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Posts: 13421
Warnings:  (20%)
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:32 am
crystalsm wrote: Mine should go down some more when I'm eligible for all the discounts. I think the first couple payments were $210 or somewhere around there. That's the key. When my friends and I were young we drove on our parents insurance until our 40% discount kicked in. Now I think they actually make you have your own insurance for four years. Or is that wrong?
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Posts: 13421
Warnings:  (20%)
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:38 am
Assuming that 0 is the best insurance rating you can have, and I have roadstar in BC. I would pay nearly identical premiums in sask. 91 bucks.
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Posts: 2259
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:39 am
I'm honestly not totally sure how it works now. I'm pretty sure you get a discount after x numbers of years of safe driving, and also when you turn a certain age. I could be wrong though.
After using that calculator and putting in 0 as the safety rating, my quote went up to 97.32 though it could be with all discounts included, as lily mentioned.
Unselfish and noble actions are the most radiant pages in the biography of souls. - David Thomas
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Posts: 4265
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:41 am
lily wrote: crystalsm wrote: Mine should go down some more when I'm eligible for all the discounts. I think the first couple payments were $210 or somewhere around there. I'm guessing the number Robair quoted for you included the maximum discounts. My bad, using 0 she would pay $96.88. Ain't "no fault" insurance grand? lily wrote: I used "0" as the safety thing, assuming that's the best one, and I got a lower number too... however, I live in the lower mainland, so I'm already paying more than some other areas in the province. Also, that calculator didn't take usage of the vehicle into account, other than whether it was to be used on a farm. That's because other than that, it don't matter. It's been a long time, but I know I never answered questions like "will you be driving this to work?"
"we've got a struggling livestock sector out there that needs a lot more barley in the ground, not less, to try and bring the price down." —Gerry Ritz
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Posts: 13421
Warnings:  (20%)
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:43 am
Actually I was wrong, I tried it again and put in 13 for safety rating and my premiums would have been even lower. 70 bucks. Damn ICBC is ripping us off.
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Posts: 4265
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:46 am
crystalsm wrote: After using that calculator and putting in 0 as the safety rating, my quote went up to 97.32 though it could be with all discounts included, as lily mentioned. That's what you pay if you move to SK with zero history. That is also what you pay if you are a brand new, 16 year old driver. I'm trying to open your eyes residents of BC! 
"we've got a struggling livestock sector out there that needs a lot more barley in the ground, not less, to try and bring the price down." —Gerry Ritz
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Posts: 8636
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:55 am
$1,200 and change for a year. Two cars, a truck and a boat.
Alberta, in the sticks rate. The nice break came from having the house and contents with the same company.
The cake is a lie.
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Posts: 13421
Warnings:  (20%)
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 7:57 am
SprCForr wrote: $1,200 and change for a year. Two cars, a truck and a boat.
Alberta, in the sticks rate. The nice break came from having the house and contents with the same company. Damn, I think I will move back there.
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Posts: 2259
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 8:00 am
Robair wrote: crystalsm wrote: After using that calculator and putting in 0 as the safety rating, my quote went up to 97.32 though it could be with all discounts included, as lily mentioned. That's what you pay if you move to SK with zero history. That is also what you pay if you are a brand new, 16 year old driver. I'm trying to open your eyes residents of BC!  haha, well it's too bad I won't be moving to Sask. anytime in the foreseeable future. Wish I could get your rates though.
Unselfish and noble actions are the most radiant pages in the biography of souls. - David Thomas
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Posts: 4265
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 8:08 am
(I live in BC right now, so they aren't MY rates, they just used to be.  ) Tell your MP. I've certainly let mine know what I think of ICBC. Bunch of crooks.
"we've got a struggling livestock sector out there that needs a lot more barley in the ground, not less, to try and bring the price down." —Gerry Ritz
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Posts: 4265
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 12:32 pm
Here's why I think the ICBC system is retarded. I'll start by comparing it with two opposite systems that I've had experience with; Saskatchewan which is 100% government run and not for profit, and Alberta which is 100% private companies competing.
In SK, as stated, SGI is entirely not for profit. On top of that, they have a kind of "no fault" claims system that cuts lawyers out completely. This means the only cost is administrative and makes for some low premiums.
In Alberta, it's wide open. Private companies compete and drive each other's prices down. This system also works very well. You can buy from a million different packages from about as many companies so you never end up paying for extra insurance that you don't want, and you can shop around for the lowest price.
BC has, as far as I can tell, taken the WORST of both systems and combined them. Like SK, you are stuck with one plan, you can't shop around, ICBC gets a monopoly, you HAVE to buy from them. But unlike SGI, ICBC turns a profit. Just like any private company in Alberta, ICBC competes on the open market with sellers of additional coverage. This means they can jack up the price of their basic coverage as hight as they like to supplement their other products and make them more 'compedative'.
Why not? You can't legally buy from anybody else.
The government makes you buy from one company, and that company is allowed to turn a profit. That is so retarded it boggles my mind. Somebody correct me if I'm missing something. Please.
They either need to go the direction of SK or Alberta (two opposites that work very well) but this halfway in between crap is not working. Not to the consumers benifiet anyway.
This should be a BC election issue. A fairly big one.
"we've got a struggling livestock sector out there that needs a lot more barley in the ground, not less, to try and bring the price down." —Gerry Ritz
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Posts: 2743
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2008 12:37 pm
Robair wrote: Canadaka wrote: That does suck about your previous driving record not having an effect, but I think thats a common things in any province and if you were to move to any country. I've lived in SK, AB and Kentucky. First time I've had to prove a record of uninterrupted insurance. It's retarded. If you don't own a vehicle for a month you're back to square one?? Am I the only person in BC who has ever taken a job with a company vehicle supplied? They say a letter from the company I was working for would suffice, that would be great if the company still existed. Fuck me. I'm pretty much making a car payment every month in insurance alone. That sucks huge.
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QBall
Forum Junkie
Posts: 613
Posted: Fri Sep 19, 2008 1:45 pm
As someone who has sold auto insurance in Ontario and currently sells it in BC I have a somewhat unique experience in both a government run system and a total private system. I have to say the government run system is far better for the consumer and here's why:
1. First off, to try and comparte rates between two different jurisdictions is ludicrous at best. Saskatchewan, Alberta and B.C. do not have the same population, population density, geography, climate, legislation regarding insurance or crime rates; 2. With ICBC vehicle registration, vehicle licensing and insurance are all done at the brokers office. In Ontario (I'm assuming it's the same in Alberta) vehicle insurance and licensing/registration are done at two different loactions. This is a bigger hassle for the consumer as everyone is going to two or three different locations to renew their plate which results in large line ups, as opposed to many dozens of locations. Also the consumer can establish a relationshipn with their broker and receive information and service personal to them. I doubt you could say the same at a Ministry of Transportation office. The consumer is also free to renew their ICBC insurance at ANY Autoplan broker in the province; 3. Being a crown corporation they have a higher social responsibility to pay claims. Private insurers have no such calling. I have seen private insurers deny claims for the stupidest of reasons. Since ICBC answers directly the government through the BC Utilities Commission they are under greater scrutiny not to screw around. This does not mean that ICBC will pay claims that they are not legally required to. Hence in Tarektioban's case ICBC is not required to pay his claim since he is operating a vehicle illegally (you cannot transfer a plate to a vehicle you just purchased unless the vehicle the plate came from has been sold, even then you only have 10 days); 4. Because ICBC answers to government, they cannot instill rules which go against the greater good. In Onatrio insurers can charge higher rates for drivers under 25 and for unmarried males under 25. ICBC cannot use age, gender or marital status to determine rates; 5. Since vehicle insurance and licensing/registration are done at the same location it is easier to determine whether valid insurance exists prior to licensing a vehicle. In Ontario one purchases insurance, and then takes their proof of insurance (usually in the form of the pink liability card) to the ministry of transportation, who then issues/renews a plate based on this information. This leads to many, many cases of fraud where someone will go into a broker's office to buy insurance, go on a monthly pay plan, gets the liablity card and goes down to renew a plate, and then doesn't pay the remaining installment allowing their insurance to be cancelled. The worker at the ministry, the police or the public in general have no way to tell the insurance has been cancelled. Then when it's time to renew they do the same crap with another company. In BC if you miss a payment, your insurance stays valid but you go off the payment plan and you end up owing the balance. When you try and renew the plate the agent sees that you owe for the previous policy term and you must pay that off that balance before renewing the plate (plus you cannot go back on the payment plan for two years). If you try and drive after the policy has expired everyone, including the police, will instantly know this since the decal on the rear licence plate indicates the day the the vehicle licensing AND insurance expire (they both end on the same day). This is why in Ontario it is estimated that 15-20% of the vehicles on the road are uninsured. In BC that figure is 1%. 6. ICBC does not figure in a profit loading when determining rates, unlike private auto insurers. If ICBC does make a profit they will either save the money as a reserve to protect future catastrophic claims (thereby protecting rates from spikes in really bad years) or they will send rebate cheques to drivers with good records like they did in 1998 ($47 million rebated), 2000 ($218 million rebated) and 2005 ($100 million rebated). I doubt Onatrio, Alberta or anywhere with a 100% private setup can claim the same;
I would write more but my hand is literally cramping up. Need a break.
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Posts: 1293
Posted: Fri Sep 19, 2008 9:26 pm
The biggest problem I've had with ICBC was the private agents who sell it. Twice I discovered they'd put my truck in a different 'rate class', So they could earn a couple bucks more commission! and I had to go back an get it corrected. Saving a couple hundred bucks each time, but of course no refund for the time I'd been ripped off.
Once we ere on the scene of an accident up-country and the cops asked us to ferry the lightly injured to the hospital. A couple weeks later ICBC called and told us they had a Good Samaritan Program and the cops told them about us. They sent us a claim to get our car professionally cleaned inside and some bloodied sleeping bags and blankets laundered.
Dave Barrett: because of ICBC a lot of us didn't have to choose between car insurance or tuition. We know how that choice turns out when you're a 20 yr old male!
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Posts: 4265
Posted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 4:47 pm
Online petition calling for competition in BC.
"we've got a struggling livestock sector out there that needs a lot more barley in the ground, not less, to try and bring the price down." —Gerry Ritz
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