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How Long Does a 24-Hour Suspension Stay on Your Record?

Police officer issuing a ticket to a driver in a car during a roadside stop.

A 24-hour driving suspension in British Columbia is typically issued for suspected impaired driving or unsafe driving behaviour that causes an officer to believe on reasonable grounds that the driver’s ability to operate a motor vehicle is impaired by either a drug or by alcohol.

While this suspension may seem like a temporary inconvenience, it’s important to understand its potential impact on your driving record and how it could affect you moving forward.

How Long Does a 24-Hour Suspension Stay on Your Record? Read More »

Understanding Hit and Run Offences in Canada

Police roadblock at night with cars stopped, officers in discussion, and bright lights reflecting off wet pavement.

In Canada, failing to remain at the scene of an accident, commonly referred to as a “hit and run,” is a serious criminal offence under section 320.16 of the Criminal Code. A recent sentencing decision from the Provincial Court of British Columbia, R. v. Singh, 2025 BCPC 126, illustrates the gravity of such offences and the types of sentences they attract.

Understanding Hit and Run Offences in Canada Read More »

How Many Speeding Tickets Before Suspension in BC?

Person holding multiple traffic tickets beside a parked car on a city street

Receiving a speeding ticket in British Columbia can be stressful, but many drivers are even more concerned about how multiple tickets might affect their ability to keep their licence. The rules around licence suspensions for speeding tickets in BC are strict, and understanding them is crucial for anyone who spends time on the road.

How Many Speeding Tickets Before Suspension in BC? Read More »

Kyla on City News: Rustad to end ICBC’s ‘bloated monopoly,’ if elected: BC Conservatives

BC Conservatives Leader John Rustad calls the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (ICBC) a “bloated monopoly” and a “broken system” and announces a new plan to end the insurance company’s monopoly across the province.

The party says it will bring fair, competitive car insurance to drivers across B.C.

“On top of that, David Eby and the NDP have stripped away the rights of accident victims to fight for the support they need to rebuild their lives. That’s not just wrong, it’s cruel,” Rustad said, according to a release Wednesday.

Kyla on City News: Rustad to end ICBC’s ‘bloated monopoly,’ if elected: BC Conservatives Read More »

What is the Driver Improvement Program?

1. The Driver Improvement Program

The Driver Improvement Program (DIP) is designed to preemptively correct dangerous driving behaviour. This “program” ultimately acts as a series of restrictions that can be imposed on you to correct what are deemed to be unsafe habits on the road. The DIP’s impact on drivers can range from simple warning letters to complete prohibitions on driving. Dangerous driving habits are identified in a number of different ways. These include penalty points (commonly referred to as demerits), offences under the BC Motor Vehicle Act, criminal charges, and through actions taken by the police, which in turn are noted on a driver’s record.

What is the Driver Improvement Program? Read More »

Will a ticket affect my insurance rates in BC?

Tickets can have all sorts of consequences that are not printed on the face of the ticket. They can attract penalty points, and trigger driving prohibitions, and they can result in you having to pay Driver Risk Premiums or Penalty Point Premiums.

There are a number of reasons to be concerned that if you get a traffic ticket in BC, you may be at risk of a bigger financial loss than just paying the ticket itself.

Will a ticket affect my insurance rates in BC? Read More »

Difference between the Driver Risk Premium and the Driver Penalty Point Premium?

The Driver Risk Premium is a premium that you get invoiced once a year based on the number of convictions that you have on your driving record, depending on what those convictions are.

Not every ticket you get will trigger a Driver Risk Premium invoice, but the tickets that do trigger it are the ones considered to be high-risk offences.

Difference between the Driver Risk Premium and the Driver Penalty Point Premium? Read More »

What are the different types of speeding tickets in BC?

In BC, you can get many different types of speeding tickets, and each type of ticket has unique consequences.

Each speeding ticket is viewed differently by the Superintendent of Motor Vehicles in determining whether to prohibit your license and by ICBC when deciding what insurance-related consequences to impose on you.

What are the different types of speeding tickets in BC? Read More »

Climate Change, BC Floods, and Your ICBC Insurance Rates

The consequences of the flooding and devastation in BC right now will lead to massive payouts from ICBC. In fact, climate change will affect your ICBC insurance rates and the cost of owning a vehicle in ways that we have not really considered.

This morning, it was reported that roughly 5000 cars were stopped in some fashion on Highway 1 leading out of the Lower Mainland. There were cars trapped in mudslides, cars that have floated away in communities throughout Southern British Columbia, and cars partly or mostly submerged in places like Merritt, Abbotsford, and the Cowichan Valley.

Each of these cars will require repairs – at the very least – to the significant water damage. While it is easy to imagine those vehicles that are no longer drivable and the replacement cost associated with them, there are also vehicles with lesser forms of damage: water damage to seats and interior fabrics, vehicles that have damage to the paint, dents from debris striking against vehicles, and the cleaning costs associated with removing mud, debris, and water from inside vehicles.

ICBC is, in many circumstances, going to be obligated to pay for these costs.

But the ICBC costs associated with the BC floods are likely going to impact people negatively overall.

Climate Change, BC Floods, and Your ICBC Insurance Rates Read More »

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