B.C. ombudsperson calls rules that allow private roads to be made public ‘unjust’
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s ombudsperson says a decades-old portion of the Transportation Act has holes big enough that a logging truck could drive through.
Jay Chalke says it’s “unjust” that a section in the act allows some roads on private property to be automatically considered public if government money is spent on maintenance, without the property owner’s knowledge or consent.
A report from Chalke’s office highlights cases where an owner was surprised that she couldn’t stop logging trucks from using the road through her property, while another thought he was using a public road to get to his property, but when it was blocked the Transportation Ministry said it couldn’t help because the road was private.
The report says property owners are not compensated for the reduction in the size of their property when public roads are created and there’s no easy way to determine a road’s ownership.