EPaper

Replace peeling plates... or else

TED CLARKE

Dave Muirhead first noticed his peeling licence plates a year ago.

The Prince George resident is among thousands of B.C. drivers whose licence plates have delaminated and peeled off, leaving the plate identification numbers and letters unreadable from a distance.

“The car is a 2004 and that’s probably when I got the plates,” said Muirhead. “I wondered about it when I first noticed it but it’s a lot worse now, or course.”

Muirhead, 79, has been driving for decades and this is the first time he’s ever noticed a plate not standing up to the test of time.

“They must be making them differently, that’s for sure,” he said. “I’m a little worried about it, if there’s a fine.”

Muirhead was not aware of the fact he could be subject to a $230 fine for driving with a defective plate, as stated in Section 3.03 of the Motor Vehicle Act regulations.

Drivers are responsible to replace lost, stolen or damaged plates on their vehicles.

According to the provincial law: “A number plate must be kept entirely unobstructed and free from dirt or foreign material, so that the numbers and letters on it may be plainly seen and read at all times and so that the numbers and letters may be accurately photographed using a speed monitoring device or traffic light safety device prescribed under section 83.1 of the Act.”

ICBC spokesperson Greg Harper says customers with delaminated plates should visit an Autoplan broker to obtain a replacement plate free of charge.

In March, ICBC announced it is discontinuing the use of licence plate decals, which indicate the day an insurance policy expires. The change took effect on May 1 and all customers with new policies or renewals have not had to attach decals to their plates.

FRONT PAGE

en-ca

2022-08-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://princegeorgecitizen.pressreader.com/article/281500755041952

Glacier Media