Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rates To Jump Amid Growing Financial Losses At ICBC

The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2017 11:02 AM
    VANCOUVER — Insurance rates are going up for drivers in British Columbia and the province's attorney general says the previous government is to blame.
     
    David Eby said the Insurance Corporation of B.C. is in crisis, with financial losses totalling more than $500 million last year.
     
    The insurance provider is asking the provincial utilities commission to hike basic rates by 6.4 per cent this year to combat the losses.
     
    Optional rates will also jump and Eby said Tuesday that the average driver can expect an annual blended increase of eight per cent or $130 per year.
     
    All vehicle owners in B.C. are required to purchase basic coverage through ICBC, but they can look to private insurers for optional extra coverage.
     
    The higher rates follow a recent report from Ernst & Young that said the Crown corporation's finances were in serious trouble and rates would need to increase 30 per cent by 2019 to cover costs.
     
    Eby said the public auto insurer's problems are due in part to the previous Liberal administration's "cavalier and reckless" attitude toward the Crown corporation's finances.
     
     
    "The former government knew years ago that issues at ICBC were spiralling rapidly out of control, yet they completely failed to look out for drivers and the road users of our province. We are paying for those short-sighted decisions today," he said.
     
    But Andrew Wilkinson, the Liberal's attorney general critic, said his party took steps to keep increases affordable and stable for families when ICBC's claims surged, totalling $2.4 billion in payouts in 2015.
     
    "Instead of offering new ideas on how to control the cost issue, Eby is attempting to lay blame for the challenges ICBC is currently facing rather than provide his own plan," Wilkinson said.
     
    Fixing the public auto insurer will be an ongoing project for "the next several years," Eby said.
     
    First steps will include an audit of ICBC's operations and a number of initiatives aimed at reducing collisions, including activating red-light cameras 24 hours a day and a public awareness campaign highlighting the dangers of distracted driving.
     
    "The way we identified these specific initiatives was to ensure we could, as quickly as possible, begin bending those cost curves by making B.C. roads safer, but also by identifying opportunities for savings within ICBC to get those costs down and, as a result, keep rates affordable for British Columbians," Eby said.
     
     
    Eby wouldn't guarantee that British Columbians won't see rate hikes again next year, but promised that he has asked ICBC to look for ways of making the costs more fair.
     
    "It makes absolutely no sense to me that someone with a spotless driving record should be paying the same or a similar insurance rate as someone with a careless driving conviction. We need to make sure that bad drivers pay more and good drivers pay less," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rajasthan Doctors Engage In Verbal Feud During Emergency Surgery Of Pregnant Woman; Newborn Dies

    Rajasthan Doctors Engage In Verbal Feud During Emergency Surgery Of Pregnant Woman; Newborn Dies
    Watch Doctors Indulge In Verbal Spat During Surgery Of Pregnant Woman 

    Rajasthan Doctors Engage In Verbal Feud During Emergency Surgery Of Pregnant Woman; Newborn Dies

    New Westminster, B.C., Police Say Charges Recommended In Teen Overdose Death

    New Westminster, B.C., Police Say Charges Recommended In Teen Overdose Death
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Police say charges are being recommended following the death of a 13-year-old girl who overdosed on ecstasy bought in New Westminster, B.C.

    New Westminster, B.C., Police Say Charges Recommended In Teen Overdose Death

    B.C.'s Helicopter Air Ambulances To Be Equipped With Night Vision Technology

    B.C.'s Helicopter Air Ambulances To Be Equipped With Night Vision Technology
    VANCOUVER — The organization that manages paramedic and ambulance services across British Columbia says night vision technology is being installed on three of its air ambulance helicopters.

    B.C.'s Helicopter Air Ambulances To Be Equipped With Night Vision Technology

    Saskatchewan Man Who Attacked Woman, Set Her On Fire Not Dangerous Offender

    Saskatchewan Man Who Attacked Woman, Set Her On Fire Not Dangerous Offender
    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — A Saskatchewan man who viciously beat a homeless woman before setting her on fire will not be declared a dangerous offender.

    Saskatchewan Man Who Attacked Woman, Set Her On Fire Not Dangerous Offender

    Canadian High Schools Welcoming More International Students, Boards Say

    Canadian High Schools Welcoming More International Students, Boards Say
    Public high schools across the country are welcoming a growing number of international students in an effort to build valuable relationships and — in some cases — boost revenue.  

    Canadian High Schools Welcoming More International Students, Boards Say

    22-Yr-Old Pardeep Singh Identified As Victim Of Surrey Shooting

    22-Yr-Old Pardeep Singh Identified As Victim Of Surrey Shooting
    Surrey Man Killed Tuesday Night  Identified As Pardeep Singh, 22. Associated With Gangs

    22-Yr-Old Pardeep Singh Identified As Victim Of Surrey Shooting