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More Time, Support For Catastrophic Crash Injuries

Full Title:
Insurance (Vehicle) Amendment Act, 2025

Summary#

  • This bill changes B.C.’s auto insurance law to help people with very serious crash injuries (called “catastrophic injuries”).

  • It does two main things: it gives more time to file a benefits claim after a catastrophic injury, and it makes it easier for some amputees to be recognized as having a catastrophic injury.

  • Key changes:

    • Extends the deadline to file a claim for catastrophic injury benefits for crashes that happened on or after May 1, 2021.
    • Sets a new rule so the deadline will be at least two years after this law takes effect, even if the old deadline would have ended sooner.
    • Updates the definition of “catastrophic injury” tied to amputations, so fewer amputations are needed to qualify.
    • People who newly qualify as catastrophic can access the higher level of care and supports that B.C.’s public insurer (ICBC) provides for these injuries.

What it means for you#

  • Drivers, passengers, cyclists, and pedestrians injured in crashes since May 1, 2021

    • If your injuries are catastrophic, you would get extra time—at least two years after this law starts—to file a benefits claim, even if you missed the earlier deadline.
    • This does not change lawsuits; it only affects benefits you claim from ICBC.
  • People with crash-related amputations

    • It would be easier to meet the “catastrophic injury” definition after an amputation.
    • This could open access to a higher level of supports, such as long-term care, rehabilitation, home modifications, and specialized equipment.
  • Families and caregivers

    • If your loved one is newly recognized as catastrophic, ICBC could cover more of the supports they need, easing out-of-pocket costs and caregiving strain.
  • Health care providers and rehab teams

    • More patients may qualify for catastrophic-level supports, which can change treatment plans, discharge planning, and equipment needs.
  • ICBC (public auto insurer)

    • May see more catastrophic claims and late-filed claims within the new window, and will need to update guidance and communications.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Proponents' View#

  • Gives severely injured people a fair chance to claim benefits, especially those focused on survival and rehab who may have missed early deadlines.
  • Better reflects real-world impacts of limb loss by easing the amputation threshold to qualify as catastrophic.
  • Aligns with the start of B.C.’s Enhanced Care model in May 2021, so people hurt under that system are not shut out by timing rules.
  • Could reduce hardship for families by opening access to higher-level supports without court fights.
  • Clarifies rules, which can cut confusion and appeals about who qualifies as catastrophic.

Opponents' View#

  • Could raise ICBC claim costs if more people qualify as catastrophic or file later, which might put pressure on premiums in the future.
  • Retroactive deadline changes may create uncertainty and administrative workload for ICBC.
  • Broader catastrophic definitions can lead to “threshold creep,” making it harder to manage costs and keep criteria consistent.
  • Longer filing windows may increase disputed claims and make it tougher to verify facts long after a crash.