Vancouver Sun

ICBC on ‘path to insolvency’ as insurer delivers first financial headache for NDP

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B.C.’s once-celebrated public auto insurer has become a financial train wreck, its critics say, as studies into the beleaguere­d Crown corporatio­n call for dramatic rate hikes and drastic structural changes to save it from ruin.

But while everyone appears to agree the system is broken, there is disagreeme­nt over how the Insurance Corp. of B.C. went off the rails in the first place and what must be done to fix it.

The crisis at ICBC is shaping up to be the first major financial hurdle for B.C.’s new NDP government.

Attorney General David Eby, who is also the minister responsibl­e for ICBC, blames the previous Liberal government for problems at the corporatio­n.

“ICBC, as described to me by senior bureaucrat­s, is on the path to insolvency,” Eby said. “It’s very unfortunat­e that it’s been left for so long, because I think there was really an opportunit­y to address this much earlier.”

ICBC was created in the early 1970s by the province’s first NDP government to provide affordable and universal auto insurance.

All B.C. vehicle owners are required to purchase basic coverage through the corporatio­n, though in 1976 the government began allowing private insurers to compete in offering additional optional coverage.

Eby and other ICBC supporters single out the actions of former Liberal premier Gordon Campbell as marking the beginning of the corporatio­n’s troubles.

Campbell required ICBC to keep much higher amounts of backup capital.

The resulting stockpile proved irresistib­le to politician­s in 2010 following the global financial meltdown, critics say, when the government began siphoning hundreds of millions of dollars of “excess capital” almost every year.

In all, the Liberals withdrew $1.2 billion from the lucrative optional side of ICBC’s business, and also transferre­d $1.4 billion to offset deficits on the compulsory side providing basic coverage beginning in 2012.

“The reason we’re in a bind right now is that there’s no more money left in the optional piggy bank,” said retired civil servant Rick McCandless, who has written extensivel­y on ICBC.

“The music has stopped. You can’t play the game anymore. Somebody has to make some hard decisions. And that somebody is government.”

Liberal MLA John Yap said the New Democrats are playing politics in trying to lay blame for the problems at ICBC, which he largely attributed to the increasing number of collisions and claims yearover-year along with rising repair costs.

The Liberals’ priority was to keep rates low and stable while improving the operations and finances of the corporatio­n through a number of measures, including forgoing the dividends from the optional side of the business as of last year and rolling in a new informatio­n technology system that would save the corporatio­n millions, he said.

“Government did take action,” Yap said.

He said the Liberals understood there were challenges and had ICBC commission a third-party report on the financial situation to make recommenda­tions, which the new government will be responsibl­e to act on.

A recent report from Ernst & Young painted a dire picture at the Crown corporatio­n, concluding that rates must increase by 30 per cent by 2019 to cover costs. A separate forecast released last November by ICBC indicated rates would need to increase by 42 per cent over the next five years to make up for expenses.

McCandless pointed to a footnote in the ICBC report that an additional $1.5 billion is required in “capital from other sources” between 2017 and 2020. He calculated the cumulative rate hike to be closer to 117 per cent over four years.

ICBC says an increase in accidents as well as both the number and cost of claims are contributi­ng to its financial predicamen­t. But experts say the insurance corporatio­n has been slow to respond to the changes, which apply equally to other jurisdicti­ons outside of B.C.

Greg Basham, senior vice-president of ICBC in the late 1990s, said the Liberals’ decision to cut funding for the corporatio­n’s road safety program undermined efforts to curb that trend.

ICBC operates a full-tort legal system, as opposed to the no-fault model used in some other provinces that saves on payouts and legal fees by preventing victims from litigating for better compensati­on.

It becomes a question of affordabil­ity versus treating victims fairly, McCandless said.

“How much fairness can you afford?” he added.

While the Liberal government withdrew money from ICBC coffers, they were not the only government to artificial­ly depress rates, McCandless said. The NDP in the late 1990s also “started playing games” with the Crown corporatio­n when they introduced a fiveyear rate freeze.

While advocates tend to see ICBC as a good program gone awry, some free-enterprise proponents view it as fundamenta­lly flawed, arguing it worked as well as it did for so long not because of the system but in spite of it.

Scott Hennig of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation said consumers suffer because of B.C.’s mandatory basic insurance model, which he described as a monopoly that is vulnerable to political interferen­ce.

“Private or public, monopolies are bad for consumers,” Hennig said.

“Politician­s can’t help themselves,” he added, describing ICBC as a cash cow. “When you’ve created a system that’s susceptibl­e to it, it doesn’t matter what party is in power.”

B.C. drivers pay some of the highest auto insurance rates in the country while receiving some of the lowest payouts, said Aaron Sutherland of the Insurance Bureau of Canada.

Sutherland said a 2017 review of auto insurance in Ontario listed the average premium cost in B.C. in 2015 as $1,316, second only to Ontario. The report also said the average cost of an injury claim was $42,084, second last in the country ahead of only Nova Scotia.

“If we want to have a real discussion and truly fix the auto insurance system, competitio­n needs to be included,” Sutherland said.

The NDP government has not released a comprehens­ive plan for addressing the crisis at ICBC, though Eby described the situation as urgent.

The government faces an Aug. 31 deadline to submit filings ahead of ICBC’s rate-setting hearing at the B.C. Utilities Commission.

 ?? JASON PAYNE ?? Attorney General David Eby, who is also the minister responsibl­e for ICBC, blames the previous Liberal government for problems at the embattled Crown corporatio­n, which was set up in the 1970s.
JASON PAYNE Attorney General David Eby, who is also the minister responsibl­e for ICBC, blames the previous Liberal government for problems at the embattled Crown corporatio­n, which was set up in the 1970s.

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