Auto body shop scams could be hiking insurance costs, says industry expert - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:31 AM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Auto body shop scams could be hiking insurance costs, says industry expert

Aviva Insurance found evidence of auto body shops scamming insurance providers in Ontario and cab driver George Murphy thinks he's found evidence of it happening in Newfoundland.

George Murphy says his insurance company was charged $1,143 for a $350 job

A St. John's cab company manager says he's found evidence of auto body shops invoicing insurance companies for much more than they'd charge consumers. (Sarah Smellie/CBC)

A recent investigation by anational insurancecompany showed consumers in Ontario could be footing the bill for auto body scams, and a St. John's cab company managersays he's found evidence of the scamsin Newfoundland and Labrador.

"I suspect that consumers out there don't know about this," he said.

"There's consumers in this province, particularly for automobile, that have seen [insurance] increases of about 13 per cent this year, and that's outside the taxi industry."

Taxi drivers continuing loss for insurers unless changes made, report says

While doing a bit of digging, George Murphy got a list of all the claims that had ever been filed on his insurance policy. On that list was a charge of $1,143 for "glass breakage," he told theSt. John's Morning Show.

George Murphy is the business manager of Jiffy Cabs in St. John's. (CBC)

The only glass breakage he could recallwasa windshield replacement for his wife's car.

He phoned around to ask auto body shops how much a windshield replacement would normally cost, he said, and on average, they told him it'd be about $350.

"Huge difference," he said.

"When we go to get our windshields replaced, we never see that. We pay our $100 deductible and we go off on our merry, happy way."

Shops caught on video doing damage

Gordon Rasbach,vice-president of fraud management at Aviva Canada, wasn't surprised by Murphy's findings.In early March, Aviva released the results of an investigation in which Aviva purchased 10 cars, roughed them up and then sent them to auto body shops in Ontario to be fixed.

When investigators compared the costs of the actual repairs needed with what the shops invoiced the insurance company, they found a large discrepancy: total estimates of the damageswere around $30,000, but repair shops invoiced Aviva for double that amount, he said.

Aviva Canada found that nine out of the 10 auto body shops they investigated filed fraudulent claims. (Shutterstock / Jamesboy Nuchaiko)

"We found that in 90 per cent of the causes there was deliberate fraud," he said.

Some shops would replace parts with used pieces, but claim they'd used new ones, and some would invoice for work that was never done, he said.

"In some instances we caught on video the body shops doing additional deliberate damage [to the cars]," he said.

"What happened didn't shock me, [but] the extent of which it happened I have to admit, it startled me."

Systemic issue

The practice extends well beyond Ontario, said Dan Service,national director of investigative services for the Insurance Bureau of Canada, and the costs definitely come out of consumers' pockets.

"It ends up in higher insurance premiums for everyone," he said.

It also extends beyond cars. Many types of insurance, from health care to property insurance, aresusceptibletoscams and overcharging, he said.

Dan Service is the director of investigative services with the Insurance Bureau Of Canada. (CBC)

Andthere's no quickfix for it, either, he said. Insurance companies have to put their own money into investigating a claim it suspects to be fraudulent, and those investigations delay coverage for customers, he said.

"If they have to choose between looking at a claim that might be somewhat suspect and making sure that their customers are taken care of, they often will choose the second course of action."

Consumers can help by keeping an eye on the claims made to their insurance companies.

"The more that people are aware that this type of behaviour happens, the more attention they pay to the bills that are submitted on their behalf, the less opportunity there is for this type of fraud to be undertaken," Service said.