Manitoba·Go Public

Budget Car Rental blames possible tire thieves after SUV sends driver, kids spinning out of control

A Winnipeg man wants answers after his frightening experience renting a vehicle with Budget Car Rental. A major safety flaw had him and two children spinning out of control on a highway, ending up in a ditch. Experts warn rentals can be unsafe due to poor maintenance and the drive to keep vehicles on the road.

Budget head office blames franchise owner, who says he's working on improving safety

On the left stands a young girl with long brown hair wearing a purple t-shirt. In the middle stands a man with short grey hair and a navy blue zip-up jacket. On the right is another young girl with long light brown hair wearing a white t-shirt that says "Sturniolo". All three have serious facial expressions.
From left, June Burnett, Norm Wylie and his daughter Sammy Wylie want to know why Budget Car Rental would give them a vehicle not fit to drive. (Warren Kay/CBC)

When Norm Wylie's 12-year-old daughter Sammy, who has Type 1 diabetes, asked if he would take her and a friend on a road trip from Winnipeg to Minneapolis, Minn., to see her favourite YouTube stars, he couldn't say no.

"She gets needles, insulin injections every day and she never asks for anything, never complains. So when she said she wanted to do this, I of course said yes."

The group had scored hard-to-get tickets to see the Sturniolo Triplets, YouTube personalities with more than 5.5 million subscribers.

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The plan was to rent a newer — and safer vehicle — than the one Wylie owns to make the almost 1,500 km drive to Minneapolis and back.

Instead, they got an SUV with tires so bald it sent them spinning out of control on a highway in a vehicle that legally, shouldn't have been on the road. According to one automobile consumer protection expert, it's a sign of the ongoing maintenance and safety issues plaguing some rental companies.

Wylie picked up his rental on Oct. 5 from a Winnipeg Budget Car and Truck Rental. He says the employee assured him that aside from a scratch in the paint, the 2022 Mitsubishi Outlander was good to go, and no walk-around inspection was done.

WATCH | His rental vehicle's tires were so thin it shouldn't have been on the road: 

Budget blames tire thieves for unsafe vehicle

12 months ago
Duration 2:30
Budget Rental Car says thieves have been swapping out tires on its vehicles, which could have resulted in a Winnipeg man’s rental SUV spinning out on a highway. The Budget franchisee says it’s reviewing its policies.

Less than an hour into the drive, it started raining. Sammy and her 13-year-old friend, June Burnett, were in the back seat.

"I could feel the vehicle hydroplaning," Wylie told Go Public.

"The next thing you know, we're doing 360s down the highway. The girls are screaming. I'm screaming. And then we flew backwards into the ditch."

A black SUV lies in a green grassy ditch with the hood pointing upward toward the highway. The sky is grey. On the left of the photo, which was taken through a windshield with raindrops on it, is a tow truck with a tow truck driver standing beside it.
Norm Wylie and his two teenage passengers ended up in a ditch off Highway 75 outside Winnipeg after their rental vehicle from Budget Car and Truck Rental spun out of control. (Sherry Ebner)

'Checkered record' on maintenance

"It was like a bad rollercoaster," said Sammy.

"My first thought was like, why is it happening? And the second was, I wasn't going to be able to go to the show."

Wylie says he was stunned and grateful no one was hurt.

Vehicle rental companies have a "checkered record" when it comes to maintenance, says George Iny, who heads up the Automobile Protection Association (APA).

He noted that safety can take a back seat to keeping vehicles on the road, a situation that was made worse by the pandemic and the vehicle shortage that followed.

A white man with short grey hair looks directly at the camera with a neutral facial expression. He is outside with an urban street in the background and he is wearing a black zip-up jacket.
George Iny, the head of the Automobile Protection Association, says bald tires are a big safety issue. (Christian Patry/CBC)

"The difference now is the pandemic has required them to be renting older vehicles and keeping vehicles in their fleet longer. And these vehicles are going to need more maintenance and probably a more robust inspection program," Iny said.

Go Public asked Avis Budget Group, which oversees Budget Car Rental franchise locations, if that's the case with their vehicles, but they didn't answer the question.

Car rentals are big business. More than 3.7 million Canadians rented a vehicle last year, and those rentals brought in billions in revenue last year, according to market research company Statista Market Insights.

Tire specialist examined treads 

After the accident, Wylie got the rental towed to his in-law's house, then borrowed their car to continue the road trip. When he got back, a family member pointed out how thin the tire tread on the rental looked.

Instead of returning the SUV to Budget, Wylie decided to take it to a tire specialist at Kal Tire, which performed the tire inspection for him as a free service.

The Kal Tire paperwork shows the tread on the rear tires was just 0.8 mm — half the minimum 1.6 mm that's required in most provinces, including Manitoba, where Wylie lives.

The photo is a close-up of a tire's tread.
The back tires of the SUV Wylie rented were so worn that legally, the vehicle shouldn't have been on the road. (Norm Wylie)

Kal Tire found the front tire treads were within legal limits at 4.88 mm, but that could have added to the problem, Iny wrote in an email to Go Public after looking at the results.

"The uneven tire measurements could contribute to the loss of control," he wrote. "The back tires are very worn and could let go with no warning in rain or snow."

MPI, the public insurer in Manitoba, recommends a tread of at least 4.8 mm to increase safety when road conditions are poor.

The fact Budget would rent him a vehicle with such thin treads is "completely inexcusable," Wylie said.

"How can they put me on the road like this in this type of vehicle?"

Franchise owner blames possible tire thieves

Wylie complained to the franchise owner by email. In his response, Don Johal apologized, saying that even before the accident, he had already been "reviewing and re-developing" the vehicle inspection and maintenance program at the locations he oversees.

He told Wylie the new procedures include 15 point inspections by outside service providers every 9,000 km, a 70 point inspection when vehicles hit 40,000 km, and a plan to redesign the vehicle inspection slips to include a separate section for tires only.

"That's pretty convenient timing," Wylie said. "Why wasn't it in place before?"

In his email to Wylie, Johal also blamed tire thieves, saying at times, good tires have been swapped out for bad ones while the vehicles were rented out or sitting on the Budget rental lot at night.

He said he's added security cameras and posted signs to deter theft.

Iny and another expert say it does happen, but it's rare. Wylie says the owner is just passing the buck.

"Basically saying 'It's not our fault that these people are doing these things,'" he said, noting Budget should have checked the tires before renting him the vehicle if tire theft is a known problem.

The front of a grey corporate building is in the background with a large cargo van in front of it. The building and the van have the orange and blue Budget logo on them.
Budget Car Rental at 1700a Waverley Street in Winnipeg where Wylie picked up his rental in early October. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Budget, Avis won't share maintenance records

Budget credited Wylie the $105.53 he spent on the rental, but when he asked the company to provide the maintenance records for the SUV, so he could see for himself what safety checks had been done, that request was ignored, he says.

When asked, Avis Budget Group didn't send the records to Go Public either.

Their head office also didn't answer specific questions about their safety and maintenance policies for all their locations, including Go Public's request to make them public so customers can see what's being done.

Instead the company sent CBC News a short statement.

"All Budget locations, including independently operated franchised locations like the one that was rented to Mr. Wylie, are expected to adhere to the Motor Vehicle Safety Act, as well as our safety and franchise guidelines," they wrote in an email to Go Public.

"We have instructed this location to follow these policies and are taking preventative steps to avoid this happening in the future." 

Transport Canada sets vehicle standards for manufacturing under the federal Motor Vehicle Safety Act. Provinces and territories cover laws around the safe operation of vehicles on public roads.

Under those laws, vehicle owners can face suspended vehicle registrations, mandatory inspections and fines up to $500 for driving unsafe vehicles, depending on the province.

More consumer protection needed: expert

Experts say a tougher, more specific law for rental companies is needed, because rentals are often driven harder than the average vehicle and by people unfamiliar with the make and model, leading to more wear and tear.

It's not clear who owns the rental Wylie was given that broke the tire tread rules in Manitoba. Neither Avis Budget Group nor the Budget franchise would say.

Neither Transport Canada nor the individual provinces and territories have laws that specifically hold rental companies responsible for unsafe vehicles.

WATCH | When your rental doesn't measure up: 

Lawyer shares what to do when rental vehicles fall short

12 months ago
Duration 0:59
Canadian consumer lawyer Jeff Orenstein gives advice about what to do when rental vehicles don't meet safety standards.

California introduced a law last year that clearly says the rental companies themselves need to ensure the vehicles they rent are "mechanically sound and safe to operate."

"It puts them on notice," said Michael Brooks, the executive director at the Center for Auto Safety in the U.S.

"We're making sure that every time that rental vehicle comes back to the facility, it's checked out, deemed safe and can go back out to be rented to another person."

Even without a specific vehicle rental law, Canadian consumer lawyer Jeff Orenstein says that doesn't mean short-term rental companies are off the hook, but it can leave consumers to prove negligence in court.

"It seems fairly clear to me that when a rental company is giving you a vehicle, it should be in proper working order," said Orenstein, the owner of Consumer Law Group.

"It's not good enough for them to say, for example, 'We're trying our best. We've had problems in the past where we put up cameras in our place.' That's really not sufficient."

On the left, a young girl with long light brown hair looks at the camera with an open-mouthed "party" expression. She is wearing a blue t-shirt, sunglasses, and a blue cowboy hat and makes a "hang loose" gesture with her right hand. On the right stands another young girl, with long brown hair, smiling and looking toward the other girl, wearing a purple sweatshirt and making a peace sign with her left hand.
After a delay of a few hours, Sammy Wylie, left, and her friend June Burnett finally made it to the show in Minneapolis after swapping the unsafe rental for a family member's vehicle. (Norm Wylie)

Norm Wylie, his daughter Sammy Wylie and her friend June Burnett, who was on that road trip, say they would like to see Canada beef up its laws and place more responsibility for unsafe vehicles on the rental companies.

Sammy says it's "totally crazy" Budget would give them an unsafe vehicle.

"That is the most unresponsible thing you can do."

Burnett agrees. "The car could have just as easily flipped over and we could have died," she said.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rosa Marchitelli is a national award winner for her investigative work. As co-host of the CBC News segment Go Public, she has a reputation for asking tough questions and holding companies and individuals to account. Rosa's work is seen across CBC News platforms.

With files from Lori Ward