Woman who died in flood remembered for her compassion - Action News
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Ottawa

Woman who died in flood remembered for her compassion

Relatives of the woman who died during flooding in the Village of Quyon, Que., over the weekend are waiting to find out more about the sequence of events that led to her death.

Louise Lortie Sguin, 72, drove into washed-out road

Louise Lortie Sguin with her husband John Jolie. (Submitted by the family of Louise Lortie Sguin)

Relatives of the woman who died during flooding in the Village of Quyon, Que., over the weekend are waiting to find out more about the sequence of events that led to her death.

Louise Lortie Sguin, 72, was driving alone on rue de Clarendon at chemin Bronson-Bryant on Saturday morning when she accidentally steered her car intoa washed-outroad.

A culverthad given wayand a large sectionof the road hadwashed out overnight.Sguin'scar fell into the waterbelow.

A couple in another vehicle had tried to warn her before the crash, and a neighbour rushed to try to help Sguin.

"At least we know that she didn't die alone ... and that there were people there," one of her daughters, AnnSguin-Huska, told CBCRadio's Ottawa Morning on Wednesday.

The scene of the washout in Pontiac, Que., near rue de Clarendon and chemin Bronson-Bryant. (Jrmie Bergeron/CBC)

Started recovery centre

While Sguin's family is still coming to terms with herdeath, they'vebeen touched by themany people fondly remembering her selfless commitment to helpthose less fortunate.

"She touched a lot of people from many walks of life. Young, old, everything in between. Healthy, sick, she was there to help you with anything that you needed," said another daughter, Tina Roy.

"She lived in the community for a very long time ... so everybody knew her."

Louise Lortie Sguin, 72, was killed in the Pontiac on Saturday. (Submitted by the family of Louise Lortie Sguin)

She startedthe Maison Luskville alcohol and drug recovery centre after being moved by a newspaper picture of a homeless man who had wrapped a blanket around his dog.

"What touched her is that even though this person was homeless himself, that he had so much care for his dog,"Sguin-Huska recalled.

Sguin called the reporter, tracked down the homeless man, known as "Wolf," and eventually brought him home for a shower and some food. He ended up back on the streets, but Sguin and her partner were motivated to start a program.

'She would go the extra mile'

"She bought the old Luskville Hotel, and then that was that,"Sguin-Huskasaid. The Maison Luskville alcohol and drug recovery centre operated for years until it closed in 2015.

But she'd been helping people for years before that. Their family home had 10 bedrooms, and over the years it functioned as a daycare, a retirement home, a foster home, and a home for former residents of the rehab centre who had essentially become part of the family.

Tina Roy, left, and Ann Sguin-Huska, right, are two of Louise Lortie Sguin's three children. (Kristy Nease/CBC)

Sguin even spent two weeks on the streets in 1995 to get a better feel for her work.

"She really wanted to live the life of what it was like, so when her residents would come to her she could be 100 per cent compassionate towards them and understand what their life was like, battling just to have a warm place to sleep or keep the jacket on your back," Roy said.

"That's just in her DNA. It was just deep down inside her, and she was always like that. She would go the extra mile just to make sure that you were OK," Roy said.

A memorial service will be held May 11at Liberty Ministries in Aylmer.

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning