He attended Sir James Dunn Collegiate and Vocational School.
Marie, Ontario. Showing an aptitude for mathematics, he participated in contests provincially and nationally at both the Junior (grades 9-11) and Senior (grades 12-13) levels. He continued his education at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, receiving a Doctor of Philosophy from the latter institution in 1977. His dissertation was entitled "Witt Theorems for Lattices over Discrete Valuation Rings".
He worked as a corporate planner and financial analyst.
Together they raised three daughters. He ran for the federal New Democratic Party in the 1984 election, but lost to Progressive Conservative Jim Kelleher in the Sault Ste.
Marie riding by 2,409 votes. The following year, he defeated Progressive Conservative Russian Ramsay in the riding of Sault Ste.
Marie in the 1985 Ontario election by 1,069 votes.
Morin-Strom was re-elected in the 1987 election. In 1987 he added critic for Transportation and Financial Institutions to his portfolio. He decided not to run in the 1990 election to protest the fact that Sault Ste.
Marie had decided to make the city officially an English language only municipality.
Morin-Strom now teaches evening classes of Astronomy at Nipissing University and works as a business analyst at Ontera.
In 1985 he was appointed as his party"s critic for Industry, Trade and Technology.
He served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1985 to 1990 as a member of the New Democratic Party.