Toronto Star

‘Weak links’ in licence suspension­s probed

Ombudsman to look at why some suspended drivers can go years without being told

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Ontario’s ombudsman is investigat­ing “weak links” to find out how drivers whose licences have been suspended or reinstated have missed important notificati­ons from the Ministry of Transporta­tion.

Mailing systems and computer problems are being considered as part of the investigat­ion that began in May following a Toronto Star story about a Toronto man who learned his licence had been suspended since 2013, Paul Dubé said after issuing his annual report Tuesday.

The man had not paid a speeding ticket, but was allowed to renew his licence plate sticker at least twice despite the suspension, buy a new car and renew insurance without the suspension being flagged.

“Those are the kinds of things we’re going to look at. Where does it break down? Where are the weak links?” Dubé told reporters.

“We all know what the outcome has been . . . people finding out years after the fact that they’ve been suspended and, if their insurance is invalidate­d as a result, it can be pretty catastroph­ic from a financial point of view.”

More complaints have been rolling in since the initial Star story and investigat­ion was announced.

Some have gone years without knowing their licences are suspended.

Dubé said “it’s a bit early to draw conclusion­s” on what has gone wrong at the ministry, but, the probe will wrap up this summer and a report will be written in the fall.

He suggested better co-ordination with Service Ontario, which does licence plate sticker renewals, is needed. Transporta­tion Minister Steven Del Duca said drivers used to be notified of suspension­s and reinstatem­ents by registered mail, but that practice was scrapped about 17 years ago. Efforts are under way to improve how drivers are informed about the status of their licences.

“I want to make sure the notificati­on is effective so at the end of the day we’re prepared to look at all options,” Del Duca said on his way into a cabinet meeting.

“We’ll be happy to receive the input and feedback from the ombudsman around how to make it right.”

He stressed that motorists whose licences have been suspended have broken the rules.

“Driving in the province of Ontario is, in fact, a privilege; it’s not a right. So we have to balance making sure that our notificati­on is effective and robust alongside the fact that people who receive suspended licenses do so only because there has been an infraction or violation of the law.”

Dubé has said he suspects “an underlying systemic problem” at the ministry, which sends about 130,000 suspension notices a year to motorists who have not paid traffic fines.

The ombudsman’s annual report also slammed the Ministry of Transporta­tion for wrongly suspending another driver’s licence for 315 days over medical reasons, even though the motorist did not have a health condition.

Bureaucrat­ic errors also abounded at the Family Responsibi­lity Office, which channels support payments between former spouses.

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