Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes 2.3 Per Cent Fare Cap Through 2024

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2019 08:32 PM
  • BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes 2.3 Per Cent Fare Cap Through 2024

VICTORIA — A preliminary decision by the BC Ferries commission would cap annual ferry fare hikes at just over two per cent for five years starting in 2020.


The Office of the BC Ferries Commissioner says in a news release that a maximum yearly fare increase of 2.3 per cent is based on total operating expenses increasing at, or just above, the rate of inflation.


At the same time, Commissioner Sheldon Stoilen expects the trend of increased ferry traffic will level off by next year.


The proposed price cap covers BC Ferries' fifth performance term, which begins April 1, 2020 and ends March 31, 2024.


The commissioner has until September to finalize the decision and public comments are being accepted until the end of June.


BC Ferries was permitted to implement annual fare hikes of up to 1.9 per cent during the last five-year performance term, but Stoilen says average increases were lower than the maximum allowed.


He's pleased the proposed price caps are close to the consumer price index in B.C., but warns holding the line on fare increases could become increasingly difficult.


"The major challenges to operating a world-class system that is affordable to the riding public and taxpayers can be expected to persist and even deepen," Stoilen says in the release.


Fuel costs are the second-highest cost for the service and are estimated at $108.7 million for fiscal 2019 but Stoilen says they have been effectively managed and could decline due to a higher use of liquefied natural gas fuel.


However long-term capital plans will have a moderate impact on the upcoming performance term and "could have a larger impact for following terms," the release says.


Stoilen also points to non-controllable costs in the upcoming performance term such as $19.8 million for the provincial carbon tax, $6.1 million for the new provincial health tax and $19.4 for Canada Pension Plan rates.


He urges BC Ferries to develop a plan for the conversion to all-electric ferries as soon as infrastructure and technology is available.


Other recommendations include possible reductions in the long-term capital plan to ease pressure on future price caps at the publicly owned, independently managed company.


A tracking process and reporting requirement to meet targets for reducing operating, maintenance costs and administration costs should also be developed, Stoilen says.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert
An Ontario man who snatched his four-year-old daughter from her mother's home in the early morning hours has been found guilty of abduction after a judge found 

Man Found Guilty Of Abducting Daughter In Incident That Triggered Amber Alert

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers
Drivers using Google Maps are getting a last-minute warning as they approach some photo radar camera locations.

'Speed Camera Ahead:' Google Maps Add Photo Radar Warnings For Drivers

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government plans to strengthen its civil forfeiture law to better target drug crime and hidden assets.

B.C. To Tighten Civil Forfeiture Law To Better Target Drug Crime, Hidden Assets

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.
About a month after a rock slide in British Columbia closed Highway 97 near Summerland, traffic is moving again on the only route along the west side of Okanagan Lake.

Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates
Prisoners advocates are asking a Federal Court to intervene in the case of a Dene man from northern Saskatchewan who they say has spent most of his adult life in segregation and is at risk of committing suicide.

Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates

Obama Tells Winnipeg Audience That Politics Being Driven By Passions Not Facts

WINNIPEG — Barack Obama says there is a danger in the United States and around the world with politics being driven by passions disconnected from facts.

Obama Tells Winnipeg Audience That Politics Being Driven By Passions Not Facts