Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bad B.C. Drivers To Face Increased Penalties; Fines To Jump 20 Per Cent Annually

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2018 10:05 AM
    VICTORIA — Bad drivers in British Columbia have less than 24 hours to improve their habits or face increased penalties for speeding, impaired or distracted driving and other offences.
     
     
    Attorney General David Eby says in a release that fines applied under the driver risk premium and driver penalty point premium will jump 20 per cent effective Nov. 1, and a further 20 per cent in November 2019.
     
     
    The driver risk premium is assessed for behaviour such as excessive speeding or two or more distracted driving violations, while the penalty point premium applies to drivers who collect four or more points from traffic violations in a single year.
     
     
    Both penalties are on top of any fines or other consequences linked to the initial infraction and must be paid before vehicle insurance or a driver's licence can be renewed.
     
     
    The Attorney General's Ministry says driver point premiums currently range from $175 for four points to $24,000 for 50 or more, but the increase will raise those amounts to $210 for four points and $28,800 for 50 or more.
     
     
    Eby also says penalty premiums will keep pace with hikes in basic insurance offered by the Insurance Corporation of B.C., meaning the public insurer expects to collect $26 million in penalties next year, $32 million in 2020 and $36 million by 2021.
     
     
    "Reckless drivers put others at risk, and they're contributing to the rise in crashes we're seeing on our roads," Eby said in the release.
     
     
    He also said higher penalties will hold drivers accountable if they engage in dangerous behaviour while behind the wheel.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Man Convicted In Husband's Murder Granted Bail While He Appeals Ruling

    Toronto Man Convicted In Husband's Murder Granted Bail While He Appeals Ruling
     A Toronto lawyer who conspired with his lover to kill his husband has been released on bail while he appeals his murder conviction.

    Toronto Man Convicted In Husband's Murder Granted Bail While He Appeals Ruling

    Canada's Children Have High Rates Of Suicide, Child Abuse, Infant Mortality: Report

    Canada's Children Have High Rates Of Suicide, Child Abuse, Infant Mortality: Report
    Canada's global reputation as a healthy place to raise children is belied by statistics showing strikingly high rates of suicide, child abuse and struggles with mental health, a new report suggested Tuesday.

    Canada's Children Have High Rates Of Suicide, Child Abuse, Infant Mortality: Report

    Police Arrest Man Wanted In Connection With Toronto's Yorkdale Mall Shooting

    Police Arrest Man Wanted In Connection With Toronto's Yorkdale Mall Shooting
    Police allege two groups of men had an altercation inside Yorkdale Shopping Centre around 2:50 p.m. on Thursday when two shots were fired.

    Police Arrest Man Wanted In Connection With Toronto's Yorkdale Mall Shooting

    Travellers Complain About Rude, Disrespectful Canadian Border Officers

    Travellers Complain About Rude, Disrespectful Canadian Border Officers
    The total number of complaints through the CBSA's online "Compliments, Comments and Complaints" website remains a tiny fraction of the 95 million travellers seen by officers in the past year.

    Travellers Complain About Rude, Disrespectful Canadian Border Officers

    U.S. Woman Appeals Life Sentence In Halifax Valentine's Day Mall Shooting Plot

    Lindsay Souvannarath was sentenced in April after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit murder in a plan that would have seen two shooters open fire at the Halifax Shopping Centre food court in 2015.

    U.S. Woman Appeals Life Sentence In Halifax Valentine's Day Mall Shooting Plot

    Court Battle Over 'Grabher' Personal Licence Plate Put Off Until April 2019

    Court Battle Over 'Grabher' Personal Licence Plate Put Off Until April 2019
    HALIFAX — A court hearing for a retiree who is battling the Nova Scotia government over its suggestion that a licence plate bearing his family name supports sexual violence against women has been put off until next year.

    Court Battle Over 'Grabher' Personal Licence Plate Put Off Until April 2019