Wait times for ICBC road tests soar as new drivers show up unprepared - Action News
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British Columbia

Wait times for ICBC road tests soar as new drivers show up unprepared

ICBC made its road tests more challenging in 2016. Now, wait times to take one have soared to 58 days. But the corporation says the main factor driving the problem is people showing up unprepared to take the test, not a lack of driver examiners.

ICBC says it made the road tests more challenging in 2016 to put better drivers on the road

People wait outside an ICBC branch, many of them on standby to take a road test. (Maryse Zeidler/CBC)

Ona crisp but sunny morning on Vancouver's West Side, about a dozen people are waiting outside in some semblance of order.

They're not there for a sale on electronics, or to get their hands on the new Beaujolais they're waiting at an ICBCbranch on standbyto take a road test so they can get a driver's licence.

Some of them have been waiting since 5:30 a.m., hopeful someone with a reserved spot won't show up. Susanna Miller, 25,arrived about an hour before doors open at 8:30 a.m. She thinks she's about fifth in line.

"I feel confident to pass. I just don't think I'll get to take it," she said, bundled in a puffy jacket.

Susanna Miller waits in line at an ICBC branch on Vancouver's West Side. She arrived at 7:30 a.m. to get on standby for a road test and figured she was about fifth in line. (Maryse Zeidler/CBC)

ICBCmade its road tests more challenging in 2016. Now, wait times to take oneto get a Class 5 or 7 driver's licence in the Lower Mainland have risen to 58 days, compared to 48 last year. But the corporation says the main factor driving the problem is people showing up unprepared to take the test, not a lack of driver examiners.

Miller recently got a job but she can't start until she has a Class 5 driver's licence the full licence as part of B.C.'s graduatedlicensingsystem.

The first road test appointment she could book online in Vancouver wasn't until January. So she decided to hedge her bets and wait on standby.

"This is my fourth day coming. Some days I just call it after a little while because I can tell it's not going anywhere," she said.

"It's just a complete unknown as to whether I'll be able to get it anytime in the next few weeks."

More repeat customers

ICBCspokesperson Joanna Linsangansays wait times are long because of a percentage of drivers who clog up the system by failing the test over and over again.

"Unfortunately we're seeing a growing number of people coming in unprepared and essentially treating their road test as a driving lesson," Linsangan said.

In the Lower Mainland, eight per cent of drivers needed four or more tries to pass their test in 2015, Linsangan says taking upnearly a quarter of ICBC's total testing time in the region.

ICBCdata from that same year shows that only 62 per cent of customers passed their Class 5 or 7 test on their first attempt. And Linsangan says that number has shrunk by about five per cent since 2016.

ICBC recommends that people wait on standby to take a road test as soon as possible. The current wait time in the Lower Mainland is 58 days. (Maryse Zeidler/CBC)

"The main message that we're trying to get out to new drivers wanting to get their new licence is to study, get those hours in practice on the road," she said.

Lee Olley,ICBC'sdirector of driver testing, admits that part of what's driving the increased failure rates is the test itself.

The corporation reviewed its test routes in 2016 to include more challenges like left-hand turns at intersections, Olley said, where crashes are more likely to happen.

"At the end of the day, I think our focus is to make sure we're putting safe drivers on the road," Olleysaid.

More examiners coming

ICBCdid hire 18 new driver examinersacross the province last year to help deal with the backlog, and Olleysays the corporation intends to hire more.

He says driver examiners were also retrainedto apply test criteria more consistently across the province.

But for now, the bulk of ICBC'sfocus is on easing the number of repeat offenders.

Ruby Waddell, 18, waits on standby to take her road test. She wants her licence so she can rent a motorcycle when she goes travelling to Southeast Asia after Christmas, but the first road test available online wasn't available until January. (Maryse Zeidler/CBC)

Last June ICBCimplementedlonger wait times between tests for people who fail the first time. The goal is to hopefully get drivers to practise more before taking the exam again.

Olleysaid the corporation is also working toward improving the educational portion of its website, and is working more closely with driving schools to ensure they're teaching according to ICBC's standards.