City of Toronto Files Court Injunction Against Uber 169
Sebolains writes: The city of Toronto in Ontario, Canada has filed a court injunction on Uber Canada Inc. today that requests for all operations in the city to cease. Uber has been operating there since 2012 without a license from the city, and so officials are concerned that Uber's operations pose a risk to both drivers and riders. How quickly this will happen, we don't know, but the city has asked the courts to be expedient in hearing this application.
Toronto Municipal Gov't divided (Score:5, Informative)
John Tory (the next mayor of Toronto) has made statements actually supporting Uber. Thing is, although he's been elected he hasn't taken office yet, so he's not quite in a position to act. Be interesting to see what happens when he takes the helm, though.
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Re:Toronto Municipal Gov't divided (Score:4, Funny)
Canadian version: We've gotta be safer than driving under the influence, eh?
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Re:Toronto Municipal Gov't divided (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny.
But not as funny as pretending that somehow the drivers do NOT have valid driving licenses, or that there are some special inspection requirements that are not required for family cars, but should apply here. This is why lobbying is pure evil.
What is next? Ban car pooling? Because it is only a matter of time till someone comes up with a popular "couchsurfing/airbnb" version of car pooling, and just generating revenue via registration & background verification fees and advertising.
Re:Toronto Municipal Gov't divided (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a difference between sharing a journey which would happen anyway (and being compensated for fuel used, etc.) and someone actively earning a living from driving people around. If you can't see that maybe you should familiarise yourself with this subject before commenting? I know taxis suck in the US (I have no idea about Canada), but elsewhere they are good, and this Uber nonsense threatens to lower the quality massively, as well as put people at risk.
There already *are* popular ride-sharing apps & websites out there, and they're perfectly legal, as they are organising ride-sharing, not people pretending to be professional taxis.
Please enlighten us... (Score:2)
...on the crucial finer points that make being paid to drive someone around so much different that it merits such massive legal protection and draconian regulation.
It certainly is not the burden of inspection. At least where i am at, taxis are given the EXACT SAME inspection as out of province used vehicles registered by regular drivers. As for maintenance, when i was still scrimping and saving to pay off student loan and get a house i drove used cars and went to the junk yard to get parts, and there were
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Have you read through your auto insurance policy? I don't know how Canada works but in the United States it almost certainly contains an exclusion for using your vehicle for hire. Which
is why Uber provides insurance
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And yet yesterday there was a link to an article about an Uber driver running over a cyclist, and Uber response was 'drivers are not employees, we are not responsible, we suspended his account.'
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And yet yesterday there was a link to an article about an Uber driver running over a cyclist,
who it's safe to say was not inside of the vehicle at the time.
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Sorry, but you are just dumb.
You seem to have a tendency of irrationally deciding that something is "evil"(TM), and THEN trying to assume supposed hypothetical flaws and then avoid even checking facts. Insurance policies are available for US, for uber.
http://blog.uber.com/rideshari... [uber.com]
You need to get therapy, mate. All this confirmation bias, and trying to grind an axe, just because you don't like something is just going to make you miserable in long term.
Re:Toronto Municipal Gov't divided (Score:5, Insightful)
Joe Average has no incentive to drive 16+ hours a day. Joe Uber does. That means Joe Uber is going to get into more accidents, and requires a far higher level of skill to get the rate down to acceptable level. Furthermore, while it's of course nice to have cheap taxis, it also means that Joe Uber pretty much has to work those 16+ hours a day to make a living, and that's not so nice for everyone who shares the roads - and sidewalks, and occasionally a living room with a new hole in the wall - with him. So I, for one, wholeheartedly support limiting the supply to the level where Mr. Uber can go home after 8 hours and then mandating that he actually does just that rather than continues busting his ass at the expense of public safety.
So do you think this situation would get better or worse by having a lot more and more desperate taxi drivers around?
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Given that Uber is legal in a lot of places (and still done in places it's not), there should be plenty of statistical evidence that they get into more accidents per mile driven than "normal" drivers.
So, can you point me at the evidence that supports your statement, or were you just talking out your ass?
Disclaimer: I've got no interest in this whatsoever. While it's
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Do accident statistics have a handy "works for Uber" column now?
Do you have evidence that I have an ass to talk out of? Seeing how you apparently require evidence of such basic physiological facts as "peop
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Do accident statistics have a handy "works for Uber" column now?
They don't even have a column for suicide (thank the Christians for that one). So someone who gets drunk or takes pills, leaves a suicide note, then hops in the car, hits max speed and drives into (or off) a cliff will be properly marked as "DUI and speed-related". These statistics are used to push for lower limits on speed and drinking, when neither of those rules would have any effect on someone deliberately trying to kill themselves.
The statistics don't work. Uber or otherwise.
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This is not different from standard taxis (at least in Montreal). The permit is over 200,000$, so the drivers still have to work their ass off to make a little money.
This is (again) lobbying instead of competing. Uber is not the first victim. Aereo was pretty much shut down, and there are countless other examples.
What about taxi companies writing their own applications and provide the same service?
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... aereo was exploiting a loophole in the law to get around paying content producers for their content. Which you know, is clever, but was in no reality ever going to fly unchallenged. They lost because it was pretty obvious that they designed their entire operation around exploiting a loophole.
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the drivers do not receive special scrutiny above and beyond a normal driver,
Where? Everywhere I've lived, Taxis needed a commercial license. That requires drug testing (from federal rules), and hearing and extra vision tests (from state rules) for the places I've held a commercial driver's license.
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Speak for your own country. Here, for certain taxi cabs and mini cabs receive special safety inspections. The normal regime of inspection is nothing for 3 years, then a mandatory annual inspection ; for taxis, it's a 6-monthly inspection from registration.
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a valid drivers license for personal use, or a valid drivers license for business use? in the states we have a special test and license procedure for this practice called a CDL (commercial drivers license) which is required if you're carrying cargo or passengers for a fee.
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[...] a CDL [...]is required if you're carrying cargo or passengers for a fee.
Can undercover cops go hitchhiking, and offer you a $20 for gas at the end of the trip, and if you take it, arrest you for driving without a valid license?
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We have taxicab regulation because unregulated cab drivers rip off consumers.
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just wondering a little bit about uber in general,
How much Operations they have in the city?
I mean, they don't need to have an office in the city, they don't drive the cars. they don't need to have anything in the city. Has Iran asked Facebook to stop operations in Iran?
Sure the city can start fining Uber drivers and app users if they want and that would probably be bad for popularity of Uber in Toronto, but what has the service to do with where it's used from?
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Is this about automobile safety? Because my car has to pass smog and safety inspection every year just like the cabbies.
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Is your car driven by someone who has passed a criminal background check?
Is your car required to have snow tires?
It's about more than mere automobile safety.
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Sometimes it is also a question of safety (Score:2)
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Oftentimes a company complaining about regulation sounds similar to the government complaining about obeying the constitution.
Company: "We want to do it this (much cheaper but much less safe) way but the annoying Government keeps requiring us to abide by basic safety rules!"
Government: "We want to catch the bad guys, but the annoying Constitution keeps requiring us to get these stupid war
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" A balance ensued wherein the safety needs are mostly met and the established players don't have to worry about competition." " replace it with a leaner version that would focus on the core mission of ensuring safety without interfering with the natural development of the market."
Safety is not the core reason for these laws, the main reason taxi regulation started occurring in major cities: congestion control. Even now, only 2% of cars in NYC are taxis, but during peak hours/congestion, more than half of t
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Nope. That was just the pretext for the power-grab.
Grow up.
There is a long, sordid, history of abuses associated with taxi and limousine services, tour buses and so on.
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Government initially regulated transportation for hire for legitimate safety reasons;
There is a long, sordid, history of abuses associated with taxi and limousine services, tour buses and so on.
Government regulations on cars for "safety" existed before car crashes existed. Look at the requirements for the first driver's licenses. Driving tests came about many years after licensing started, so the first ones couldn't have been about safety.
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No, the regulations were initially put in place precisely for the stuff Uber is doing.
Underinsured drivers [see accidents where Uber drivers are between "jobs", sorry you aren't covered].
Vehicles not being inspected on a regular basis.
No ongoing driver checks.
Overcharging customers.
Underpaying drivers.
Then there is the whole death spiral of an unlimited number of drivers all trying to earn a living from a fixed number of clients.
We have ALREADY gone through "Uber" before [only without the global central com
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In Madrid (Spain), only a limited number of taxi licenses are available. They can be auctioned (about 200.000$ each). Taxi drivers must own a special driver license (BTP), and comply with several other legal requirements (car aspect and equipment, etc.), so it is in fact a quite regulated maket.
In my opinion, the general rule should be to require certain controls (driver license, insurance, clear identification, homologated fare meter, etc.) and let the market self regulate. That would exclude "services"
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There's Uber's motto: Hey, we've gotta be safer than driving under the influence.
Problem is that doesn't hold up in Toronto - we have designated driver services for them. I have to say, this is one particular case where I have to side with the city. The reasons they give are reasonable and justified with the exception of the protectionist crap for taxis. The insurance aspect is particularly important - I would not want to be in an accident with someone who only has a million dollars liability that has to cover themselves, the other driver, you, and anyone else injured.
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Pretty much, and everyone already knows why they're trying to expedite it right? Because the city council doesn't want it, but the previous mayor and incoming mayor are in favor of it. For people that don't know, or don't pay attention to the council meetings this should be an eye opener. I don't live in the centre of the universe, but I still get pulled into their gravitational well(130km away).
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Is it the City Council who dont want it? Or is it the Toronto taxi companies lobbying behind the scenes?
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The city council itself mainly doesn't want it. There are some behind the scenes crap without a doubt, but by and far the councilors themselves.
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John Tory (the next mayor of Toronto) has made statements actually supporting Uber.
But Toronto doesn't have a "strong mayor" like many American cities. What it has is a city manager and a council can go its own way if it chooses.
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"But Toronto doesn't have a "strong mayor" like many American cities."
But it did have one just as corrupt as any american big city mayor...\
Well This Explains One Thing (Score:2)
John Tory (the next mayor of Toronto) has made statements actually supporting Uber. Thing is, although he's been elected he hasn't taken office yet, so he's not quite in a position to act.
Well I suppose this explains why, after Uber has been operating for 2 years Toronto is suddenly in a rush to get the case heard by the courts.
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considering Uber is as morally bankrupt a company as they come. They should be using it only so much as their pocketbooks trump their espoused values.
they're trying to make their bones flaunting established laws, undermining competition that would make a 1900s oil magnate blush, and effectively generating profit off exploiting the hell out of their workforce.
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I live an hour away from toronto. It really is littered with hipsters, and it seems like the ripple effect is starting to make it near my hometown.
Since 2012 (Score:4, Funny)
For the past several years the city leaders of Toronto have been afraid to go after Uber, allowing it to operate unlicensed out of fear that the CEO and CFO of Uber will bash their heads in with baseball bats.
Two years free data... (Score:1)
" Uber has been operating there since 2012 without a license from the city, and so officials are concerned that Uber's operations pose a risk to both drivers and riders."
Well, they've just been given data from a two year trial. Any reason to suspect based on that data that it does pose a risk? I suspect not...
Don't go the way of Vancouver (Score:1)
Was just in Vancouver and learned that they've done away with Uber. It was horrible. Not enough taxis so it was impossible to get around the city. Frankly, it will impact my decision on whether or not I go back to visit. Unless your taxi companies can offer the same level of service, killing Uber will result in an impact to tourism... maybe just from me, but it'll be an impact. :)
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You were doing it wrong [wikipedia.org].
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I can only pray that the feds force through the pipeline so that the port can expand, and offset some of this failure.
You're a selfish fuck just like the feds who are expecting a kickback if they manage to force through the pipeline.
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Was just in Vancouver and learned that they've done away with Uber. It was horrible. Not enough taxis so it was impossible to get around the city. Frankly, it will impact my decision on whether or not I go back to visit. Unless your taxi companies can offer the same level of service, killing Uber will result in an impact to tourism... maybe just from me, but it'll be an impact. :)
Toronto has poor to adequate taxi service. Vancouver has NO taxi service. It is not a taxi town, everyone drives cars. Taxis, when you can get them (airport or phone in) cost real money. Public transit is perfectly fine for the young and poor. Vancouver also has the worst traffic in North America, according to Wikipedia.
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Toronto doesn't have poor taxi service, just crazy expensive. Vancouver was also rated as one of the easiest cities to get around in thanks to public transit.
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Vancouver has NO taxi service. It is not a taxi town, everyone drives cars. Taxis, when you can get them (airport or phone in) cost real money. Public transit is perfectly fine for the young and poor. Vancouver also has the worst traffic in North America, according to Wikipedia.
I live in Vancouver, and none of this is true.
There's a reason we license livery drivers (Score:2)
In the rest of the civilized world, there's a reason we license livery drivers. That's how you can get a cab ride or black car ride without getting robbed, or worse. Taxi and Livery Commission (TLC): It's a thing.
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Because goodness knows, nobody's [ctvnews.ca] been [seattlepi.com] assaulted [nbcwashington.com] by a licensed [wcax.com] taxi driver [www.cbc.ca].
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Nice anecdotes you have there. Win many debates much?
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Also, considering all of this is done through an app that contains feedback and such ratings, it seems unlikely that such assaults are any more likely to occur when using Uber or some similar service as opposed to a regular cab driver. One could argue that a p
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If we want to make cabs safer, I have a better idea: How about we background check the passengers to make sure they don't assault the driver?
Seriously, who's more likely to be a criminal? A guy with a job to keep or a random stranger hopping in a car?
what about Sophia Liu? (Score:2)
That is livery drivers must have full coverage and Uber tried to use fine print to get out of that.
Where will Uber dig? (Score:3)
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111 (Score:1)
cab drivers are mostly unqualifed (Score:2)
Uber privacy (Score:2)
On the subject of Uber, anybody else look at Uber's new privacy policy, and think it's a bit skanky?
http://www.buzzfeed.com/johana... [buzzfeed.com]
--What a carefully crafted weasel-worded policy. It says that Uber retains the right to violate your privacy for "legitimate business purposes"-- but doesn't define any limits on what they're going to call "legitimate." They list some "examples", which sounds soothing-- but these are just SOME of the reasons they might violate your privacy-- not ALL the reasons. Frankly, th
Could Pose a Risk? (Score:2)
Looking at the injunction/article (Score:3)
The City is concerned that Uber's operations pose a serious risk to the public, including those who are signing on as drivers, for the following reasons:
increased risk to passenger safety – no mechanical vehicle inspections, lack of driver training
inadequate insurance that fails to meet the requirements of the Municipal Code and may not provide essential coverage to drivers, passengers and others in the event of accidents
Seems legit. I could see the rationale for requiring a higher safety standard, and perticularly better insurance. This also seems like something Uber could accomodate.
increased number of vehicles operating as taxicabs resulting in traffic congestion and a possible threat to the taxi industry, including the City's objective of increasing the number of on-demand accessible taxicabs available, mandated by the City of Toronto earlier this year
So they want to stop Uber both because it results in too many new taxis... and because it reduces the number of Taxis? This argument sounds pretty dubious/protectionist.
unregulated fares resulting in price surging/gouging, and
Predatory pricing is a concern but for a big company like Uber it's generally something that consumers figure out.
increased safety risk to the drivers due to lack of training and vehicle security equipment, normally governed by City bylaws.
Again this is defensible and could be fixed by Uber.
It seems like Uber has an ability to seek a regulatory middle ground with some basic driver training, safety inspections, and insurance standards. I'm not sure I understand their strategy of no accomodations.
Reminds me of the movie Brazil (Score:2)
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Re: Dubious claims (Score:3)
It's the 4th largest by city proper population after mexico city, new York, and LA, but 13th largest by metro area.
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Fourth Largest city, Eighth Biggest Metro area (Score:4, Informative)
Actually, according to our good friend wikipedia, Toronto is still 8th by metre area population in NA.
It makes a difference whether you are asking about the population of the city, or the population of the metro area, the city plus surrounding areas that are not in the same political unit.
Cities: Toronto is fourth largest: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Metropolitan Areas: Toronto is eighth largest: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Urban Agglomertions: Toronto is number five: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
So I rate the original claim,
Toronto is Canada's largest city, the fourth largest in North America
, as True.
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Interesting, this [wikipedia.org] page is the one I went on for the 13th by metro area. I guess you'd have to look into the links and figure out what stats they're each basing their rankings on.
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Re:Dubious claims (Score:4, Informative)
1. Mexico City (pop. 8.5 million)
2 New York (8.4 million)
3 Los Angeles (3.8 million).
4 Toronto (2.8 million)
Chicago is 5th,
San Francisco at 36th and Detroit at 53rd, both fall behind Canadian cities Montreal (9th), Calgary (22nd), Ottawa (32nd), Edmonton (33rd)
Mississauga (49th), and just ahead of Winnipeg (55th) beat out Washington (60th), which is just ahead of Vancouver (63rd)
Las Vegas, with a population of 583,736, doesn't make the list.
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Re:Dubious claims (Score:4, Interesting)
That's only if you look at CMAs - in reality the GTA or GTHA would be #5 or $6 with 6 to 6.5 million people
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Sorry ... Mississauga is not a "city" .. it should really be a part of toronto ...
Mississauga is very much its own city, with its own municipal government, charter, and bylaws.
Just because it's immediately next to Toronto doesn't make it "not a city"
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Toronto is Canada's largest city, the fourth largest in North America, and home to a diverse population of about 2.8 million people.
4th largest? Somehow I doubt that.
New York is big, but I imagine that Las Vegas, San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, and DC are bigger than Toronto.
New York is #2, Chicago is #5, San Francisco is #36... the rest don't even make the top 50.
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Las Vegas:
City 583,736
Mod parent down (Score:2)
"The article contains this trivially verifiable statement of fact, but I _feel_ it doesn't sound right to me, so I'm compelled to rant about it on Slashdot, while at the same time being far too lazy to spend ten seconds to check it with a search engine — but then again, I just don't respect the audience enough to
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I've been utterly shocked at the state of many cars on the road here with no sills left and nothing but rust in other structurally essential parts of the car. I think th
Re:Inspections? (Score:5, Informative)
So, I'll flat out say to you: bullshit. Bullshit bullshit bullshit.
As in, you're spewing bullshit. You're spewing so much bullshit it isn't even funny. Are you even aware that what you say is bullshit? You clearly do not own a motor vehicle in Ontario.
There is no such thing as annual safety inspections of private, non-commercial motor vehicles in Ontario.
I have owned a motor vehicle in Ontario for almost 20 years. You periodically have to do an emissions test. When you buy and sell it needs an inspection.
But you do not, and have not for at least the last 20 years, have to do an annual motor vehicle inspection in Ontario.
There are some classes of commercial vehicles [gov.on.ca] which do get inspected annually.
So these Uber guys? They're driving in their own personal vehicles with neither a commercial license, insurance, nor mandatory vehicle inspections.
In other words, Uber as a service is pretty much ignoring the law and claiming that it doesn't apply to them.
Basically, Uber is a bootleg taxi service, and the laws being applied have applied to all commercial car services for a very long time.
This isn't some powerful taxi lobby pulling strings behind the scenes. This is cities deciding that Uber is required to follow the same laws as everybody else.
Uber aren't the victims here. They're the idiots claiming they can decide the law doesn't apply to them and their drivers, and going ahead and doing it anyway.
Re:Inspections? (Score:4, Informative)
So, I'll flat out say to you: bullshit. Bullshit bullshit bullshit.
I was mistaken; it's been a long time since I was up there. It appears that the laws have been relaxed in most Canadian provinces, other than New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, which still have hard requirements on safety inspections because they care about their citizens safety. I'm sorry your government in Ontario no longer cares.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V... [wikipedia.org]
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Maybe they determined that "taxing" you for an annual inspection for personal cars went to far and stopped it, more then 20 years ago? (i don't recall ever having to have the cars inspected and i have been driving for 25 years in ontario).
Please come back and post some more information on Ontario, a place you clearly don't know anything about.
PS.
This map indicates that a large number of states don't have annual inspections as well, does that mean they don't care about you as well?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_inspection_in_the_United_States
Yes. It does.
It means all they care about is collecting registration fees, and they smog test fees, and while they are generally named "The Department of Public Safety", they really don't give a crap about public safety, if they let you drive around with worn-out brakes, misaligned headlights, cracked windshields within the drivers field of view, and all the other things they wouldn't let you get away with in 17 U.S. states.
In point of fact, they are doing the minimum necessary work to be able to collect t
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17 states require annual or biennial inspections (Score:2)
17 states require annual or biennial inspections
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V... [wikipedia.org]