The Province

ICBC won’t get revenue from intersecti­on speed cameras

- ROB SHAW rshaw@postmedia.com twitter.com/robshaw_vansun —With files from Jennifer Saltman

VICTORIA — Drivers who get caught speeding by B.C.’s new intersecti­on cameras won’t see their fines go toward keeping car insurance rates low.

Attorney General David Eby said Wednesday the revenue from speeding cameras will be shared with municipali­ties to fund road safety programs, and not kept by the Insurance Corp. of B.C.

That’s despite a recommenda­tion by an outside consultant that the Crown corporatio­n get the money and use it drive down premium increases.

“This red-light camera initiative is not a revenue-generation piece for ICBC. It’s not going to be creating money that will help close the financial gap at ICBC,” Eby said to reporters after making a speech at a Surrey Board of Trade meeting.

“Where revenues from tickets go is to local government after the costs of administra­tion are deducted, and we’re hopeful to work with local government to use that money to improve road safety further, to invest that money in infrastruc­ture in the city to reduce collisions because that will create a virtuous circle for everybody.”

B.C. currently collects revenue from tickets for speeding and other traffic offences, and, after deducting costs, distribute­s it to municipali­ties.

Eby’s comments appear to contradict public statements by Solicitor General Mike Farnworth earlier this week. He mused about possible changes to the revenue-sharing program that would let the province keep a larger share of new speeding camera tickets.

The Crown insurer faces a $1.3-billion loss for the year ending March 31 due to increases in crashes, claims and legal fees. The losses threaten the provincial budget, and Eby has launched several reforms, including $5,500 caps on pain and suffering claims for minor injuries and penalizing bad drivers with higher rates.

Earlier this month, Eby announced the government would convert 140 red-light intersecti­on cameras to also take pictures of vehicles that speed through intersecti­ons on both red and green lights. The province has not said what speed will trigger a camera, or when the changes will be made, but it has denied any comparison to a 1990s photo radar program that B.C. drivers hated.

A 2017 independen­t report into the insurer’s financial problems, written by the profession­al services firm Ernst & Young, suggested B.C. could generate as much as $89 million with intersecti­on speed cameras.

“With the potential for increased income from new and additional road safety and non-insurance initiative­s … it is recommende­d that the option of having ICBC retain at least a portion of additional revenues generated by such initiative­s (i.e., intersecti­on cameras) be considered,” the report said. “The additional revenues would help reduce pressure on basic insurance premiums.”

The Liberal Opposition has dubbed the speed cameras “photo radar 2.0.” Critic Michael Lee said the concept was “rushed out,” and argued that the fact government ministers can’t agree on where the revenue should go doesn’t inspire confidence.

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