Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

ICBC Projecting More Than $1Billion-Dollar Loss For The Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2019 09:21 PM

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's attorney general says the financial situation with the province's public auto insurance agency is critical and getting worse.

     

    David Eby says the Insurance Corporation of B.C. lost $860 million for the first nine months of its fiscal year, $273 million higher than expected.

     

    He says that puts the Crown corporation on track for a year-end loss of $1.18 billion, compounding the blow of last year's $1.3 billion deficit.


    Eby says a key reason for ICBC's worsening financial crisis is the escalating costs of settling personal injuries claims, which have jumped by 43 per cent over five years, and almost half of each litigated settlement is legal expenses.


    Major reforms are kicking in on April 1 this year and are expected to save the public agency more than $1 billion a year, but Eby says recent financial results make it clear the government needs to do even more.


    Eby says the government will have more details in the coming days on how it intends to respond to the escalating legal costs.


    "Although ICBC's financial challenges are significant, there should also be no doubt that ICBC remains a valuable public asset that provides important benefits for British Columbians," he says in a news release.


    "Our government's job is to deliver affordable, high-quality auto insurance to British Columbians, and we will do so."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Professor Of Cannabis Science Is Launched At The University Of B.C.

    Epidemiologist and research scientist M-J Milloy will be the first Canopy Growth professor of cannabis science at the university.

    Professor Of Cannabis Science Is Launched At The University Of B.C.

    B.C. Officers Leave Positions Amid Misconduct Investigations: Commissioner

    SAANICH, B.C. — British Columbia's police complaint commissioner says two Vancouver Island officers are alleged to have had inappropriate relationships with sex workers and both left their positions during misconduct investigations.

    B.C. Officers Leave Positions Amid Misconduct Investigations: Commissioner

    B.C. To Spend $1.1 Billion To Retrofit Social Housing For Safety, Energy Savings

    B.C. To Spend $1.1 Billion To Retrofit Social Housing For Safety, Energy Savings
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government says it will invest $1.1 billion over the next decade to make social housing in the province more energy efficient, less polluting, safer and cost efficient.

    B.C. To Spend $1.1 Billion To Retrofit Social Housing For Safety, Energy Savings

    Three More Cases Of E. Coli Confirmed, None Found In Tested Canadian Lettuce

    OTTAWA — The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has tested more than 2,000 samples of fresh lettuce and packaged salads looking for the source of an E. coli outbreak but hasn't found any produce that contains the bacteria.

    Three More Cases Of E. Coli Confirmed, None Found In Tested Canadian Lettuce

    Canada Post Strike Causes Drop In Salvation Army Donations, Charity Says

    Canada Post Strike Causes Drop In Salvation Army Donations, Charity Says
    TORONTO — Every holiday season workers at the Salvation Army anxiously check the mail for a flurry of envelopes.

    Canada Post Strike Causes Drop In Salvation Army Donations, Charity Says

    Natural Gas Pressure Eases But FortisBC Urges Restraint For Potential Cold Snap

    SURREY, B.C. — The natural gas supply is improving for British Columbia, but FortisBC Energy Inc. is still asking its residential and business customers to conserve ahead of the two coldest months of the year.

    Natural Gas Pressure Eases But FortisBC Urges Restraint For Potential Cold Snap