Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Repeat bad drivers can expect dramatically longer prohibitions in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2017 11:31 AM

    Street racers and stunt drivers in British Columbia could lose their vehicles for up to 36 months as part of new penalties the province is imposing on bad drivers.

    The Ministry of Public Safety says starting Dec. 1 prohibitions ranging from three to 36 months will replace existing 15-day penalties for those drivers and other repeat offenders.

    The ministry says the same penalties could also be applied to a broader range of offences, including excessive speeding, driving without due care and attention and other high-risk behaviours.

    RoadSafetyBC, the lead provincial agency responsible for road safety in the province, will set the length of each prohibition on a case-by-case basis, relying on the driver's record and details provided by police.

    Officers will still be able to immediately impound vehicles for a minimum of seven days if drivers are caught racing or stunt driving, the ministry says in a news release.

    Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth says drivers posing the greatest risk to peoples' lives are often caught repeatedly, suggesting they are not taking consequences seriously.

    "We're going to be scrutinizing their driving more closely and making sure the penalty fits," Farnworth says in the release.

    "Racers who won't take their cars to the track can expect to walk or use public transit."

    Delta Police Chief Neil Dubord, who is chair of the traffic safety committee within the B.C. Association of Chiefs of Police, says the group was consulted on the new approach and it believes it will make B.C.'s roads safer.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl
    Owen Ross Gibson-Skeir, 21, was arrested a year ago in Halifax and pleaded guilty in December to three charges.

    Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

    Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

    EDMONTON — A mentally ill Edmonton man who stabbed two co-workers to death and badly injured four others has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

    Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised
    The company says the accessed information included names, addresses, phone numbers, employment histories and other standard job application information.

    McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer
    Sanjeev Kainth had a newborn daughter, and worked at River's Reach Pub as a line cook

    New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing
    VANCOUVER — The mother of a man who drove drunk and killed three people on a British Columbia highway says her son's time in jail has made him a changed man.

    Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device
    VANCOUVER — A group of students at the University of British Columbia have turned to technology in an effort to address the opioid crisis by creating a wearable device they say can detect an overdose.

    These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device