Skip to main content

Fines without teeth

The heat is on: no more frozen bus rides, province vows

The heat is on: no more frozen rides

From the FreeP: 

"After years of headlines about frigid rides to and from Winnipeg, heat on commercial buses will be mandatory this winter, the province announced Monday."

"Bus operators must examine their heat systems daily and provincial bus inspectors will conduct random stops. They will have the authority to place any vehicle that doesn’t comply out of service."

I've never sat on an unheated bus from Thompson, so maybe I'm wrong and it is in fact better to have no ride than a cold ride.

Just threatening operators with random inspectors and grounded buses seems like punishing the passengers, though. How about just going straight to the fine (maybe don't bench the bus unless the bus company is a repeat offender?) and making it hurt: $10,000.

"If a company is caught disobeying rules, it will be fined either $174, $298 or a combined total of $472, depending on the case."

“The fines haven’t been reviewed for some time,” Naylor said, asked if the charges were severe enough. “We are open to reviewing the fines.”

This "ground the bus" rule punishes the bus companies in the kind of way that incentivizes them not change, risk fines, and if worse comes to worst, just shut down (since they have to pay to fix a bus plus lose passenger revenue for the time the bus is out of service getting fixed). 

Either way, passengers are stuck.

Instead, give violators a fine that says "we are icily serious about this". A fine that says "it will be cheaper for you to fix your buses now rather threatening passengers lives while you play chicken with inspectors."

Sigh. Why are Manitoba institutions so averse to fines that actually make a point? 

Well, they are happy to ding just-trying-their-best homeowners with massive fines for firefighting costs should a being-worked-on house catch fire. Likely as not the reason the house is considered vacant is that the owner is stalled on their renovations, waiting for a city inspector to come and give them a permit to proceed. 

But folks who intentionally undertake reckless behaviour to cause harm -- bus company operators who knowingly run buses without heat for hours-long trips in well-below freezing weather, motorists who exceed posted speedlimits by measures of 10s not 1s -- these folks get slap-on-the wrist fines. Less than $500 for having risked 20-40 people's live to hypothermia. Only a few hundred (decidedly less than annual insurance costs) for wanton and reckless speeding.

Government interference on personal liberties may not be something we should take lightly or welcome without critical thinking, but failing to use government powers to restrict/punish/reduce severely antisocial behaviour that clearly endangers innocent bystander's safety is just irresponsible. Risking others' lives for your own jollies or to pad your pocketbook isn't a valid exercise of personal freedom.

Comments

kar0ling said…
Or the reverse: punishing seniors community clubs with astronomic fee increases. So short-sighted to cut community centre funding!
https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/2024/09/26/seniors-fear-rec-programs-in-jeopardy-by-escalating-facility-fees

Popular posts from this blog

Whose death matters?

In June of 2024, a man was just riding his bike to work. Early in the morning when traffic should be low to nonexistent. Wearing a helmet and a reflective vest.  A racing driver lost control and plowed him over.  Anyone who bikes in this city was grieved and outraged.  This stretch of roadway is designated as a bike route. There's a little green sign with a bicycle icon to tell you that. The wide road that invites speeding certainly doesn't. How does a person even drive 159 km/hr on a sleepy residential street within city limits? (Because the street is too damn wide.) For about as long as it has existed, the cycling advocacy organization has identified this stretch of roadway as a route in critical need of remediation to make it safer.  So, within a week, temporary safety measures had been rolled out. Reduced speed limit signs were erected, poly posts narrowed the roadway and speed cameras made sure folks took it seriously.  Ha ha ha ha ha ha. No. 20, 40,...

Bike 19

It's Earth Day today. It's a day, not to worship creation, but to pay mind to it, and in so doing, to worship the creator. So, says Sarah Pulliam Bailey , was the intention of Earth Day's originator. I confess I'm not doing anything special for the day. I take pride -- perhaps too much -- in the "eco-morality" of the normal things I do. That morality, sense of self-righteousness, is not the reason for my choices. Instead, it's a conviction that it is, in fact, worship when I climb on my bike; dig paper out of the recycling bin or stock used envelopes for reuse; dissect a teabag so the paper tab goes in recycling, the bag into compost, and only the string into the garbage; use my thrift store dishes; even when I carpool with someone else. The little bits of inconvenience that I subject myself to in order to reduce waste are intended for the sake of the Creator. The attitude is not always worshipful; on my way home today, I was once again muttering i...

SAD

Though I won't deny I welcome the slightest sign of spring after a long Winnipeg winter, I would never say I suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder on account of the long darkness and the bitter cold. Rainy season, however, is proving to be a different matter. Maybe the short evenings contribute somewhat my distress; as someone from just above the 49th parallel, I associate warm weather with long daylight hours but though the weather is mild enough here, darkness invariably falls by 7:00 pm, and it falls fast. Whatever the case, my outlook is positive and eager on sunny days, but when the sky darkens and the rain begins to fall, my mood plummets and I find myself wishing dry season here as fast as the clouds can carry. No doubt you'll be laughing at me 3 months from now when I am complaining about the heat and the dust and wishing the rains back, but at the moment, I can't say I particularly enjoy rainy season.