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“These modifications often don’t meet the safety standards of the Motor Vehicle Act and its Regulations and can put the occupants of the vehicle, and the rest of the motoring public at risk.”
Traffic enforcement officers say a common modification encountered by police is the illegal raising or lowering of a vehicle’s suspension height by more than 10 centimetres from the specification of the vehicle manufacturer.
Regulations state that modified vehicles cannot be driven, operated or parked on a B.C. highway until they have been inspected by a certified inspector at a designated facility.
As for tinted windows, no materials that reduce the amount of light transmitted through a vehicle’s window can be affixed more than 75 millimetres below the top of the vehicle’s windshield, a side window that is not behind the driver, or the rear window if the vehicle is equipped with an outside rearview mirror.
Drivers and motorcyclists should also beware that aftermarket exhaust systems or no muffler at all that creates excessive noise can subject them to a fine or notice to rectify the issue.
In April alone, law enforcement officers of the Central Okanagan municipal traffic section issued 31 violation tickets or notices.