Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

ICBC relief rebate coming for drivers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2022 10:04 AM
  • ICBC relief rebate coming for drivers

VICTORIA - British Columbia is giving a one-time relief rebate to help drivers cope with the cost of rising fuel prices caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Premier John Horgan announced Friday.

Horgan said the provincial government approached the Insurance Corporation of B.C. to provide drivers who have a basic auto insurance policy with a $110 rebate and commercial drivers with $165.

“Today, if we go to fill up at the pumps, sometimes it feels like it’s a bit of a hold up," he told a news conference. "Prices are at unprecedented levels and those prices at the pump are a direct result of (Russian President) Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.”

Horgan said the one-time payment is a better approach than cutting fuel taxes because the price will only increase again at the pumps.

He said the corporation is in a financial position to cover the cost of $395 million rebate. It is forecasting an annual net income of $1.9 billion for the 2021-22 fiscal year ending March 31.

In 2018, David Eby, who was then the minister in charge of the insurance corporation, compared the finances of the public auto insurer to a dumpster fire.

The NDP brought in legislation to prevent governments from to dipping into reserves at the corporation "to pad their budgets," Horgan said Friday.

But the difference with the rebate, he said, is that the money is going back to policy holders, who finance the corporation.

"This is a rebate based on the robust position the corporation is in," Horgan said.

Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said drivers can expect the rebate to start rolling out in May.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021
Paramedics and medical dispatchers in B.C. responded to a record-setting 35,525 overdose calls last year. BC Emergency Health Services says paramedics attended an average of 97 overdose calls a day last year, a 31 per cent increase compared with 2020.

B.C. overdose calls rose by 31 per cent in 2021

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.
Insurance losses from a wildfire that wiped out most of Lytton, B.C., have surged to $102 million. The Insurance Bureau of Canada says the amount has risen from an original estimate of $78 million mostly because of delays in rebuilding the village.

Delays increase cost to rebuild Lytton, B.C.

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine
The school board in Delta, B.C., is requiring all its employees to show proof of vaccination for COVID-19 and is giving them less than two months to disclose their status.  Board chair Val Windsor says it is taking the step to reduce the risk of staff and students getting COVID-19.

B.C. school district wants staff proof of vaccine

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani
Reshmi is a South Asian woman and 52 years old. Reshmi’s family and friends, as well as police, are concerned about Reshmi’s well-being and are asking the public to share the information provided above.

Burnaby RCMP need your help in locating missing woman Reshmi Mani

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that the country will have enough third and fourth doses for all eligible Canadians — if or when they're needed — with contracts signed through 2024 with Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

Fourth doses not yet needed for most: experts

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate
Only days before Canadian truck drivers were required to be fully vaccinated for COVID-19 to get into the country or face quarantine, the federal government is backing away from the vaccine mandate. The new rule will still take effect for American truckers starting this weekend, with drivers being turned away at the border unless they've been inoculated.

Ottawa backs away from trucker vaccine mandate