Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB) Copyright: 2008, Vue Weekly. Contact: http://www.vueweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918 Author: Connie Howard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) WELL, WELL, WELL - PROGRESS ON ROAD SAFETY REQUIRES COMPLEX SOLUTIONS Our government has been busy ramping up its health and safety efforts in recent months, proposing changes to food and drug safety laws (now thankfully on pause), and passing new impaired-driving laws. I'm all for successfully keeping those who still think it's OK to drive drunk off the road, but I'm not sure the new wider net that has been cast will be strong enough to stand up in court, big enough to fully address impaired driving or porous enough to avoid being a catch-all for things not relevant. The new law, which goes beyond alcohol impairment to include drug impairment, has given the Canada Safety Council reason to call it premature. One of the problems, they say, lies in the scope created by making drug-impaired driving a criminal offense. Under criminal law, the accused in Canada are innocent until proven guilty, which means the law has to be able to hold up in court-something that will be a bit of a problem with most non-alcohol kinds of impairment, given that we haven't yet set defensible impairment levels for other drugs. Not that the growing problem of non-alcohol impaired driving is something we should ignore. It's just that it's complex and resistant to simple solutions. For one, millions of us regularly drive on the effects of legal drugs-sleeping pills, antihistamines, decongestants, Tylenol with codeine, morphine pain meds, anti-nausea meds and anti-anxiety meds-many of which regularly show up in the blood of impaired drivers, and many of which can impair driving as much as alcohol can. And even more of us regularly drive impaired for reasons that have little to do with drugs-driving into the wee hours of the night after a long day counting on caffeine to keep us safe, or with dementia (more than doubling our risk of a collision), or under time-pressure-induced haste, or grief-induced distraction, or screaming-child-induced desperation or a death wish-all of which clearly impair us, and all of which are complicated, difficult to measure and harder still to ban. And there is of course the marijuana issue, the most obvious problem being that the presence of THC in the blood doesn't equal being impaired-THC, as is commonly known, lingers long after its effects have worn off, which means we'll likely see a lot of denial of use, challenges of charges, court backlogs, expense and little change in actual numbers of truly impaired drivers on the road. Because some will delight in looking for THC, there's little doubt about that, all while the problem of overconfident, angry, testosterone-laden, cellphone-packing, risk-preferring young adults-arguably a much bigger problem-continues to be largely ignored. I'd never advocate driving under any kind of potentially negative influence-ask my kids, who are very tired of my reminders that it's not safe to get in at 2 am and then hit the road at 5 am to get to their destination for 8 am. It's just that impaired driving, especially any non-alcohol-related kinds of impairment, is a problem that resists simplistic and heavy-handed solutions. Effectively addressing road safety will require much more than stiffer penalties. Suspending licenses for any kind of poor road behaviour is a fair, inexpensive and reasonably effective tool, but really effective solutions will involve addressing things like the aggression and hair-trigger rage of so many on the road (research has shown profound reductions in aggression with omega-3 and mineral supplementation of modern on-the-run diets), education about the many different ways we're tempted to get behind the wheel impaired, reducing our need for medications of all kinds and making it respectable and easier to choose not to drive when certain medications are necessary. But I'm wasting my time. That's all complicated and expensive, and we're already hoping that the new tighter laws will do the trick, and maybe even deter marijuana use as a nice little side effect earning us some brownie points with the US. Canada, with those currently at the helm buying into the idea of harsher punishment as the way to manage everything from choice in natural medicines to addictions and road safety, appears to be well on its way down the path toward bogged-down legal systems, fuller jails and good times for lawyers. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom