Calgary Herald

Province may take back control of driver road tests

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON Alberta said it might take driver road tests back from the private sector due to concerns about oversight and high fees compared with the rest of Canada.

Service Alberta Minister Brian Malkinson said all options will be discussed in coming months and changes could come as early as January.

“I think we’ll be able to have a driver-testing system that has the integrity that I think Albertans expect,” Malkinson said Wednesday in Calgary.

Alberta is believed to be the only jurisdicti­on in North America that delivers road tests through the free market. They are arranged through privately operated registry agencies.

An independen­t consultant’s report said the approach is failing to deliver projected cost savings to consumers and is open to collusion and abuse.

“Challenges in monitoring the program, associated fees and general operations leave opportunit­y for inconsiste­ncy and exploitati­on such as fraud, bribery, sexual harassment and collusion,” the report said.

Malkinson said an in-house study by his department from 2014 to 2017 found there were more than 40 investigat­ions of improper behaviour on the tests.

There have also been complaints that would-be drivers are purposely flunked to make them re-take their tests as a cash grab.

Craig Couillard, president of the Alberta Associatio­n of Registry Agents, said his group supports improvemen­ts to driver testing and will work with the province.

He questioned complaints people are failed so they have to take more tests and pay the fee again.

“Those (complaints) have to be taken with a measure of context,” said Couillard.

Registry agencies arrange driving tests and set fees with companies that do road exams. Five dollars from every test goes to the province. Malkinson’s department estimates the average Alberta price for a basic Class 5 driver’s licence is $90 a test — double or triple the cost for similar tests in other provinces.

Prices rise sharply after that for more specialize­d licences and top out at $219 on average for a Class 1 licence for commercial truck drivers. That’s three to four times higher than in other provinces.

A motorcycle road test that costs $22 in Saskatchew­an and $20 in Prince Edward Island costs an average of $145 in Alberta.

“Alberta’s road testing fees are up to five times the average of the other provincial jurisdicti­ons,” said the report by Tantus Solutions Group.

“When Alberta moved to a privatized model in 1993, the rationale for the move was based on ... increased access for Albertans and low cost to provide examinatio­ns.

“There is evidence that access has been increased in some areas of the province, but the lower cost justificat­ion has not materializ­ed.”

Couillard said registries have leeway to offer cheaper or higher prices depending on levels of service, such as offering tests on weekends and evenings.

“I think the (free) market works now, but ... I also realize in some rural communitie­s there is no option and that is a legitimate concern of the government,” he said.

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