Vancouver Sun

BEING COVERED WILL COST YOU

Unlisted driver fee coming to ICBC

- ROB SHAW

VICTORIA B.C. motorists who might occasional­ly let a friend or family member drive their vehicle will need to pay a new $50 fee on their basic auto insurance next year or face the risk of large penalties if the borrower crashes.

The “unlisted driver protection” fee is a little-known part of the overhaul at the Insurance Corp. of B.C. the government announced in August and will take effect in September 2019. The changes are touted as a way to pull the Crown insurance agency out of its financial crisis. But critics say the driver protection plan is one example of several rate hikes masqueradi­ng as hidden fees that most drivers will feel pressured to pay out of caution or confusion.

“If your vehicle is involved in a crash caused by an unlisted driver and you didn’t have the unlisted driver protection, there will be a financial consequenc­e,” ICBC’s Adam Grossman said in a statement. “We need to ensure that the right incentives exist and, more importantl­y, that all drivers aren’t paying for the decisions that individual­s make about who they lend their vehicle to.”

The $50 annual protection plan would apply to anyone who intends to lend their vehicle out fewer than 12 times a year to family members, friends, neighbours, acquaintan­ces or co-workers. For example, if you lend someone your truck to help them move.

If an owner doesn’t buy the extra protection, and someone with a worse safety record than the owner crashes their vehicle, ICBC would hit the owner with a steep fine. Anyone who might drive that vehicle more than a dozen times in a year must be explicitly listed on the insurance and their driving record will be considered in calculatin­g premiums.

The surcharge is one of several new levies motorists will face next year when insuring their vehicle with ICBC, which has a monopoly on basic auto insurance.

Attorney General David Eby has said the changes are intended to increase rates for the riskiest drivers while providing savings for those with safer records. He has said 39 per cent of ICBC customers could have rates fall by up to $50, 13 per cent by between $50 and $100, and 15 per cent by more than $100. However, those reductions are based on 2018 rates and could be wiped out by ICBC’s new fees and any rate hike for basic insurance in 2019.

Families, in particular those that have a teenager or new driver trying to obtain a driver’s licence for the first time, appear to be particular­ly hard hit under the new rules.

An average family with a basic insurance rate of $1,094 this year could pay almost $200 more next year for the same vehicle, reflecting what ICBC says is the increased crash risk of young drivers.

“All of this adds up to a pretty steep rate increase that David Eby is trying to hide,” said Opposition Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson. “It sounds like David Eby ’s newborn ICBC is going to be a whole bunch of flat rate fees with no real relationsh­ip to risk.”

All vehicle owners will be required by ICBC to list everyone who may drive their vehicle after September 2019, including spouses, children and other relatives (as well as any friends or neighbours who will drive it more than 12 times a year).

ICBC’s new 2019 rate structure will mean the principal operator (say a parent with a lengthy clean driving record) will account for only 75 per cent of how ICBC sets the insurance premium on that vehicle. The highest-risk driver on the list (say a teenager) will be used by ICBC to calculate the remaining 25 per cent of the rate.

ICBC also plans to levy a new learner premium for drivers who must use the red “L” signs, of between $130 and $230 annually, depending on where you live in B.C., to “recognize the risk that a learner driver represents.”

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