Court BulletinMinistry of the Environment Conservation and ParksPublished: July 15, 2026
Tamworth retirement home owner convicted for failing to keep well water safe
The owner and director of Adair Place/Stone Mills retirement home were convicted for not testing or maintaining the facility’s well from March 2022–Dec 2023 and fined.
Summary
What happened
- The court found 2652366 Ontario Inc. (owner of Adair Place / Stone Mills Retirement Home in Tamworth) and its sole director, Safraz Ally, guilty of 11 violations each under the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Where and who this affected
- The small non-municipal well system served a retirement home with up to 27 residents. The facility closed in December 2023.
By the numbers
- Conviction date: February 19, 2026.
- Fines: company $85,000 + $21,250 surcharge; Mr. Ally $70,000 + $17,500 surcharge.
- Combined fines = $155,000; combined victim surcharges = $38,750. Both defendants were given 60 days to pay.
Key failures cited in the court bulletin
- Operating the drinking water system without a valid operator certificate after Mar. 20, 2022.
- Missing required raw and distribution water samples (multiple months in 2022 and 2023).
- Failing to ensure weekly maintenance by a trained person as required by the engineer’s report.
- Not installing an automatic shut-off valve on the UV disinfection system until Aug. 28, 2023.
- An October 2022 UV failure led to undertreated water; one sample showed 79 Total Coliforms.
- Failing to submit sampling and maintenance plans required by a Provincial Officer’s Order.
Enforcement
- The ministry’s Environmental Investigations and Enforcement Branch investigated and laid the charges that led to the convictions.
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Source: Ontario Newsroom