Pubdate: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 Source: Chronicle, The (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 Media Transcontinental Contact: http://www.westislandchronicle.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4097 Author: Marc Lalonde Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) NEW LEGISLATION TAKES AIM AT DRUGGY DRIVERS Federal legislation designed to make it easier on police to catch drivers under the influence of illegal drugs is welcome and overdue, said Montreal police Station 1 Cmdr. Michel Lecompte. "My one comment was it's about time," he said, adding the new legislation will allow police to continue to impress upon motorists the importance of being sober and safe on the road. "I still remember the '50s and '60s, at Christmas, everybody used to go get drunk at parties and take their cars, but times have changed with the increasing deterrents for drunk driving. Today, (Station 1 police) hold 15 to 20 different operations every year. It's a different world now," he said. Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced last week his minority government would soon introduce legislation that will allow police more tools to detect drug-impaired drivers, increase penalties for drug-impaired driving, strengthen presumptions of breath and blood tests and promote awareness about drunk driving with partners like Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD). "Our government recognizes the need to target drug-impaired driving. We are prepared to take action to prevent future drug-impaired incidents. The objective of the proposed legislation is to avoid reckless deaths and injuries of innocent people," Harper said while attending the launch of MADD's annual Red Ribbon campaign in Kitchener, Ont. last Thursday. "In fact, we hope to make drug-impaired riving as socially unacceptable as drunk driving has become amongst adults and teens alike," the PM added. Lecompte, a longtime anti-drug crusader, agreed. "Anything the government can do is welcome. It's a start, because we know we will never be able to stop them all. There will always be the minority of the population who will get drunk and drive, or borrow a car if they don't have their own. We can stop it 99.9 per cent, though. Anything they can do in government to help us on the street is welcome," he said. MADD West Island president Graham Doughty said the best way to stop drivers from getting behind the wheel under the influence of anything - - illegal drugs or alcohol - is to increase deterrents. "The best way to stop people from doing something is to motivate them not to. Hopefully, this will make people think twice before they get behind the wheel and drive when they are under the influence of anything," said Doughty, who founded the West Island chapter of MADD in 2004. Doughty's daughter Amber and friend Dahlia Sinclair were struck and killed by a driver Doughty believes was drunk, on Cartier Avenue in Pointe Claire in 2000. He added that the extra tools for determining if a driver is under the influence of drugs will help police keep roadways safe. "The fact is, in this day and age,m there are probably as many 'drug drivers' on the road as there are drunk drivers and the police will now be able to get them off the road easier, and that's good for everybody," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek