List of FSRA SAC participants (new) https://www.fsrao.ca/industry/auto-insurance-sector/stakeholder-advisory-committee-property-casualty-pc-insurance
Settlement of Class Action About The Personal Insurance Company
Ellen Roseman: Insurance is personal finance’s blind spot
The federal government has been on a mission to improve your financial literacy ever since the 2008 financial crash.
To be financially literate, you need to know how to track your expenses, use credit wisely, comparison shop, save for the future, invest prudently and protect yourself from scams.
CLHIA: Many Canadians falsely believe benefits fraud is not a crime
Smartphones can be more deadly than impaired driving, data suggests
In addition to the deaths and injuries, the number of collisions related to distracted driving that include other things like eating, applying makeup or fiddling with the radio while behind the wheel — is pushing up the price of auto insurance across the board. Some Canadians say they’ve even been denied comprehensive and collision insurance because of a distracted driving conviction.
OCF-19 Application for Determination of Catastrophic Impairment
Top court won’t review amputee’s bid for military disability benefits
Survey Repudiates Canada’s Pain Care Policies
Hope for patients with traumatic brain injury
Fordjour v. Royal and Sun Alliance Ins. Co. of Canada, 2019, 2019 ONSC 6268 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/j34kw
[4] Ms. Fordjour’s family physician, Dr. Saito, was a central witness in Ms. Fordjour’s case. At the hearing, the Adjudicator ruled that Dr. Saito could not give opinion evidence. This ruling was wrong: see: Westerhof v. Gee Estate, 2015 ONCA 206 (CanLII). This ruling undermined the Adjudicator’s assessment of Dr. Saito’s evidence and led the Adjudicator to disallow admissible evidence: it infected the fact-finding process.
[5] On reconsideration, LAT found that this error was corrected when the Adjudicator was persuaded that Westerhof would ground opinion evidence from Dr. Saito. This conclusion is unreasonable. Evidence had been excluded on the basis of an erroneous ruling and the Adjudicator did not reopen the evidence to hear the opinion evidence from Dr. Saito.
[9] On reconsideration, LAT concluded that the causation analysis was “implied”. We find that this conclusion is unreasonable. Crucial factual findings were not made on the causation issue. The test for causation (set out in this court’s decision in Sabadash v. State Farm, 2019 ONSC 1121 (CanLII)) and an analytical approach to applying that test (such as that set out in the Court of Appeal’s decision in Heath v. Economical Mutual Insurance Co., 2009 ONCA 391 (CanLII)) were not stated. Nor is there a basis to infer that the proper test and analysis were applied.
[10] Reasons are not to be subjected to a minute analysis, but in this case the failure of the reasons renders them insufficient. We cannot be satisfied that the proper test was applied or that the factual findings were made to support the decision.
[11] The appeal is allowed. The decisions below are set aside and the case is remitted back to LAT for a new hearing before a different adjudicator.