Latest posts by Gluckstein Lawyers (see all)
- Helpful tips to deal with the end of Daylight Savings Time - October 28, 2025
- What happens if I get hurt at a professional sporting event? - September 25, 2025
- Travel to the United States can be fun but be aware of the hazards - March 20, 2025
Canada is a country with four seasons and each offers its own appeal. Of course, the changing weather also presents motorists with different challenges.
Summer is now in the rear-view mirror and it’s time for drivers to look down the road to winter. The days that lie ahead are bound to present a myriad of weather conditions that will make driving more hazardous. As drivers are well aware, rain, fog, sleet, frost, freezing rain and snow can turn even the shortest trip into an ordeal.
The RCMP states that nearly 30 per cent of accidents reported to the National Collision Database in 2017 took place on wet, snowy or icy roads. One-third of those collisions occurred in November, December, January and February. To read more, click here.

