Driving instructor Vladyslav Konevshchynskyi says Moncton’s missing or faded pavement markings are making it difficult for his students to navigate roads and intersections.
Pavement markings disappear beginning of every spring, leaving motorists to their best guess

Rhythm Rathi · CBC News
· Posted: May 09, 2026 5:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours ago
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Moncton driving instructor Vladyslav Konevshchynskyi said the few months of spring with faded road markings can be dangerous for drivers. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)
Driving instructor Vladyslav Konevshchynskyi says Moncton’s missing or faded pavement markings are making it difficult for his students to navigate roads and intersections.
“By the end of March every year in Moncton, all of us, drivers, instructors, new drivers, we have the same problem,” he said.
Every year, the City of Moncton has to repaint its road markings after the harsh winter conditions take their toll on the paint. There is little to no paint left on some roads between the time the snow melts and city crews repaint the lines.
Konevshchynskyi, who runs the Canadian Drivers College in Moncton, said the faded lines make it confusing for him and his students and described driving between March and May as a guessing game.
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