Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 2004 Source: Cochrane Times (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 Cochrane Times Contact: http://www.cochranetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1588 Author: Darryl Mills THE CARNAGE CONTINUES ON OUR ROADS Cochrane Times - It's my least favourite subject to write about, but probably the one I write about most. Drinking and driving and the lip service our society pays to the fight against it. Last week, it was an eight-year-old Chestermere boy whose young life was snuffed out by a 65-year-old suspected drunk driver driving a one-ton flatbed. The boy's 14-year-old sister was left critically injured, and the family is shattered. Apparently, all because someone was too selfish to not have a few drinks. And then, in a bit of an ironic twist, rather than getting drunk in a bar and crashing into someone else, a man in Calgary allegedly gets drunk and slams into a bar, injuring a group of people. It is the most preventable, pervasive crime in our country, and the experts can talk all they want about the rate of drinking and driving going down. People are still dying everyday in this country at the hands of someone who has been drinking and then gotten behind the wheel. I will be following the case of the 65-year-old very closely to see what, if any, jail time he serves if convicted of being under the influence when his flat-bed crossed the centre line. It is chilling to know that some people who drink and drive and kill get very light jail time, if any at all, while others who drink and drive, and get caught, might get a fine and their license suspended -- big deal. If you get caught drinking and driving, you should go to jail. It is only by dumb luck that you didn't kill someone. If you kill someone while drinking and driving, you should go to jail for a long time and you should never drive again. It really is that simple, or at least it should be. But, our legal system, which is about as in touch with the desires of Canadian society as well as a drunk is with sober thought, continues to hand out lenient sentences. Not only to the drunk driver, or the drunk driver who kills, or the drunk driver who gets caught over and over for driving while suspended, but even to those who do nothing but injure themselves drinking and driving. There it was in the Saturday Calgary Sun. A man who spent a night drinking, and then slammed into the back of a stalled paving truck and trailer was awarded $600,000 from the paving company. Incredibly, even though this bozo had a blood alcohol level of twice the legal driving limit, he was ruled only 25 per cent responsible for the crash, while the paving company took 75 per cent of the blame for not using cones, or the four-way flashers on. Well, this guy shouldn't have been driving at all, so he should be 100 per cent to blame, case closed. But no. Justice Donald MacLeod sided with the driver and offered some mumbo-jumbo about making adjustments for absorption after the crash, and the difference between serum and whole blood. Arrrrrrrgh. THERE is why we have people driving drunk on our roads. On one hand we're warned not to do it. But, then you do it and you're $600,000 richer. Give me a break. Then, in Monday's Sun, oh joy, we hear deputy Prime Minster Anne McLellan is urging Canadian judges to get tough on marijuana grow-ops. I have never inhaled, never puffed, never even touched the stuff. It's not my thing, I don't have a lot of respect for those who do it and I won't be very kind to anyone who ever brings it near my kids. BUT, I say, let's put that same emphasis on cracking down on drinking and driving. Let's give police more money to be conducting year-round checkstops. And let's make jail time mandatory for any drinking and driving offence. No, I'm not a pot fan. But, I can live with the potheads sitting in their basement getting high. I can't live with dead eight-year-olds at the hands of drunk drivers. Let's get our priorities straight. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek