'Heard the concerns': Auto insurance rates to be reviewed by PUB, Service NL - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:14 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

'Heard the concerns': Auto insurance rates to be reviewed by PUB, Service NL

Rate relief? The Public Utilities Board and Service NL are reviewing the automobile insurance industry.

'Claims costs and insurance rates have increased steadily since the last review in 2005'

Service NL Minister Perry Trimper says the government there has been a lot of frustration when it comes to rising costs of insurance. (CBC)

The Public Utilities Board (PUB) and Service NL will be part of a review of the auto insurance industry in Newfoundland and Labrador, as the provincial government responds to complaints from drivers.

"There has been a lot of frustration with the escalating costs,"Service NL Minister PerryTrimpertold CBC Radio's On the Go.

"There's no question, when you start sticking out as much as we are right now in Atlantic Canadaand we're just behind the worst situation in Canada, which is in Ontariothat's something we want to address."

What are the factors that are driving up our rates to the point where it is driving us out of business?- Doug McCarthy, Jiffy Cabs

In a press release Tuesday morning, Trimper said the costs of claims and insurance rates have increased steadily since the previous review in 2005 and that drivers are finding it difficult to cope.

"We have heard the concerns of consumers and stakeholders who are finding it difficult to deal with the rising cost of insurance," Trimper stated in the release.

The PUB review will investigate "costs in the system, the product itself and the rate setting mechanisms" by looking at data from closed insurance claims, according to the release.

Higher claim costs and insurance rates that taxi operators have faced over the past several years will also be examined.

Rates not affordable

Doug McCarthy, a driver with Jiffy Cabs, said the review is overdue.

"Finally we are going to sit down, through public consultations and reviews to determine just what it is that is driving up the insurance for taxis," he said.

Taxi driver Doug McCarthy says if insurance rates keep increasing, no one will be able to afford commercial insurance. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

"Is itthe amount of accidents we are having? Is it the claims pay out? Is it revolving around personal injury or property damage What are the factors that are driving up our rates to the point where it is driving us out of business?"

McCarthy said rural Newfoundland will be especially hit if rates continue to increase.With no options for public transportation, people rely on taxis to get to doctor'sappointmentsand the grocery store.

"If it gets to the point where taxi drivers can no longer afford to insure their vehicle, how are these people going to get around? Especially the seniors?" he said.

The PUB will hold public consultations, as will Service NL, with dates and times to be announced later.

Public consultations will be held by the PUB and Service NL to give people a chance to weigh in on the auto insurance system. (Getty Images)

A report and recommendations will be submitted to the Newfoundland and Labradorgovernment at the end of the process.

Any changes to the Automobile Insurance Act would be in place by the fall of 2018, according to the government.

Isolating bad drivers

Trimper said the review could result in reduced insurance rates and more accountability. He said the review should isolate drivers who are the source of a lotof claims.

"I don't believe that a normal consumer who's obeying the rules and driving safely should have to pay the same rates as someone who is not," he said.

McCarthy said the review should give government the tools needed to make sure thatinsurance is affordable for everyone in the province,

"At the end of their consultations and reviews, the government will have at their hands a definite idea of why the insurance rates are where they are," he said.

"If rates keep going the way they are, no one will be able to afford commercial insurance."

With files from On the Go and Nakshi Pandit