Taxi companies
brace for rough ride on insurance rates
Taxi companies and
their drivers in the province [Newfoundland and Labrador] are bracing
for a second big increase in insurance premiums in as many years.
At least one St.
John's business says it's been notified that an application for a 50
per cent increase in insurance premiums is before the Public
Utilities Board.
That would be on top
of a similar 50 per cent increase approved by the PUB last year.
Up until then, there
had not been an increase in liability rates since the mid-1990s.
Still, cab companies
say the double-whammy in back to back years is too much to bear.
"It's
understandable ... that things go up and things have to change,"
said Doug McCarthy, general manager of Co-Op Taxi and a member of the
St. John's Taxi Committee. "But it's got to stop some place. At
this rate, they're going to drive taxis out of business."
McCarthy says he
understands rates are set to cover Facility's expenses, which begs
the question why they want such a large increase now.
"Because in
talking to other companies, they haven't seen an overall increase in
the amount of accidents that are occurring where taxis are at fault,"
he said. "I know with our company, we haven't had an at-fault
accident in at least two years, if not three."
McCarthy also
dismissed the idea that older vehicles are creating greater risk and
liabilities.
"Most of the
taxis out there are all well within the 10-year life cycle. Most cars
on the road now are 2006, 2007 to 2009. And we have several 2013s and
2012s. So it's not the age of the fleet. So, why the second increase
in two years? I don't know." ... More.
___________________
What is that makes
governments so reluctant to curtail insurance rates? It's not as if
we're talking 'invisible hand' markets here. Ontario makes auto
insurance a mandatory provision for licencing a car, and so it is not
a take-or-leave-it proposition. Moreover, insurers in Ontario retain
$0.61 cents on every dollar paid out in claims. So why are Greg Sousa
(Minister of Finance for Ontario), and others, so reluctant to tackle
insurance companies beyond lip service?
It is a question
that remains open, even if consumers are bleeding money.
It is also a display
of remarkable gutlessness!!
Source:
http://gerry-stopthebull.blogspot.ca/2014/04/a-50-increase-in-insurance-for-taxi.html
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