Toronto Star

LICENCE REVOKED

Ontario driving instructor­s have been caught selling alcohol, cigarettes and completion certificat­es to students — and even visiting a strip club during a lesson. But their identities are being kept secret by the province

- KENYON WALLACE STAFF REPORTER

Ontario driving instructor­s have been stripped of their licences due to inappropri­ate — and in some cases illegal — activity, including selling alcohol and contraband cigarettes to students, visiting a strip club during an in-vehicle lesson and selling driver education certificat­es to students.

But the Ministry of Transporta­tion says the public, including novice drivers and their parents, has no right to know who these instructor­s are. Roughly 300 have lost their licence in the past three years.

The policy of keeping the names of these driving instructor­s secret contrasts sharply with standards for other provincial­ly licensed profession­s, including doctors, dentists and teachers. The governing bodies for these and other profession­s publish the names of those whose licences have been revoked.

The Star is seeking the names of driving instructor­s who have had their teaching licences revoked in the past three years in an effort to determine if any are still getting behind the wheel with beginner drivers.

“I would not want my daughter in that vehicle,” said Anne Marie Hayes, president of Teens Learn to Drive, a non-profit organizati­on with the goal of reducing traffic accidents, commenting on the reasons drivers lost their licences.

“As a parent, I would be very upset to learn that my daughter’s instructor had this kind of a history.”

ANNE MARIE HAYES PRESIDENT OF TEENS LEARN TO DRIVE

“Parents put a great deal of trust in driving instructor­s and, as a parent, I would be very upset to learn that my daughter’s instructor had this kind of a history,” Hayes said.

The Star asked the Ministry of Transporta­tion for the names of these instructor­s last year as part of an ongoing probe by the Star of GTA driving schools.

The ministry refused, so the Star appealed to the Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er of Ontario on the grounds that the release of the names concerns public safety.

A Star investigat­ion last year exposed dozens of unlicensed driving schools in the GTA offering in-car lessons to beginner G1drivers.

The probe highlighte­d the fact that the ministry does not monitor driving schools it does not licence, thereby allowing unlicensed schools to operate without oversight.

In its arguments submitted to the commission­er this month, the ministry revealed for the first time examples of the reasons driving instructor­s had their licences revoked. These include:

Selling driver education certificat­es to students;

Using sexist and obscene language with students;

Selling alcohol and contraband cigarettes to students;

Visiting a strip club during an invehicle lesson;

Issuing certificat­ion to students who had not completed a course;

Taking money from students who had completed courses and not issuing certificat­ion to these students.

But the ministry goes on to say that the names of these instructor­s should not be made public because the informatio­n is of a “personal nature.” “Disclosure of the informatio­n would be an unjustifie­d invasion of personal privacy,” writes ministry lawyer Todd Milton in the government’s submission. “The fact of the revocation is in itself highly sensitive and may unfairly harm the reputation­s of at least some of the third parties.” Milton goes on to say that the health and safety aspect of the Star’s request “should be accorded little weight in this case.” When asked how his ministry could justify keeping the names of these instructor­s secret, Transporta­tion Minister Glen Murray did not respond. Instead, ministry spokesman Bob Nichols was assigned to handle the Star’s questions. In an email Nichols said the minister and the ministry “take very seriously both the public’s right to know and an individual’s right to privacy.” Nichols refused to say whether the ministry reports illegal activity, such as selling contraband cigarettes or selling driver education certificat­es, to police. “The ministry takes action as soon as possible based on its own authority instead of waiting to respond to the results of criminal investigat­ions and potential court proceeding­s,” he wrote. The province’s submission to the Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er reveals that, in the past 18 months, six revocation­s were made under the “fit and proper” criterion, which states that the ministry may revoke a driving instructor licence if “the licensee is not a fit and proper person to be a driving instructor, having regard to his or her character, integrity and past conduct.” Thirty-nine licences were revoked due to conviction­s under criminal statutes or the Highway Traffic Act, including those revoked under the “fit and proper” criterion. A further 50 instructor licences were revoked due to driver licence cancellati­ons, 123 were revoked for accumulate­d demerit points and 86 were revoked due to driver licence suspension­s or cancellati­ons arising from medical issues and unpaid fines, among other things. Under Ontario’s graduated licensing system, new drivers first get a G1 licence by passing a written test. After a year, new drivers can take a road test to graduate to a G2 licence (this time period is shortened to eight months if new drivers take lessons from a ministry-approved school). After another 12 months, G2 drivers can take another road test to obtain their full G licence. Students who complete the ministry-approved beginner driver education course can obtain a discount on their car insurance. The ministry does publish online the names of provincial­ly monitored driving schools that have had their licences revoked, but refuses to make the reasons for the revocation­s public. The province does not publish a list of individual licensed driving in- structors.

“If an instructor circumvent­s the rules, puts others at risk, or engages any illicit activity, they need to be identified and prohibited from instructin­g drivers,” said MPP Jeff Yurek, transporta­tion critic for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

“There are a variety of different licensed profession­als that operate in this province.

“For most of these profession­s, online databases are maintained that allow the public to verify the status of licences.

“I don’t understand why such a simple solution eludes the Ministry of Transporta­tion.”

Bill Pollock, one of a handful of master driving instructor­s in Ontario (meaning he is qualified to teach other instructor­s), said he was “shocked” to learn what some driving instructor­s had been caught doing and said the ministry has no defence in choosing not to release these instructor­s’ names.

Like Yurek, Pollock said driving instructor­s should be treated like other provincial­ly licensed profession­s, such as doctors and teachers.

“Anybody should be able to go on the MTO’s website, and access a database that can tell them whether an instructor is in good standing or not,” he said, adding that unless the ministry makes the names public, beginner drivers have no way of knowing if instructor­s who have lost their licences are still teaching.

The Star has until the beginning of May to make its submission arguing for the release of the names to the Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er. Kenyon Wallace can be reached at 416-869-4734.

 ??  ?? Anne Marie Hayes would not want her child to be in a car with an instructor whose licence was revoked.
Anne Marie Hayes would not want her child to be in a car with an instructor whose licence was revoked.

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