Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Insurance Corporation Cuts Ad Budget In Favour Of Traffic Enforcement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2018 12:42 PM
    VICTORIA — The Insurance Corporation of British Columbia is slashing its advertising budget in half and redirecting the funds toward police traffic enforcement.
     
     
    Attorney General David Eby says high risk drivers are ignoring the corporation's road safety messages.
     
     
    He says channelling advertising funds directly to enforcement will offer the chance to deliver the message directly to risky drivers.
     
     
    Starting in the next fiscal year, the insurance corporation will add $2.4 million to enhanced traffic enforcement.
     
     
    The Ministry of the Attorney General  says that will boost the public insurer's investment in direct safety traffic programs to $24.8 million.
     
     
    Corporation president Nicolas Jimenez says ICBC's cost pressures can be traced directly to the 350,000 crashes, about 960 a day, that were recorded across British Columbia last year.
     
     
    "With crashes at an all-time high in our province, we're committed to doing what we can to reduce claims costs and relieve the pressure on insurance rates," Jimenez says in a news release. 
     
     
    The corporation says the $2.4 million remaining in its advertising budget will be spent educating drivers about upcoming changes to the provincial auto insurance system.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study
    TORONTO — Researchers say a month of abstaining from cannabis leads to improved memory in adolescents and young adults who are regular users of weed.

    Abstaining From Pot Improves Memory, Ability To Learn In Young Users: Study

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers
    In 2017, Canadian women earned 88.5 cents for every dollar a man earned, as measured in hourly wages for full-time workers, according to government figures.

    Government Ushers In Pay Equity Legislation For Federally Regulated Workers

    Air Canada, Westjet Latest Companies To Cut Ties To Seaworld Ahead Of Whale Bill

    Air Canada and WestJet Airlines Ltd. are joining a growing wave of companies that have cut ties to SeaWorld, in sync with the spirit of a federal bill to ban whale and dolphin captivity and in the wake of concerns raised by animal rights advocates.

    Air Canada, Westjet Latest Companies To Cut Ties To Seaworld Ahead Of Whale Bill

    Opposition Leaders Unite To Pressure Justin Trudeau To Call Byelections

    Opposition Leaders Unite To Pressure Justin Trudeau To Call Byelections
    OTTAWA — Opposition party leaders have joined forces to pressure Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to call byelections in all four vacant federal ridings.

    Opposition Leaders Unite To Pressure Justin Trudeau To Call Byelections

    John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson To Talk Electoral Reform In B.C. In Televised Debate Nov. 8

    VANCOUVER — Premier John Horgan and Opposition Leader Andrew Wilkinson have set a date to debate the merits of electoral reform.

    John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson To Talk Electoral Reform In B.C. In Televised Debate Nov. 8

    3 Asian Nations Warn Citizens Not To Use Marijuana In Canada

    3 Asian Nations Warn Citizens Not To Use Marijuana In Canada
    BEIJING — Marijuana may be legal now in Canada but at least three Asian governments are warning their citizens to avoid it, including the spectre of possible arrest for Japanese and South Koreans.

    3 Asian Nations Warn Citizens Not To Use Marijuana In Canada