Pubdate: Wed, 22 Nov 2006 Source: Airdrie Echo (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 Airdrie Echo Contact: http://www.airdrieecho.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1558 Author: Russell Barth and Myron Thompson TWO PERSPECTIVES I am pleased that my government will soon introduce legislation to tackle drug-impaired driving. The objective of the proposed legislation is to avoid reckless deaths and injuries of innocent people. Therefore, we need to target drug-impaired driving and take any and all actions required to prevent future drug-impaired incidents. The goal of this legislation is to make drug-impaired driving as socially unacceptable as drunk driving has become amongst adults and teens alike. Under the proposed legislation, Canada's new government will: provide police with more tools to detect drug-impaired drivers; increase penalties for drug-impaired driving; strengthen presumptions of breath and blood tests; and promote awareness about drug-impaired driving with partners like MADD. We are going to provide police and prosecutors with more tools, so that drug-impaired drivers can more easily be detected and convicted. Myron Thompson is the MP for Wild Rose Re: drugged driving laws -- how can the government justify this new affront to our civil rights and liberties? There are no numbers to show that there has been an `increase' in drugged driving incidents, as no official study has ever been done. Remember, this is the same government which wants to `crack down' on a crime rate that has been steadily dropping. Imagine this scenario: someone is driving around, stoned on tranquillizers, painkillers, cold medications or some combination thereof. The driver gets pulled over and appears -- to the police officer -- to be visibly impaired. The driver blows zero for alcohol and his urine and blood samples test negative for illegal drugs. That driver is free to go and repeat the offence. But if the driver tests positive for even trace amounts of marijuana - -- which may show up in the body for up to three months after the last puff, or because of secondhand smoke -- that driver will be booked for impaired driving. This is the same as busting someone for drunk driving three days after his or her last drink. Clearly, this new `drugged driving' legislation is designed specifically to profile marijuana users. How medical marijuana users will fare is yet to be seen. The new law will likely ignore the dangers of other impairment factors - -- such as: coffee or cigarette or cell phone in hand; rowdy pets and passengers; booming stereos; over-the-counter and prescription medications; blood sugar imbalances; fatigue; inexperience; bad driving habits; old age; and just plain old stupidity. To focus on any one thing is arbitrary and discriminatory. And that is exactly what this new law will do. It won't matter if the driver is tripling his or her dose of a prescription medication, but if marijuana shows up in your blood, you are considered guilty until proven innocent. So much for Canada being a `just' society. Russell Barth, of Ottawa, is a federal medical marijuana licence holder. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek