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Nova Scotia keeps minor injury cap, triples limit to $7,500


April 29, 2010   by Canadian Underwriter


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Nova Scotia has kept its minor injury cap on pain and suffering awards for automobile accident injuries, but tripled its maximum limit to $7,500.
The government announced amendments to the Insurance Act and draft regulations on Apr. 28. The amendments and regulatory changes will:
•    amend the definition of minor injury to mean strains, sprains and whiplash-associated disorders, mirroring the definition used in Alberta;
•    increase the maximum pain and suffering award limit to $7,500;
•    index the cap limit to inflation; and
•    enable at a later date the introduction of optional full-tort coverage, which would allow injured persons to seek greater compensation.
“The new measures will apply to injuries on or after today,” the government announced in a press release. “The amendments and regulatory changes will come into force July 1 to allow insurance companies time to make necessary system changes.”
Nova Scotia Finance Minister Graham Steele told the CBC that the “changes won’t be retroactive…because that would have cost $69 million and driven up premiums for all drivers.”
 “Optional full-tort coverage requires additional time to develop,” the government added in its release. “Government will conduct a broader review of automobile insurance this fiscal year.”
The amendments represent the government’s response to a public discussion paper it launched earlier in 2010. The consultation paper was part of a cap review promised during Nova Scotia’s election campaign in 2009.


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