunk.

A forensic chemist at the Centre for Forensic Sciences testified that Leianne’s body was covered in an oily dirt, similar to an oily substance found in Grenier’s trunk.

The Crown asked Justice Paul Philip to grant a lengthy adjournment to try and link Russell to the paint chips, but the judge refused. Assistant Crown attorney Paul McDermott requested the not guilty verdict in light of the new evidence.

Police said, after the trial, Grenier was earlier cleared as a suspect because he and his sister worked at the same place and the paint chips could have easily transferred from her clothing to the trunk.

THE AFTERMATH

Melanie looks back at the murder today and sees the effects the tragedy had on her family.

Her cousin Stacey Kirk, who joined Melanie for support at that recent visit to her mother’s grave, said putting Russell on trial, and then not having some resolution after the not-guilty verdict, fractured both sides.

“I was just saying to Mel … it separated and ruined so many relationships, and separated family. It really ruined people’s lives not knowing,” Kirk noted.

While Melanie has come to terms with her feelings, Kirk admits she’s still bitter. Seeing what the lack of closure did to her mother Darlene, Leianne’s sister, prior to her death in 2009.

“I saw with my mom, all of them really, but living so close with her, I saw how it ruined her over the course of the 21 years after. She was a fantastic person, but the longer she went without her the more she longed to be with her, if that makes sense? The more hurt she carried, a lot of the times that was her focus.”

The trial also pitted one side of the family against the other. With Leianne’s side convinced Russell murdered her, and Russell’s side believing his innocence. Melanie said, at one time, she had been caught in the middle.

“I think that over the years, as you get older, I’m more open to one side or the other, and maybe there’s a different scenario,” she said.

“I don’t want to say it in a negative way, but I was really influenced by one side versus the other side of the family, and I listened to a lot of it. Of course you take the negativity from them and say, ‘oh well, it must have been your uncle, because the evidence was there.’ As I’ve gotten older, I’m impartial to all of it. I believe there’s a third story to it; I don’t know.”

She won’t go down the path of pointing fingers at Grenier, as others have.

“I’ve always taken the approach, I don’t want to know information. I don’t ask questions, because once you ask those questions and you get the answers, you can’t take it back.”

Asked point blank if she believed her father killed her mother, she said she never believed he did it.

“I tried to think if it were a possibility, but I lived with my dad, I grew up with my dad and if it was him, then hopefully something will come forward to prove that. But at this point I don’t believe it was my dad.”

She thinks at some point, the person will be revealed.

“I believe we all meet our creator in the end. I think at this point whoever did it, they’ll have to be the one to confess. Hopefully if that person’s still alive they can shed some light on what happened.”

COLD CASE

Police haven’t touched the case since Russell was found not guilty. Retired Waterloo regional police deputy chief Brent Thomlison was urged by the family to reopen the case in 1999 when he was head of homicide, but doesn’t see the likelihood of that happening without a new lead.

“Barring either a stone that had been unturned or new information coming in, my quote from ’99 would sort of sum it up,” he said when he reached by the Times.

“Speaking more broadly … there were a number of cold cases that were unsolved, as I’m sure there still are today. Then the resources were put to either active cases, recent cases, that sort of thing. When the investigators were to have time on their hands to look at other cases, that’s when they would go back through the books so to speak and open up a case and basically look at it again.”

Made aware Russell, Ellies and others involved in the case have passed on, and that most of the police force at that time have retired, he said the perpetrator will be even harder to find.

“(When) people who were involved, be it the investigation or the prosecution or the defence or whatever, start passing on or memories fade I can only imagine how much more challenging that would be to solve a case.”

Waterloo regional police Insp. Mike Haffner said the investigation into Leianne’s murder is still active. Asked if whether advanced DNA testing might be able to assert a suspect, Haffner said he’s not sure it would make a difference.

“I am unaware what DNA would be available (i.e. seized at time, etc.) that could be tested,” Haffner said in an email to the Times.

“In addition, what would be available after 31 years … as well on the body of Leianne.”

When asked if investigators would exhume the body to get DNA evidence, Haffner said, “I am unaware investigators are at that stage at this time.”

Melanie said she isn’t in favour of exhuming her mother’s body. It would likely just bring false hope, as investigations more than 20 years prior were just as fruitless.

She said police looked at a neighbour whom her mom feared and would hide from when he came over. Then there was a murder in Kitchener in the 1970s where a girl died in the same way, according to Melanie, and the police went an interviewed a person of interest that might have connected the cases. The person moved and they lost track of him, she claims.

In trial, it also was submitted into evidence that Leianne had received obscene phone calls leading up to the days of her disappearance. Melanie didn’t know if that had any connection to the phone call her grandmother received at their home on June 8, 1988, when a man asked for her. She was at her baseball game.

The next morning, Russell had the kids packed up and moved to Iroquois Falls. She doesn’t know who was on the other end of the line.

While she doesn’t hold on to closure as she once did, she said a resolution would finally allow everyone to move on.

“We’re all at a point where we just want to enjoy our kids and move on. We can’t go into the past. We can’t hold on to that anger. I don’t want our kids to be in that generation of turmoil and anger.”

“We’ve worked very hard for our kids not to be part of that. We wanted to stop it with our generation. Some day it may be resolved, but I don’t want our kids to carry that burden.”

Anyone with information should call Waterloo Regional Police at .

with files from Metroland

Penetanguishene takes out two loans for combined $13.2 million

Penetanguishene council has authorized the issuing of debentures for the $9.4 million outstanding on the Philip H. Jones Pollution Control Plant and $3.8 million of the Main Street reconstruction project.

Financing for the $9.4 million will be undertaken through a 30-year loan with an interest rate of 3.46 per cent per annum. Semi-annual payments of $252,686 will be made from July 16, 2018 to July 16, 2048.

The pollution control plant recently received $28.2 million worth of renovations, which included a new headworks facility, removal and replacement of the chlorination system, a new biosolid thickening and process building, addition storage facilities, improved air and noise controls and an increase in capacity.

The renovations improve the facilities capacity from 4.5 million litres per day to 5.25 million litres per day.

A 30-year loan with an interest rate of 3.46 per annum will also be secured for the estimated $3.8 million remaining on the Main Street reconstruction project. Annual repayments are estimated at $204,560 beginning in 2019.

The total cost of the reconstruction project is estimated at $10.7 million. Of that, $3.5 million was paid via a small communities fund grant, $1.3 million through taxation, $1.05 million through water and wastewater rates, $502,955 through development charges and $782,874 through reserves.

Lisa-Marie Wilson – SCDSB Trustee Barrie Ward 7-10

My name is Lisa-Marie Wilson and I’m running for Simcoe County District School Board Trustee (Public) for Wards 7, 8, 9, and 10.

Foremost, I am a parent to two wonderful children. My oldest is attending Wilford Laurier University and my youngest will be returning for one last semester in high school after graduating this June.

I have always been passionate about the well-being of children and youth, and my personal and professional lives have reflected this passion.

I received my degree in psychology from York University and my diploma in social service work from Seneca College.

I then began my professional career in public service working for the Ministry of Community & Social Services then the Ministry of Children & Youth Services and now currently with the Ministry of Community Safety & Correctional Services.

My formal education and extensive professional training I believe have afforded me the skills required to represent the people of Wards 7-10 along with my dedication, integrity, energy and passion.

I plan to build on the current board foundation by continuing to focus on keeping our children safe with a zero tolerance for all forms of bullying and preparing our children for the future emphasizing acceptance and diversity. Studies show that children can flourish in an environment where they feel accepted.  

I promise to make myself accessible to listen to your concerns and be your voice bringing those forward to the school board. There are no issues that I am uncomfortable addressing on behalf of the people.

I have previously volunteered in various capacities in my community from coaching Barrie children’s soccer to helping with the Out of the Cold program. 

I try to live each day by the motto “be the light in the world you want to see.”

I ask on Oct. 22 that you take the time to vote and that you vote for me

Lisa-Marie for School Board Trustee.

I thank you in advance for the opportunity to represent you in wards 7, 8, 9 and 10  

Regards,       

Office: 55 Melinda Cres., Barrie ON L4N 5T7

Mobile:

New $6.4M fire hall slated for Bradford

It’s been a long time coming, but Bradford West Gwillimbury will finally get a new fire hall after council gave the go-ahead for a $14 million redevelopment project involving a new station and public works operations centres.

“We can’t overestimate just how important this project is,” Mayor Rob Keffer said regarding the town’s redevelopment plan for Melbourne Drive and Line 11 at council June 19.

“It’s a big big project, but something our community is desperately in need of,” Deputy Mayor James LeDuc said.

“We’ve done a lot of capital expenditure for growth related issues and now we need to start looking at some of the services that our residents need.”

BWG Fire Chief Kevin Gallant said the new 2-storey, 19,000-sq.ft. hall, to be built at a cost of $6.4 million beside the current facility on the vacant town-owned 5.8-acre site at 75 Melbourne Drive, addresses current needs as well as accommodating growth in the community, in terms of location, response times and design.

According to the department’s master plan, the site of the new build is “almost in the optimum location for the urban area in regards to a four-minute response time,” Gallant said.

As far as construction timelines, Gallant said he’d like to see it built “as soon as possible because the department is really stretched thin at this point.”

While the new fire station can be built without any significant disruption of service to current fire operations, the town’s water and transportation services’ urban operations — also currently housed on Melbourne Drive — will be “significantly impacted,” according to the staff report tabled.

While the new hall is being built, the current operations buildings will need to be demolished.

As a result, $1 million is being allocated to build a new 12,000-sq. ft. facility for the water department at 3541 Line 11 as well as a second 12,000-sq. ft. building to store equipment.

Consolidating operations and equipment on to town-owned land will “provide greater efficiencies” by eliminating the town’s current lease costs for storage as well as prevent any disruption in service by fast-tracking construction ideally by October, the report states.

Under a $6.5 million budget, the old fire station will be re-purposed to house the transportation division’s urban operations centre as well as a rural works yard.

Construction on Line 11 is the first step, with an anticipated 2019 completion date.

Construction on Melbourne Drive is slated to begin next year and completed in 2021.

“We could probably pull the Melbourne construction off within a 12 to 16-month window,” the town’s director of community services Terry Foran said.

Since a good deal of the project is required as a result of growth, about two-thirds of the $14 million total cost will be covered by Development Charges, which are paid to the town by developers.

The project is the first phase of the town’s multi-year facilities initiative, which also includes a second fire station to serve the Hwy. 400 employment lands and Bond Head by 2022.

With town staff currently working in 10 different locations at eight different sites, a $35-million consolidated administration centre is also part of the long-term plan.

How you can prepare for a blackout, according to HVAC company Reliance

Almost 15 years ago — August 14, 2003 — a widespread blackout left approximately 10 million Ontario residents without power during peak summer temperatures.  

While it’s hard to predict when or if another outage will strike, it is always good to be prepared in case of such an emergency. To help safeguard against the perils of a summer blackout, Reliance Home Comfort is pleased to offer the following household tips:

• Stop the surge: Unplug all unnecessary appliances in the event of a blackout to help guard against a surge once the power is turned back on.

• Power line protection: Stay away from any downed power lines and report them to your utility company right away.

• Fridge basics: Food can remain cool in a refrigerator for up to four hours and in a freezer for up to 48 hours if it’s fully stocked. Ensure refrigerator and freezer doors are shut tightly to prevent premature spoilage.

• Emergency essentials: Power outages are unpredictable and can sometimes drag on for days. Every home should have a fully stocked emergency kit with three days’ worth of supplies that is safely stored and easily accessible. Non-perishable food, a can opener, two litres of water per day for each family member, basic toiletries, blankets, insulated clothing, flashlights, extra batteries, garbage bags and a first aid kit should be included.

• Generator safety: Residential generators can come in very handy during a power outage but must be installed with care. Generators should only be installed outside the home to ensure proper ventilation and to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning.

For more about the company, visit .

Midland council looking to implement more efficient decision-making process

Midland council is looking at overhauling the entire way it operates.

A new procedural bylaw is proposing a slew of changes aimed at streamlining the decision-making process to help expedite municipal business.

A 2017 governance review revealed that council held more special meetings this term than regular council meetings and suggested councillors consider significant changes to the way they operate. Council has held 43 regular council meetings, 33 general committee meetings, 36 planning and development meetings and 48 special meetings during the current term of council.

“There are some pretty big changes being proposed … in particular that we would be going to two council meetings a month, getting rid of the planning meeting and getting rid of the general committee meeting,” said Coun. Pat File.

The bylaw proposes to switch over to the format currently being used by Penetanguishene council, which calls for two council meetings a month, each followed by committee of the whole meetings.

These meetings would be moved from Monday nights to the first and third Wednesday of every month.

Council would receive their agendas one week in advance of the meeting, giving time to prepare. Only items councillors want to debate would be pulled from the agenda and discussed at the meeting.

“We would be putting the onus on councillors to do their homework, to receive their agenda ahead of time, to ask their constituents their opinion ahead of time … and we will be a better council because of this,” said Mayor Gord McKay. “It sets the bar higher.”

The number of deputations would increase from three to 10 per month, opening the door for more businesses, organizations and residents to address council in a timelier fashion.

“This is not a new idea that somebody suddenly woke up one morning and decided to do,” said Coun. George MacDonald. “This is something that a whole lot of thought went into. It is progressive and we need to buy into the process.”

Bylaws from 36 Ontario municipalities were assessed, allowing staff to focus on the best practices currently being utilized.

The bylaw will be considered for adoption at the Aug. 27 council meeting.

Harold Dougall — Orillia Ward 2

I was born and raised in Hamilton.

In 1960, at age 11, I was placed at the Huronia Regional Centre.

I was 18 when I moved out of there to Edgar. In 1975, I moved into Orillia.

I want to join council to help the people in the community.

If I win, that would be lucky.

If they want to vote for me, fine.

Right now, some of the issues that are important to me include accessibility.

By 2025, everywhere in this city has to have wheelchair accessibility.

I’ve been in a wheelchair; trying to open a door in a wheelchair? No way.

If those push buttons are there, it is easy for people to go into stores.

I would also like the city to get a medical centre in Orillia because you wait a long time to get into the emergency department at the hospital.

I know the wetlands were blocked off on the other side of HRC, and I’d like to see them get animals in there, like turtles and birds.

It’s a wetland, you can’t build on it.

If you build on them, there go all of your animals and you will be having floods all of the time.

I’d also like council to look into Orillia Transit.

In the wintertime, they have bus shelters on Mississaga Street, but they don’t have one on West Street on the far side.

In the winter we have cold weather and you can’t stay out in the snow and cold air.

I know people feel it if they don’t have bus shelters.

About me, I’m kind, I’m happy and any questions that they want to ask, they can ask me. I’ll try to answer them.

I volunteer for Mariposa Folk Festival, and most of the time I volunteer with the jazz festival and the blues festival.

I want them back here.

A lot of people ask me why the blues festival quit.

I’m a paper carrier and I like to meet people, a lot of people. They like the way I do the papers.

I can be reached at or on Facebook.

911 ‘misdials’ divert valuable time from real emergencies in South Simcoe

South Simcoe Police Service is reminding the public about the proper use of 911 following a rash of pocket dials and inappropriate calls this month.

While a majority are made while a person’s mobile phone was in a pocket or a toddler’s curious hands, others are the result of residents clearly not understanding what constitutes an emergency.

Case in point is one example this month of a resident dialing 911 for police help with a bird flying around their bedroom.

On compassionate grounds, officers did try to help the distressed caller with a visit to the home.

While the suspect bird had flown the coop or, in this case, the bedroom after the caller followed the advice of the 911 communicator to leave the window open, the victim of the “avian invasion” was given a stern caution by officers regarding the proper use of 911.

“While we don’t want to discourage people from dialing the emergency phone number, we want to remind people that it is for emergencies only, such as a crime in progress, a fire or a medical emergency,” police spokesperson Sue Sgambati said.

Dozens of inappropriate calls were logged with South Simcoe’s communications centre this month alone.

They included a man trying to call a money-transfer company; a call from a four-year-old who was recently taught about 911 and “wanted to try it out”; pocket dials from people on a motorcycle and a golf cart; and a man who said his phone was blacked out and kept dialing into emergency mode.

Calls to 911 can be made from a number of smartphones, even while the phone is locked. The feature is aimed at increasing consumer safety, but often results in countless calls being mistakenly made to dispatchers, who then need to use valuable time to determine the validity of the call.

If you accidentally call 911, police urge you to stay on the line and let the communicator know what happened.

“When an unintentional 911 caller hangs up, that could be considered an ‘unknown trouble’ call and police will respond, taking away valuable time and resources from someone who really needs help,” Sgambati added.

Police are urging the public to “lock it before you pocket it” and advise against letting children play with mobile phones in an effort to reduce the amount on non-emergency calls flooding system operators.

Children should not be given old cell phones as toys. Many decommissioned phones can still dial 911, even without a SIM card.

Locking a cellphone’s screen can also prevent an unintentional 911 call from being activated by an accidental swipe of the highly sensitive touch screens.

In 2017, South Simcoe’s communication staff answered 5,611 calls to 911. Of those, 419 — or 7 per cent — were misdials.

For non-emergencies, you can contact South Simcoe Police at  or .