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Wow, ICBC considers less than 15 years of driving experience as "inexperienced". |
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And seniors need to be tested further on their ability to drive. I see just as many decrepit old people doing stupid shit on the road as I do N drivers. If a pilot has to retire at 65 to keep flyers safe, i think it's totally reasonable to expect someone who wants to pilot 4000lbs of metal around pedestrians to be able to pass a second road test. Also they really need to look at some sort of solution for people who insure two vehicles who are the primary (and only) operator of both vehicles. To me the discount on a second insured vehicle should be enormous. Right now I am insuring two cars for 6 months of the year, only to drive my FX like 5 times a month, and yet I pay full insurance on it. Thats retarded, I should get a discount based on the fact that I clearly cannot drive both my insured cars at the same time. |
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https://www.icbc.com/autoplan/costs/Documents/crs.pdf |
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- Acceleration/deceleration/speed - km driven - Time of day driving takes place It doesn't quantify: - Whether or not the driver is distracted - Whether or not the driver is impaired - Whether or not the driver is driving too fast for conditions - Whether or not the driver is following too close - Whether or not the driver is obeying traffic signals/signs - Whether or not the driver is obeying traffic laws So if it doesn't actually quantify useful data that accounts for the majority of crashes, how does it make things any better? |
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The proposed system would've had anyone at -15 or lower increase to -9 with a single at-fault claim. It punished drivers with good records far more than drivers with poor records. https://www.icbc.com/about-icbc/news...t-premiums.pdf It was due to take effect May 6, 2018, but the NDP scrapped it. |
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This is what it was suppose to be until they scrapped it for this new program. https://www.icbc.com/about-icbc/news...pdf#search=crs EDIT: oops, left the screen on too long and someone already posted. haha |
I've said it before, but if they want to have competent skilled drivers, you need to impose mandatory re-certification / driving exams every 2 years or so, regardless of age. It'll help generate revenue but also keep the shitty drivers off the street. |
IMO wage, distance to commute, and record should play a part. A person who makes $12 an hour and has to drive 60km to get to that job shouldn't be paying a ridiculous amount of money because of what opportunities were (or in this case weren't) afforded to them, given that they have a good record. A person who drives less than 15km to work with a so-so record should be paying substantially more, more accidents per kilometer driven. |
i have 20 years of driving experience, nothing at fault, i still pay about $1900/yr.. insurance rates have a lot to do with where you live. you can't get a $900 insurance rate like that guy in whistler living here in vancouver, unless you have just basic insurance with no collision/comprehensive. |
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not only that but it's not hard to get a min wage job, there's absolutely no reason to drive more than a few km to find one. |
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they're also still planning the general rate hike next budget as well, damn commy insurance |
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-Dave |
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It's all about risk management, some people are more risky then others so how do you judge who's more of a risk? IMO the only thing that's relevant is how long have been driving, how many accidents, distance to work and tickets should be factored in there as well. Those are the only fair metrics you can use that fairly judges where someones insurance rate should be. It's not perfect, but I can't think of any other way that would be more efficient or fair. |
so pretty much people who drive safe and don't live in lower mainland will pay less lol |
What's "at fault"? Is 50/50 at fault? Is 1/99 at fault? This indirectly discourages driving in the cities, as you automatically have way higher chance to get into an at-fault accident given the density compared to rural. Higher chance to be arbitrarily assigned partially at fault. Just another tax on driving in Vancouver, albeit targeted. |
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Anyone know how the reimbursement works if you insure a car for a year. Then un-insure it a few months later cause it's a summer car. Do you just get the prorated days back? |
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Odometers with too few digits just roll over again... like my Mustang is at 9,000 miles right now... but it's actually 109,000 because it got to 99,999 and it went back to 0 again hahaha... kind of amusing actually |
I meant the digital ones, I think it's the Matrix and Corolla that can top out at 3xx km. |
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