By Bob Groeneveld
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You鈥檝e got to have insurance if you want to drive.
That鈥檚 not just here in BC where ICBC rules the roost, but throughout Canada and in practically every country throughout the world.
The British were the first to recognize the need for it, instituting a mandatory insurance requirement in 1930鈥 after more than 10 years of roadway mayhem.
At the turn of the 20th Century, cars like the smokin鈥 hot Stanley Steamer were rolling along fast enough to do appreciable damage to anyone who got in the way鈥 but it was pretty hard to get in the way of a speeding driver, since there weren鈥檛 more than a handful in any given town.
By the time the First World War rolled around, cars were capturing imaginations. The local Mercedes owner 鈥 if there was one in town 鈥 could crank it up to an impressive 100 kilometres per hour.
In the decade after WWI, manufacturers like Dusenberg made it possible for anyone with a wad of cash and a taste for speed to drive a car that could sneak up on 200 km/h鈥 and irresponsible motoring habits exploded.
Authorities reacted by invoking speed restrictions, which motorists deemed unfair and consequently often ignored, unless there was a police officer immediately available to witness the infraction鈥 or they actually ran someone over.
Believe it or not, some drivers continue to exceed posted speed limits even today, and still offer the excuse that it is not fair to be restricted unless there is a police officer immediately available to witness the infraction鈥 or they actually run someone over.
From the beginning, the hazards of crossing intersections at formidable speeds was recognized, and in a number of jurisdictions, drivers were required to stop, step out in front of the vehicle, and look both ways for pedestrians or other 鈥渢raffic鈥, before crossing any intersection.
And some drivers today are upset about intersection cameras! Of course, we wouldn鈥檛 need them today if we still required having a passenger lead us through every intersection on foot鈥 which I suppose, would fix the intersection speeding problem as well as ensuring visibility of competing traffic.
Of course, irresponsible drivers then, as now, ignored the rules鈥 or whined bitterly about how unfair they were.
Recent whining has been over intersection cameras used to penalize drivers who refuse to send a passenger out into the street ahead of them to check for cross traffic.
Now they鈥檙e whining that ICBC is changing the rules so you鈥檒l have to list all the drivers who may be using your car 鈥 and consequently your insurance policy. If your list includes bad drivers, your insurance rates will go up鈥 and the rest of us won鈥檛 be subsidizing your free-loading son/daughter/buddy/whatever quite so much anymore.
It feels like a swing back towards Premier Davey Barrett鈥檚 original vision for ICBC when he established it in 1973, and away from Premier Christy Clark鈥檚 2010 changes that sent it down a road to destruction.