Snowmobiler paralyzed in crash warns riders to get insured - Action News
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Montreal

Snowmobiler paralyzed in crash warns riders to get insured

After an accident left her a paraplegic, Camille Ren, 23, learned she'd have to pay to make her home wheelchair accessible. She didn't know her insurance didn't cover personal injury.

Camille Ren left paraplegic by accident in February, days before her 23rd birthday

This season was Camille Ren's first winter snowmobiling. She says she wasn't aware she needed to buy personal injury insurance. (Radio-Canada)

Camille Renwas out riding her snowmobile with a friend in her friend's backyard inSaint-Lonard-d'Aston,130 kilometres west of Quebec City, last Feb. 3,when thethrottle jammed.

Ren's friend managed to get off themachine, but Ren continued riding and tried to release the gas.

"I wasn't looking where I was going, and there was a snowbank, and I drove right into it," Ren said.

Her snowmobile flew off the snowbank and launched her into the air. She wentone way,her machine wentthe other.

Ren says the landing didn't hurt that much because she wasn't going very fast.

"I tried to get back up as if nothing had happened because I wasn't in pain," she recalled. "My legs wouldn't follow my body."

She tried againto move, but her legs wouldn't budge. Once in hospital, Renlearned the full extent of her injuries: four broken ribs, a fractured neck, a concussion and a broken spinal cord.

Camille Ren was left paralyzed from the waist down following a snowmobile accident on Feb. 3, four days before her 23rd birthday. (Submitted by Camille Ren)

She underwent an eight-hour operation, andwhen she came to, Ren learned she would never walk again news she received as she celebrated her 23rd birthday with friends and family in hospital.

"It was a lot to handle," she said."I would have preferred to have my birthday somewhere else."

That wasn't the end of her grief.

Ren soon discovered her insurance didn't cover personal injury.

She carried the mandatory third-party liability insurance that comes with the access passto the province's snowmobile trails, meaning shewas only covered in case she caused bodily harm to anothersnowmobileror caused property damage.

"I thought I was insured through my licence plate," Rensaid."Like a car, when you pay your licence plates, if you have an accident and are injured, you're covered by the SAAQ," Ren said.

In order to pay to have her parents' home adapted for wheelchair access,Ren'sfriends and family started a crowdfunding campaign, raising almost $23,000 within the first month.

Camille Ren says she'd get back on her snowmobile in a heartbeat if she could. But first, she says, she'd make sure she was properly insured. (Radio-Canada)

Licence fees don't includecoverage

While snowmobilersare required to pay licence plate fees for their machines, none of the money actually goes towardQuebec's collective insurance plan.

Off-roadvehiclessuch as snowmobilesaren't covered under the provincial automobile insurance board'sno-fault insurance policy.
Snowmobilers hit the trails in the Laurentides wildlife reserve, between Quebec City and Saguenay. Many veteran snowmobilers say a lot of riders on the province's trails are unaware of the kind of insurance coverage they have and what they should have. (Peter Tardif/CBC)

By comparison, about one-third of the cost of licence plates for cars and other on-road vehicles contribute to that policy.

The SAAQ's Gino Desrosiers says the insurance board does remind people who drive off-road vehicles such assnowmobiles thatthey need to purchasetheir own personal injury coverage.

"The information is available on our website.People who renew a licence plate get a notice, and our personnel have that information on hand," he explained.

However, Desrosierssayshe can't guarantee that people who register their snowmobiles for the first time are always given that information.

He says it's something theSAAQcould improve upon.


The SAAQ website warns riders to make sure they have personal injury coverage. The public auto insurance board says the only way its insurance would cover a snowmobiler in an accident is if the rider crossed a public road and was hit by a car. (SAAQ)

Ren only began riding this season, and she says no one ever mentioned to her she had to get personal injury insurance when she paid for her licence plate.

"Had I gotten more information myself and been better informed, of course, I would have taken out an insurance policy," she said.

Confusion among snowmobilers

Le Relais l'tapein the Laurentians wildlife reservebetween Quebec City and Saguenayis a popular rest stop for snowmobilers looking to fill up on gas and graba bite.

On a recent visit, dozens were zipping byon their sleds to soak in the last few weeks of the season.

Among them was Serge Martin, who'd travelled several hundred kilometres from his home inDrummondvilleon his black and yellow Bombardier Renegade.

The veteran snowmobilersays heis well aware of what insurance he needs to ride.

However, Martin saysRen's story is proof the Quebec Federation of Snowmobile Clubs needs to do a better job at communicating information.

"She thought she was covered, like she was in her car," Martin said. The fact that that's not the case "has to be made clear."

This winter is Louis-Philippe Vermette's first season snowmobiling. The 17-year-old says he'd never heard anything about personal injury coverage when he registered his snowmobile. (Peter Tardif/CBC)

Louis-Philippe Vermette, 17, from Saint-Hyacinthe, east of Montreal,agrees there could be better information out there.

This winter is his first season on the trails, riding asecondhand Bombardier Ski-Doo he bought online.

LikeRen, he thought his licence plate provided him with some personal injury insurance.

"I was only told I had to be insured ... with third party liability insurance to ride," he said. "Nothing about personal injury."

Jean-Franois Ratfrom the Quebec City region also hasquestions about snowmobile insurance. He just got back into the sport, and he says he's covered for injuries through a policy he has with his job.

However, he admits he thought the mandatory insurance that came with his trail pass covered him for personal injuries.

"Seeing as we have to pay to be on the trail, it's with the federation, and we pay for insurance for me, it's like I was fully insured," he said.

Rat was also under the impression his snowmobile licence plate came with some sort of insurance benefit, like on his car.
Jean-Franois Rat has personal injury insurance through his workplace, but he says he thought his snowmobile insurance license plate came with some sort of insurance benefit. (Peter Tardif/CBC)

Michel Garneau of the Quebec Federation of Snowmobile Clubs agrees there's confusion among riders when it comes to coverage.

But he says snowmobilers have to be awareof what insurance they have and what it covers.

"People have to do their homework,"Garneausaid.

"It'severyone's responsibility to look out for themselves."

However, he saysRen's ordeal is unfortunate and agrees hisorganization will have to review how itinformssnowmobilers about their coverage.

"There's no such thing as too much information."

Ren says a start would be to make sure everybodywho registers a snowmobilegets a pamphlet detailing what kind of insurance they need and should get.

"That way everyone would have the information," she said,"and everybody would get insurance."