Care and control of a motor vehicle while impaired
March 5, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
It’s been a surprise to many people over the years, but you don’t have to be actually driving a motor vehicle when your ability to drive is impaired by alcohol or a drug to be convicted of that offence. Simply being able to set the vehicle in motion, engine running or not, may be enough for a conviction because you have care and control of the motor vehicle while you are impaired. If you are impaired, the best advice that I can give in most cases is to stay out of motor vehicles.
Turning left? — stick to your own lane
March 1, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Making a left turn at an intersection.
This column is dedicated to the middle aged male driver who turned left in the intersection and completed the turn half way into my lane as I approached him and half way into the lane that he was supposed to be using. Was he being inattentive, careless or did he not know any better?
Using your rear-view mirrors
February 22, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Mirror, signal, shoulder check, change is the chant that we all know to follow for a successful lane change. We also use our rearview mirrors to give us a better view than our eyes alone when we are backing up. Is this all that mirrors are used for and are these the only times that we use them?
Setting credible speed limits
February 15, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Without doubt, the laws that drivers fail to follow the most often must regard the speed limit. Everyone has a justification for doing so. They range from being in a hurry, which is selfish, to the limit is set too low which is either a reasonable observation or a result of failing to take all factors into consideration.
Overdriving low-beam headlights (part 2)
February 5, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Last week’s column on overdriving low beam headlights resulted in some interesting comments. Chief among them was the thought that this wasn’t a problem because the driver had installed high wattage bulbs and now had more light to see with. Do you suppose that these drivers don’t know this is a bad practice or just don’t care about themselves and others who use the highway?
Overdriving low-beam headlights
January 29, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Have you ever given any thought to how far you can see at night as you are driving along down the highway? High beam headlights seem to overpower the dark, but there are a lot of situations where we are limited to using just the low beams. I was required to calculate the safe speed using only low beam headlights at a seminar and I was surprised at the result.
Failing to remain at the scene of an accident
January 21, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
Failing to remain at the scene of an accident, or hit and run as it is more commonly known is without a doubt a daily occurrence in British Columbia. We all know that we are doing something seriously wrong when we hit a cyclist, pedestrian or other vehicle on the highway and leave the scene to escape civil and criminal liability. However, we’re not quite so worried when the collision is a scrape or a dent in a parking lot or something else that we can convince ourselves is of a minor nature.
Sharing the road with Goliath
January 8, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Behind the Wheel –
The trucker’s top five concerns.
I asked a couple of transport truck drivers what bothered them about the drivers of small vehicles. We had a lively half hour discussion from which I gathered their top five concerns. Each of them could have serious consequences for everyone on the highway.
The first two concern sudden reductions in speed. The small vehicle driver will either pass the transport truck, pull in suddenly, and then slow down, or just slow suddenly without taking note of the truck behind. When you consider that a fully loaded truck with all the air brakes properly adjusted has only 50 to 65% of a small vehicles braking efficiency, you can guess how dangerous this move could be.
Check your driving knowledge
January 4, 2010 by Tim Schewe
Filed under BC government, Feature stories, Safety, Technology
Behind the Wheel –
Update your driving skills and knowledge.
How long has it been since you read the manual that new drivers study to prepare for their first driver’s license? Why bother you say? You’ve been driving for years and know it all. I wish I could say that!
Let’s start with a visit to ICBC’s web site and give the practice knowledge test a try. 25 questions shouldn’t take you too long, after all, you are an experienced driver. Getting all the answers correct first try should be simple. Hmm…
Behind the wheel
December 26, 2009 by Tim Schewe
Filed under Community, Feature stories, Safety, Travel
Merry Christmas 2009.
If I could give all of you one gift this Christmas it would be a year’s worth of safe driving. For those of us here in British Columbia that would mean more than one driver a day would not die, 81 people would not be injured and 69 property damage collisions would not occur. Imagine that.
For those of you who think that they have not been affected by a collision in the past year, consider about 80 percent of what you paid to ICBC to insure your vehicle.



