Tougher Penalties for Dangerous Driving Start September 1 – includes possible jail time

Ontario’s Government for the People is taking steps to ensure Ontario’s roads are safe for everyone. Starting September 1, there will be tougher penalties for careless driving and endangering pedestrians.

Drivers convicted of careless driving causing bodily harm or death will face:

  • Fines from $2,000 to $50,000
  • Six demerit points
  • A driver’s licence suspension of up to five years
  • Up to two years in jail

“Time and time again we’ve seen families devastated because a loved one is hurt or killed by a dangerous driver, and the driver walks away with no more than a slap on the wrist,” said John Yakabuski, Minister of Transportation. “This new charge sends a clear message that dangerous driving won’t be tolerated.”

Penalties will also increase for drivers who fail to yield to pedestrians at crossovers, school crossings and crosswalks. The maximum penalty will increase to $1,000 and four demerit points.

Drivers are also reminded that they must yield the entire roadway at pedestrian crossovers, school crossings, and other locations where there is a crossing guard, and cannot continue driving until pedestrians have finished crossing the road completely.

“The number of pedestrians being injured and killed on our roads has reached a critical level,” said Minister Yakabuski. “Tougher penalties help, but we need everyone to step up and do their part by driving safely and responsibly.”

SOURCE – Ministry of Transportation

This Media Release

One comment

  1. Start with better driver training