This week on Driving Law, Kyla Lee and Paul Doroshenko take a deep dive into two major developments in law and driving that show how privacy breaches and government decisions continue to ripple across BC and beyond.
First, they unpack the BC Court of Appeal’s decision upholding $15,000 in damages for each person affected by the ICBC privacy breach scandal—where an employee improperly accessed and sold private information that led to shootings and arsons. Kyla and Paul discuss why the Court rejected ICBC’s arguments for lower payouts, and what this means for privacy law going forward.
Then, they turn to the broader traffic landscape, from increasing Vancouver road chaos and police misbehaviour to the impact of new interprovincial trade rules, the upcoming federal election, and Trump’s latest threat of tariffs on Canadian-made cars. They break down how all of this could reshape traffic patterns, trucking routes, and long weekends on BC’s highways.
Finally, in Ridiculous Driver of the Week, they highlight a Tennessee driver who crashed into a parked police car—after driving a quarter mile along the shoulder while reading a doctor’s prescription.