The Niagara Falls Review

Ontario will issue old licence plates while fixes made

Government won’t say how problem is getting solved or what caused it

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO—Ontario’s problemati­c new licence plates will stop being manufactur­ed on March 4, but the government won’t say what the root cause of the issue is or how it is being fixed.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government has acknowledg­ed there is a problem with the new plates that makes them difficult to read in the dark. The province announced Friday it has come up with a plan and timeline with manufactur­er 3M Canada for resolving the issue. Government and Consumer Services Minister Lisa Thompson said in a statement that the solution won’t cost taxpayers money.

“We take these concerns seriously and together have put a plan in place to deliver an enhanced new plate,” she wrote. “Manufactur­ing of the new enhanced plates is expected to begin within two weeks and they will be distribute­d shortly afterwards.”

Thompson has not taken journalist­s’ questions about the debacle except for one day last week. When asked, government officials would not say how the problem is being fixed or what caused it.

The old white-and-blue plates will be issued starting March 5 until the updated ones are available for distributi­on the week of March 16. Law enforcemen­t and other stakeholde­rs will be testing prototypes of the updated plate, the government said.

The problem was first raised earlier this month when an offduty police officer in Kingston posted a picture of an unreadable plate in a well-lit parking lot at night.

A number of groups have expressed concerns about the impact the problem could have on public safety, including Mothers Against Drunk Driving Canada and the Ontario Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police.

NDP transporta­tion critic Jennifer French said the issue with the plates was first raised over the Family Day weekend, so it shouldn’t take until March 4 to stop producing them.

“They have known from the beginning that there was a problem,” she said. “So the fact that they are knowingly continuing to distribute these problemati­c plates for another week is not acceptable.”

The approximat­ely 71,000 drivers who have the newer blue licence plates with the unspecifie­d problem will be issued replacemen­ts. They will get instructio­ns in the mail on how to replace those plates with the updated ones, and those will come with a new letter and number sequence, the government said.

Remaining stock of the problemati­c plates will be recycled, the government said.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves revealed the new plates in the 2019 budget, saying the government spent $500,000 on a consultati­on on branding, but had a new contract for licence plate production that saved $4 million.

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