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More than 200 drivers charged for stunt driving and racing last year

Vast majority of drivers nabbed for stunt driving are men
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Ontario Provincial Police charged 212 drivers for stunt driving and racing in 2018.

Ontario Provincial Police charged 212 drivers for stunt driving and racing in 2018.

The offence of racing and stunt driving was first introduced in the province in 2007. Last year, 28 per cent of motor vehicle collisions that occurred in the OPP North East Region were caused by excessive speed.

In the first quarter of 2019, officers within the North East Region OPP have charged 43 drivers. The largest demographic at 39 per cent is between the ages of 21 and 30 and 86 per cent of the people charged were men.   

But what is stunt driving? 

"We hear a lot in the news about speeding, but what other actions are included in stunt driving?" said the OPP in a news release. 

Here are the high-risk actions that fall under the stunt driving section of the Highway Traffic Act:

  • All tires not in contact with the highway
  • Speeding by 50 or more km/h above posted speed limit
  • Cause tire(s) to lose traction
  • Spin or circle vehicle without control
  • Drive with person in trunk
  • Driver not in driver's seat
  • Prevent another vehicle from passing
  • Driving in oncoming traffic portion of highway
  • Stopping or slowing to interfere with another vehicle
  • Driving too close to another vehicle, pedestrian or object
  • Turn left from red light before oncoming traffic 

The other charge in that section is racing which is described as a race or contest while preforming stunt or on a bet or wager. 

The penalties for racing and stunt driving are enormous. A drivers' licence is suspended at the roadside for seven days, and the vehicle is impounded for seven days. 

The impound and storage fees from the tow company alone are huge then, upon conviction fines range between $2,000 and $10,000 or up to six months in jail. For a first offence conviction, a drivers' licence can be suspended for up to two years and for subsequent offences, up to 10 years.