Pubdate: Fri, 01 Feb 2008 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2008 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Bruce Owen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) CRACKDOWN ON DRUGS AND DRIVING Bill To Give Police Power To Charge Those Suspected Of Being High HIGH times behind the wheel could soon be over. The Harper government's Bill C-2, currently before the Senate, will give police the power to charge people with impaired driving who are suspected of being high on marijuana, cocaine and other drugs. Police and anti-impaired-driving advocates say the law should be in effect by this summer. It's aimed at young drivers who think driving high on pot or other drugs isn't as bad as drinking and driving. "A lot of people have this Cheech and Chong mentality and think they can drive better while under the influence of cannabis," MADD chief executive officer Andrew Murie said. "But they are severely impaired. They're putting themselves and other people at risk." What's the new law about? Winnipeg police Patrol Sgt. Rob Riffel said it gives officers the authority to order suspected impaired drivers to do a standardized roadside or field sobriety test. The test doesn't measure drug impairment; it instead reveals signs of impairment like an inability of a drugged-up driver to follow an object with their eyes or perform a basic physical test, like balancing on one foot. Riffel said if the suspect fails the field test, the new law then gives the officer the power to demand a urine, saliva or blood test. A body fluid test would show which drug the person had consumed. Refusal to submit to a test would result in a criminal charge, much like what happens now when a drunk driver refuses to blow into a breathalyser machine. "It gives us another tool to take impaired drivers off the highways," RCMP Sgt. Wayne Blackmore added. How soon will police start doing field sobriety tests? They do them now in many provinces, including Manitoba. But what's been missing is making it a criminal offence, treating drugged driving the same as drunk driving under the Criminal Code of Canada. In Manitoba, the Doer government gave police the authority to do sobriety tests under the provincial Highway Traffic Act in 2004. It allowed police to pull a person's driving privileges for three months if they failed three short tests to display proper mental and physical co-ordination. Blackmore said C-2 takes it up a notch, so that people caught driving under the influence of drugs are treated the same way by the courts as drunk drivers. Bill C-2 is part of the much-debated federal Tackling Violent Crime Act. Murie said the other big question mark on C-2 is how soon is will actually become law. Although it can be easily passed by the Senate, it can also be held up in the upper house. "A lot of what happens in the Senate has more to do with the politics of the day," he said. The other black cloud for police is the possibility of a spring federal election, which would again delay the package becoming law. The law has been drifting around Ottawa for about seven years, but three federal elections delayed it. C-2 being before the Senate this month is the closest it's come to being a reality. Why is it needed? Politics aside, all sides agree impaired driving is a national scourge. Murie said an average of 1,500 Canadians are killed each year due to the actions of an impaired driver. Nine to 12 per cent of those drivers are high on drugs or a combination of drugs and alcohol. By comparison, the national homicide rate is about 600. "Impaired driving is still by far the No. 1 criminal cause of death," he said. A 2006 survey by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse said young men are driving under the influence of cannabis as often as, or more often than, they drive under the influence of alcohol. Researchers said it is not clear what impact the figures are having on crash-related death and injury. Riffel said so many drive high because they don't think they'll get caught. Riffel said about 100 police officers in Manitoba have been formally trained in doing court-recognized field sobriety tests. Twenty officers are also trained as being drug-recognition experts, meaning they have the training to determine what drug you're on without you uttering a word. Murie said he expects once police begin enforcing the law, the true nature of drug impairment will be revealed. "I expect we'll be reading in the media that police are shocked at the drug impairment numbers," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin