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Archive for category: Road Safety

You are here: Home / Personal Injury Blog / Road Safety

PERSONAL INJURY BLOG: Road Safety

Serious Accidents: Toronto Accident Law Firm

Road safety: Catastrophic automotive accidents can transform a person’s life in a matter of seconds.

Accidents, Car Accidents, Personal Injury News, Road Safety

Pedestrian Safety: Toronto Police Public Safety Portal

Pedestrians

View traffic related collisions data involving Pedestrians. These events include any serious or fatal collision where a Pedestrian is involved.


Definition: A pedestrian is a person not occupying a bicycle or motor vehicle and can be doing any of the following:

  • walking,
  • sitting,
  • lying,
  • standing,
  • working on a road or place, or
  • using a small wheeled device that provides personal mobility such as the following:
  • skateboard,
  • skates,
  • in-line skates,
  • scooter,
  • segway,
  • stroller,
  • wheelchair.

How to use Dashboards

Dashboards can be viewed using the following browsers: Microsoft Edge, Internet Explorer 11, Chrome desktop latest version, Safari Mac latest version, Firefox desktop latest version.

https://data.torontopolice.on.ca/pages/pedestrians

August 1, 2019/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/seriousinjury.jpg 400 900 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2019-08-01 11:15:242019-08-01 13:19:01Pedestrian Safety: Toronto Police Public Safety Portal
Accidents, Car Accidents, Insurance Law, Personal Injury News, Road Safety

Lawyer tries to overhaul civil jury process

Jeff Strype, Personal Injury and Medical Malpractice Lawyer, Toronto

Jeff Strype, Personal Injury and Medical Malpractice Lawyer, Toronto

A Toronto personal injury lawyer is not giving up his fight to reform the province’s civil jury process, despite a setback in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.

In Kapoor v. Kuzmanovski, Regional Senior Justice Peter Daley ruled against the plaintiff’s motion to either exclude anyone who pays car insurance premiums from the jury pool or give him the right to challenge them for cause.

But plaintiff’s counsel Jeff Strype has already applied for leave to appeal the decision to the Divisional Court, claiming drivers should be struck in these cases due to an inherent conflict of interest created by the risk large damage awards pose to their own premium levels.

He says he would like to see Ontario follow the lead of other jurisdictions, such as Quebec and the United Kingdom, where juries are no longer allowed in motor vehicle cases. In others, such as B.C., he says reforms such as a legislated right to challenge jury panel members for cause and expensive jury fees have helped level a playing field that otherwise seems tilted in favour of insurance companies.

“I think we have a serious problem; we’re the last bastion of the civil jury in the free world, with the possible exception of the U.S., where they have their own issues,” says Strype, the principal at Strype Injury Lawyers in Toronto. “I think I speak for the plaintiffs’ bar when I say that this has to be remedied. We need some more openness and transparency about how these triers of fact are arriving at their verdicts.”

Trying motor vehicle accident cases without a jury would also have the added benefit of saving time and courtroom space in an era of squeezed resources, according to Strype. As well as the problems caused by judicial shortages, he says, civil cases are more likely to be shunted as the knock-on effects are felt from the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in R. v. Jordan, which imposed strict deadlines on criminal cases heard in Superior Court.

“Jury cases take twice as long as judge-alone trials, so that could them free them up to do so much more work,” Strype says.

Read the whole article here: Law Times News Article 

December 4, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png 0 0 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-12-04 08:32:582018-12-04 08:32:58Lawyer tries to overhaul civil jury process
Accidents, Car Accidents, Road Safety

More must be done to dispel myths about driving high

By STAR EDITORIAL BOARD
Sun., Aug. 12, 2018

If governments and safety organizations across Canada needed a fire lit under their feet to boost public education around the dangers of driving while stoned on cannabis, Statistics Canada delivered it on Thursday.

A survey conducted by the government agency indicates an alarming number of cannabis users with a driver’s license are toking or ingesting it before getting behind the wheel.

Cannabis users think it’s OK to ingest cannabis and drive
Alarmingly, too many cannabis users think it’s OK to ingest cannabis and drive. Some even think the drug makes them a better driver.  (CARLOS OSORIO / TORONTO STAR)

Indeed, one in seven said they had driven at least once in the past three months within two hours of using the drug. By doing so they are endangering not just themselves but their passengers and other road users.

And these findings only add to the concerns raised by a Public Safety Canada study released last fall. It found 28 per cent of respondents had driven high. And, alarmingly, it found one in 10 thought cannabis made them “a better driver.” Research, of course, shows that cannabis negatively affects reaction time, decision making, motor skills, co-ordination, attention and judgment.

In fact, the percentage of Canadian drivers killed in vehicle crashes who test positive for drugs (40 per cent) exceeds the numbers who test positive for alcohol (33 per cent).

If so many people think they can get away with driving stoned now, what will happen when the recreational use of cannabis becomes legal on Oct. 17?

Legalization is the right move, but the results of these surveys are cause for concern on the issue of road safety.

October is a mere blink of an eye away compared to the time it takes for public education campaigns to influence behaviour. It has taken decades to make inroads on the problem of drinking and driving, and get the message to sink in that it’s dangerous and socially unacceptable. And even now it still happens.

Read whole article here.

September 11, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png 0 0 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-09-11 15:20:552018-09-11 15:20:55More must be done to dispel myths about driving high
Road Safety

Texting to a driver

Texting to a driver could be illegal— here’s why

Wednesday, June 13, 2018 @ 8:37 AM | By Nathan Baker

Lexis Advance® Quicklaw®

Case(s):

  1. v. R.(M.) 2011 ONCA 190
  2. v. Shilon [2006] O.J. No. 4896

 

In the Canadian criminal justice system, a person is guilty of criminal negligence if they do anything, or omit to do something that is their duty, that shows a wanton or reckless disregard for the lives or safety of other people. This is provided for in s. 219 of the Criminal Code. Criminal liability for negligence occurs where there is bodily harm or death caused to an individual (ss. 220-221 of the Code). While it is possible to convict someone for an attempted offence under this section, it is rarely seen as these matters often do not come to light until after the unfortunate injuries or death have already occurred.

In recent years, this section has been applied more and more often to individuals who are not the direct cause of the harm caused but indirectly linked, such as employers who knowingly allow their staff to enter into dangerous environments to work.

The question at law has been phrased as whether the action of the negligent person is a marked and substantial departure from the expected actions of a reasonable person. Juries often struggle with this concept and wonder, quite rightfully, what this reasonable person looks like.

In driving cases, is it the average driver they come across in their community? Is it the standard expected of drivers that most people fall short of? Or is it something lower like a minimally competent driver? Without knowing the starting point, it becomes difficult to determine what is marked and substantially different.

When considering an individual sending messages to a person driving, it is important to consider the knowledge of the individual sending the text. While the person receiving the text and engaging in the dangerous and blameworthy behaviour of texting and driving knows what they are doing and are adverting to some sort of risk, the sender is not in a similar mental state.

That being said, if the sender knows that the receiver is driving and thus at risk of distraction, then the door to guilt starts to open. Presuming that the receiver is not a person who would text and drive may or may not save a person from liability. Honest but mistaken belief in a set of facts can be a defence to this offence.

Thus, where an individual did not know that the person at the other end of the conversation was driving but honestly believed them to be acting safely would be saved by this sort of defence. However, a person who was wilfully blind to the circumstances leans closer to guilt. In R. v. R.(M.) 2011 ONCA 190, the Ontario Court of Appeal discussed party liability in the street racing context for a person acting as a “flagman” in a street race. In that case, the court found that the mental component for an individual charged as a party to a criminal negligence offence requires the party to do something to assist conduct that shows a wanton or reckless disregard for the lives or safety of other people.

As the court put it, there must be an “objective foresight of bodily harm” (para. 50). The court specifically denied the necessity of a subjective appreciation for the consequences. The party need only appreciate that they are aiding in the dangerous action to be guilty.

That being said, reasonable foreseeability of harm is still relevant in a case of this type. Whether the actions of a person in sending a text is objectively capable of creating a reasonable appreciation of bodily harm or death occurring will be very fact specific. The mere fact that a text was sent should not lead to criminal sanction, even if it is known that the other party is driving. The Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v. Shilon [2006] O.J. No. 4896, found that where actions of the other party, like a driver, intervene, then there may be a break in the chain of causation.

A different result may occur where someone engages in continuing distracting behaviour by texting a person, knowing that they are driving and that this affects their ability to safely operate their vehicle and could open the door to criminal prosecution. Since momentary inadvertence does not rise to the level of criminal negligence, the length, nature and involvement in the conversation will all be factors to be assessed. A detailed factual analysis will be needed should such a case come forward.

Finally, as cultural acceptance of texting while driving changes, so too will the determination of guilt. If current trends hold and texting while driving becomes increasingly frowned upon and fewer people engage in this risky activity, then the degree of departure from the normal person widens and increases the likelihood of criminal liability for actions involving texting while driving, both for the driver and the person engaging them in the conversation in the first place.

Nathan Baker is a criminal defence lawyer in Peterborough, Ont., and is a sole practitioner. He takes special interest in impaired driving cases, especially those involving drug impaired driving and impaired boating. E-mail him at [email protected].

June 13, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png 0 0 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-06-13 12:13:562018-06-13 12:15:10Texting to a driver
Road Safety

Do you know about the move over law?

Read more →
May 30, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png 0 0 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-05-30 09:03:482018-05-30 09:03:48Do you know about the move over law?
Accidents, Car Accidents, Personal Injury News, Road Safety

Road Conditions Toronto

Road conditions Toronto: Here are some useful links:

Toronto Traffic | 401 Road Conditions – Traffic Report – Global News

https://globalnews.ca/toronto/traffic/
Toronto Traffic reports & conditions, get the latest road condition and traffic road reports; Toronto Traffic on GlobalNews.ca.

Current Highway Conditions – The Weather Network

https://www.theweathernetwork.com/roads-and-travel/highway-condition/list

This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Privacy Policy Accept. °C. °F. km/h. mph. EN. Comments · Join Now. The Weather Network. Your weather when it really mattersTM. MENU. Home; Forecasts & Reports; Severe Weather; News; Maps & Roads; Gallery; TV …

‎Maps: Highway Forecast · ‎Traffic Cameras · ‎Rare piebald moose captured …

CP24 | Traffic – Information for Toronto and the GTA – CP24.com

https://www.cp24.com/commuter-centre/traffic

What’s on this page? Traffic News Streams from government and official sources; Travel Times; Information about driving in Toronto and Ontario; Check out more commuter coverage on CP24. Traffic Road Conditions. Travel Times; Current Restrictions; Future Restrictions; Emergency. Route, Current, Ideal, Delay. 404 NB.

Reported Road Conditions – Ministry of Transportation

www.mto.gov.on.ca › Home › Traveller’s Information
Oct 13, 2017 – Reported Road Conditions, previously called “Road Conditions”, are road and visibility conditions reported by the Ministry of Transportation’s maintenance contractors. These official reports are generated at minimum, five times a day. Reported Road Conditions identify the roadway as either “bare,” “partly …

Ontario 511 – Interactive Map – Ontario.ca

www.mto.gov.on.ca/english/traveller/trip/map.shtml
Oct 15, 2017 – Traveller’s Road Information Portal. … Text. Road Closures · Reported Road Conditions · Forecasted Driving Conditions · Construction Reports · Traffic Cameras · Traffic Reports · Carpool Lots · HOV Lanes. Related Links. Track My Plow · Smart Commute · City of Toronto RESCU Cameras · City of Ottawa …

Traveller’s Road Information Portal – Traffic Report – Toronto

www.mto.gov.on.ca › Home › Traveller’s Information › TRIP › Traffic Reports
Real-time traffic reports for Toronto Region in Ontario Canada.

Forecasted Driving Conditions – Ministry of Transportation

www.mto.gov.on.ca › Home › Traveller’s Information
Oct 13, 2017 – New this 2017-18 winter season is 511’s pilot project to include a layer showing “Forecasted Driving Conditions.” Forecasted Driving Conditions are based on weather forecasts and are independent of reported road conditions. Forecasted Driving Conditions are identified as “good”, “fair” or “poor” based on …

CTV Toronto | Traffic – 401, 404, DVP, QEW, 403 Highway Traffic Reports

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/traffic
CTV Toronto – Traffic reports for Toronto and the GTA. Travel times, traffic delays and traffic news – CTV Toronto.

Toronto Traffic Update – 680 News

www.680news.com/traffic/
Latest Toronto and GTA traffic updates on 680 News.

Toronto Live Traffic Map | CBC Toronto – CBC.ca

www.cbc.ca/toronto/features/traffic/

CBC Toronto Traffic. Share your observations – call 416-205-5840 when you are not operating a motor vehicle and it is safe to do so. Toronto Traffic Resources. Live traffic map with cameras and road speeds. Live construction map. List of planned construction areas. TTC delays and disruptions external site. GO Transit …

Road and Weather Conditions – Transportation and Engineering

https://www.simcoe.ca/dpt/trs/conditions
​For information about road conditions and emergency closures in Simcoe County, please visit the links below. Simcoe Region Traffic Report Contains information on collisions, breakdowns, emergency road works, and scheduled maintenance and construction events on provincially maintained highways. Central Ontario …

The Blue Mountains, Ontario, Canada – Weather & Road Reports

www.thebluemountains.ca/weather-roads.cfm
The Blue Mountains will be a progressive four season community, building on its agricultural and recreational features, offering a healthy and supportive lifestyle to a diverse range of residents, businesses and visitors.

Road Conditions Report – 97.7 The Beach

www.977thebeach.ca/roadconditions.php
Traffic and Road Conditions. Check this page for current road conditions (below). Help us bring you the most up-to-date information possible – become a Bayshore Broadcasting NEWS WATCHER! If you run into poor road conditions, pull over and give us a call to tell us where you are and what you’re encountering.

LIVE: Parry Sound traffic and road conditions | ParrySound.com

https://www.parrysound.com/…/6156387-live-parry-sound-traffic-and-road-condition…
PARRY SOUND — Use the tools on the map below to zoom in on the area of Parry Sound where you will be driving to see details of current road closures, slow-downs, etc.

LIVE: Traffic and road conditions in Simcoe County | Simcoe.com

https://www.simcoe.com › Whatson › Explore
POPULAR NEWS SITES; DurhamRegion.com · InsideToronto.com · NorthumberlandNews.com · ParrySound.com · TheSpec.com · WaterlooChronicle.ca. RESOURCES & AFFILIATES; Goldbook · Insurance Hotline · Lease Busters · Metroland Media · Metro News · Metroland Store · Toronto.com · Toronto Star · Tradyo.com …

Road Restrictions – City of Toronto

https://www.toronto.ca › … › Road Restrictions & Closures
433 records – Use this map and list to find better travel routes around the City and avoid disruptions. All information is subject to chang.

Driving Weather for Toronto, Canada from AccuWeather

https://www.accuweather.com/en/ca/toronto/m5j/driving-weather/55488
Excellent; for driving. Precip: 5%; Hours of Precip: 0; Rain: 0 mm. } Day Details · Tomorrow. Feb 14. 3° Hi. Plenty of sunshine. Good; for driving. Precip: 25%; Hours of Precip: 0; Rain: 0 mm. } Day Details · Looking Ahead. Icy conditions Friday morning. 3AM-8AM; 9AM-2PM; 3PM-8PM; 9PM-2AM; Hourly Forecast.

More snow overnight in GTA creates slick road conditions | National Post

nationalpost.com/pmn/news…/more-snow-overnight-in-gta-creates-slick-road-conditions

Dec 12, 2017 – TORONTO — Many drivers in southern Ontario can expect a slow and slippery drive to work this morning thanks to a fresh dusting of snow.It began to fall Monday and Environment Canada says some areas received eight to 10 centimetres of snow as of 4 a.m..

LIVE: Halton Region traffic and road conditions | InsideHalton.com

https://www.insidehalton.com/…/6438065-live-halton-region-traffic-and-road-conditi…
Dec 25, 2017 – HALTON REGION — Use the tools on the map below to zoom in on the area of the GTA where you will be driving to see details of current road closures, slow-downs, etc. * Note – if you cannot view…

Road Conditions | Bruce County Welcomes You – County of Bruce

https://brucecounty.on.ca/road-conditions
The Bruce County Road Conditions are updated periodically each day through the winter months and as weather warrants. Conditions may vary greatly within any patrol area of the County due to weather patterns. This information is provided as a public service and therefore drivers are encouraged to use care and caution …

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February 13, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/icy-roads-toronto.jpg 358 620 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-02-13 11:52:142018-02-13 11:56:23Road Conditions Toronto
Accident Benefits & Tort, Car Accidents, Road Safety

Motor Vehicle Accidents on Slippery Roads

Ice and Snow on Municipal Highways

If you or a family member has been hurt in a motor vehicle accident while driving on slippery roads, it is important to contact a skilled personal injury lawyer.

Motor vehicle accidents resulting from ice and snow on the roadway can become extremely serious when there are a number of vehicles involved. With each vehicle that is added to the pile-up, the potential for more and more serious injuries increases.

At Strype Injury Law, we’ve guided clients through more than 250 personal injury trials, helping them navigate a wide range of challenges. Compared to motor vehicle accidents on city streets or residential areas, highway accidents in Ontario can have a more devastating impact, both physically and emotionally, due to the higher speeds of the vehicles involved.

If you or a loved one has been injured in an accident caused by the negligence of other drivers or road crews, it is important to contact a skilled Toronto injury lawyer immediately.

AFTER MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENTS, THE CLOCK BEGINS TICKING RIGHT AWAY

After an accident, you will need to file a report and request accident benefits within 30 days of the accident. If you are a family member of an accident victim who is still hospitalized, it is important to talk to one of our Toronto-based car accident lawyers as soon as possible in order to meet important deadlines.

Any time there is a dramatic speed change, there is a better chance for the driver to suffer significant injury. Even a lower-speed accident can have severe consequences. A head-on collision can be among the most deadly types of accidents possible.

An accident on a highway may require a police investigation and a full engineering investigation to determine all the people and organizations who should be involved in the suit. Typically, road conditions are significant in contributing to the seriousness of the accident.

Contributing conditions could include the following:

  • Improper road maintenance
  • Improper removal of snow
  • Items fallen off vehicles that have not been cleared from road
  • Breakdown of roads
  • Damage from snow and frost
  • Potholes that cause can cause a driver to bump steering and blow tires

Any of these conditions could cause a driver to lose control of his or her vehicle and cause a serious accident. The municipality has a duty to keep roadways clear, clean and safe for drivers. When that duty is not met, it can lead to potentially devastating car accidents.

When motor vehicle accidents are caused by slippery conditions, the municipality might have a difficult time defending its actions and schedule. It must keep detailed records of what mixture was used, what tonnage was dispersed, what the weather conditions were and what it did to keep the highways safe. In these situations, it is wise to retain an experienced accident lawyer.

February 2, 2018/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/badroads.jpg 400 900 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2018-02-02 10:10:552018-02-02 10:10:55Motor Vehicle Accidents on Slippery Roads
Accidents, Car Accidents, Personal Injury News, Road Safety

Temperature drop brings 63 collisions in the GTA

Toronto police responded to 63 collisions in last 12 hours, many of them single-vehicle

CBC News Posted: Nov 10, 2017 6:05 AM ETLast Updated: Nov 10, 2017 7:57 AM ET

The sudden drop created problems for drivers. Const. Clint Stibbe, with Toronto police traffic services, said that officers responded to some 63 collisions over a 12-hour period. Some 45 collisions involved reports of property damage, while 18 included personal injuries.

Most of the incidents occurred in the northwestern, northern and northeastern parts of the city near the 401.

Read more about collisions and current driving conditions, here.

Winter driving tips: How should you prepare a vehicle for driving under winter conditions?

Driving in winter weather – snow, ice, wet and cold – creates a great challenge for vehicles and drivers. Keeping your vehicle in good technical repair reduces your overall chances for any mishap or disaster while driving – particularly in winter weather. To prepare your vehicle for winter driving give it a complete checkup.

Look for the following:

Electrical system
Battery – recharge or replace if the battery is weak. Also have the charging system checked.
Ignition – check for damaged ignition wires and cracks in the distributor cap.
Lights – check all lights (headlights, side lights, emergency flashers, directional lights, taillights, brake lights and parking lights) for proper functioning.

Brakes
Check brakes and adjust to ensure equal braking.

Tires
The traction between tires and roadway determines how well a vehicle rides, turns and stops, and is crucial for safe driving in winter. Proper tire selection is very important.
Use all-season radial tires only in areas that receive only light snowfall.
Use snow tires in areas that receive heavy snowfall.
Use chains on all four wheels when you expect severe snow and icy roads.
Check with your local Department or Ministry of Transportation office to see if the use of tire chains is legal in the region through which you are planning to drive.
Check tire pressure and if necessary restore it to levels recommended by the vehicle manufacturer. The pressure drops about 1 psi for every 5°C (9°F) drop in temperature.
Do not mix radial tires with other types.
Check tire balance and correct if necessary.
Check wheel alignment and correct if necessary.

Exhaust system
Check the exhaust system for leaks. A properly sealed exhaust system reduces the risk for carbon monoxide poisoning.
Keep the window in your vehicle slightly open when you’re stuck in snow, and run the engine and heater to keep warm.
Keep the exhaust pipe clear of snow. A blocked pipe can force carbon monoxide back into the car interior.

Heating/cooling system
Check the radiator and hoses for leaks.
Ensure that your vehicle always has a sufficient amount of antifreeze rated for the coldest weather.
Check the defrosters (front and back) to make sure they are working efficiently.

Windshield wipers
Ensure that windshield wipers function efficiently. Replace them if they are old or worn.
Fill the washer container with an antifreeze fluid and top it up frequently.

Fuel
Fill up the fuel tank before you leave on your trip.
Do not let the fuel level get too low – the driving time to the next gas station may take much longer than you ever expected, and if you get stuck, the car engine will be your only source of heat.

For more information on winter driving, please visit Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety site:
http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/safety_haz/icesnow.html

More information about traffic accidents, here.

Contact Strype Injury Lawyers for a free car collision case evaluation.

November 10, 2017/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/icy-roads-toronto.jpg 358 620 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2017-11-10 09:58:332017-11-13 09:59:04Temperature drop brings 63 collisions in the GTA
Accidents, Car Accidents, Personal Injury News, Road Safety

Ontario plans harsher penalties for careless drivers who hurt or kill

By Patrick Cain National Online Journalist, News  Global News

Ontario plans a much harsher approach to careless drivers who kill or hurt people, provincial transport minister Steven Del Duca is set to announce Wednesday in Toronto.

The announcement follows a series Global News published in June about lenient sentences being given to drivers who kill.

The proposed changes would create a new offence of careless driving causing death or bodily harm which carries with it a maximum penalty of a $50,000 fine, up to two years in jail and a licence suspension of up to five years.

The proposed law will also:

  • Increase fines and demerit points, and introduce license suspensions, for distracted drivers. Punishments would increase with repeated offences, with third (and subsequent) offences drawing a 30-day licence suspension.
  • Increase fines for failing to yield to a pedestrian
  • Double the maximum fine for most traffic offences from $500 to $1,000

Read the whole article and watch videos, here.

Strype Injury Lawyers have decades of experience and success trying complex automotive accident cases.

Catastrophic automotive accidents can transform a person’s life in a matter of seconds. Our goal is to leverage our experience and expertise to secure the maximum possible settlement needed to fund your post-injury medical and lifestyle needs.

Get more infomation on our expertise, here.

September 21, 2017/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/highway-accident.jpg 400 900 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2017-09-21 07:57:212017-10-02 08:59:56Ontario plans harsher penalties for careless drivers who hurt or kill
Accidents, Car Accidents, Road Safety

It’s safer to back into parking spaces

Road safety: It’s safer to back into parking spaces. Why most don’t drivers do it?

(Excerpts from an article by Ben Yagoda)

There are several theories, but little evidence, as to why Americans don’t often back in. How technology can help us back in: There is hope for people with bad spatial skills: rear-view cameras.

Backed in cars on a parking: road safety

Backed in cars on the University of Delaware campus

Every year, some 300 people are killed and 18,000 are injured by drivers who are backing up, usually in driveways or parking lots. There’s a simple way to prevent a lot of these accidents: We could back into parking space so that we don’t have to back out.

In a parking lot, the AAA thinks we should back in, recommending that “drivers reverse into parking spaces whenever possible, except where prohibited by law or parking lot restrictions.”

And yet most of drivers don’t do this.

In “Predicting productivity gains from parking behavior,” a 2014 article published in the International Journal of Emerging Markets, author Shaomin Li, a professor of management at Old Dominion University, describes visiting Taiwan. He notices that, in contrast to the US, most drivers there backed into spaces: “Needless to say, back-in parking takes more time and effort than head-in parking. Yet, it is easier, quicker, and safer when exiting. Thus we may conjecture that people take the trouble to back in demonstrate the ability to delay gratification; they want to invest more time and effort now so they can enjoy the fruits of their labor later. They demonstrate a culture of long-term orientation.”

Li took photographs of how cars were parked in US and Taiwan lots, and had friends do the same in the so-called BRIC countries—Brazil, Russia, India, and China.

The percent backed-in was:
US: 5.7
Brazil: 17.1
India: 25.4
Russia: 35
Taiwan: 59.4
China: 88

Read this interesting and informative article by Ben Yagoda, professor of journalism at the University of Delaware and the author, most recently, of The B Side: The Death of Tin Pan Alley and the Rebirth of the Great American Song.

If you or a loved one has endured a catastrophic injury, contact Strype Injury Lawyers team now to book your free initial consultation.

August 15, 2016/by Debbie Crowe
https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/tbone.jpg 400 900 Debbie Crowe https://strype.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/strype-logo-shield-white.png Debbie Crowe2016-08-15 11:08:012017-10-03 09:36:59It’s safer to back into parking spaces
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Categories

  • Accident Benefits & Tort
  • Accidents
  • Birth Injuries
  • Car Accidents
  • Insurance Law
  • Medical Malpractice
  • Personal Injury News
  • Product Liability
  • Road Safety
  • Slips and Falls
  • TTC Accidents

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Strype Injury Lawyers

We represent clients throughout the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) and surrounding communities.

Our top priority is helping you rebuild your life in the months after suffering a catastrophic injury.

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Toronto Office

Please note below our new address as of September 8, 2020.

The Hullmark Centre
4789 Yonge Street, Suite 516
Toronto, ON M2N OG3

Southeast Corner of Yonge St. & Sheppard Avenue • The Sheppard subway is conveniently located in our building.

Toll Free: 1-855-4-STRYPE
(478-7973)

Local: 416-214-2400

Categories

  • Accident Benefits & Tort
  • Accidents
  • Birth Injuries
  • Car Accidents
  • Insurance Law
  • Medical Malpractice
  • Personal Injury News
  • Product Liability
  • Road Safety
  • Slips and Falls
  • TTC Accidents

Free consultation

Given the stress and uncertainty you’ll likely encounter in the wake of a catastrophic personal injury, we offer free initial consultations to ease any financial burden on you and your family. We’re dedicated to helping you understand your rights and potential remedies—at no charge.

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