The Prince George Citizen

Driver dinged twice in eight minutes for driving, talking on cellphone

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VANCOUVER — A driver in Vancouver needed just eight minutes to rack up more than $700 in fines and eight demerit points, all because of a reluctance to put down the phone.

Vancouver Police posted a photo of the two tickets on social media, showing that within a space of barely six blocks along one of the city’s most congested streets, the driver of the rented Hyundai Accent was stopped twice for using an electronic device. Each infraction carries a fine of $368 and four driver demerit points, meaning the total bill facing the driver is $736, plus an additional $520 for the eight demerit points.

A later Twitter comment from police confirmed the driver was from outside the province, although the department declined to release their hometown.

Drivers of rental cars are usually responsibl­e for paying any tickets, but the demerit points are applied annually and collected by the Insurance Corporatio­n of British Columbia when a vehicle’s insurance is renewed.

That prompted a volley of comments on social media concerned that the chatty tourist might evade the fine and point penalty, but police say the Insurance Corporatio­n invoices out of province drivers and unpaid bills can be sent to a collection agency.

In it’s tweet, Vancouver Police called the repeat distracted driving offences expensive and dangerous, while B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth was more blunt.

“If people are that stupid then they deserve the financial penalty they get and this is a classic example of someone having more money than brains, and they have been hit in the pocketbook,” he said.

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