Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Liam Britten Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) ROADSIDE DRUG TESTS TOO SKETCHY While the new Carbon Tax may have gotten a lot of attention in the media, there was another change in regulations affecting driving made on July 1 of this year -- police officers can now test drivers for drug impairment in the same way that they test for alcohol thanks to the implementation of Bill C-16. Of course, the mechanisms for testing are different. There's no breathalyser for drugs, so it must be done in other ways. When an officer pulls a suspect over, he or she will have to prove to the officer that they are fit to drive by performing sobriety tests. And if an officer flunks you on your roadside sobriety test, that means you get to pee in a cup down at the station. This legislation relies on two assumptions that I feel are faulty; first, it presumes that police officers are skilled enough at performing roadside evaluations for drugs to detect intoxication in a driver. Secondly, we are assuming that a blood or urine test can accurately determine that a driver is under the influence of a drug to a degree that impairs driving at the time they are driving. In regards to the first assumption, I doubt the average traffic cop can reliably determine if someone is high on drugs from a few multitasking tests. A 2002 study in Forensic Science International showed that officers performing these tests are wrong between 19 and 35 per cent of the time. That could mean a third of all those who get pulled over will be giving bodily fluid to the cops whether they were high or not. And what about those fluid tests? How will they determine if you're intoxicated enough? We currently don't have a definite intoxication level for drugs like the 0.08 per cent limit we have for alcohol. And perhaps best of all, that blood test can't even pinpoint when you were intoxicated. Even if you smoked a joint at a party three weeks ago, that blood test will still show you as positive for weed, and that means you could be charged. As Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart wrote, "Forcing people to provide bodily fluids is intrusive; the intrusion is compounded when the samples cannot, with confidence, be used to measure impairment." Perhaps before people begin to celebrate these new laws, we should ask ourselves how dangerous is driving under the influence of drugs. According to ICBC's own data, drivers under the influence of drugs or suspected of being under the influence of drugs accounted for less than one per cent of all collisions. So why is it that small fraction of drivers are being pursued with such fervour? Driver inattention, such as talking on a cell phone, led to almost 37 per cent of collisions; if we're so committed to making the roads safer, why is it still legal to talk on a cell phone while driving, and why is it almost impossible to take careless drivers off the road? It may be easier and politically more popular to target drugged drivers, but they really account for nothing more than a drop in the bucket. Don't get me wrong, if you're stoned, tripping or flying so hard that you can't walk a chalk line, you shouldn't be driving. But that said, the way these new laws are set up, it's highly likely that we're going to see a good number of innocent people convicted alongside those who are truly making our roads less safe. If we begin thinking that these new tests are so infallible as to lead to convictions the way the breathalyser does, we're really ignoring the vast margin of error they possess, and the potentially devastating costs to those convicted erroneously. Here's hoping this law gets taken off the books, and quick. Liam Britten is a student from the Print Futures Program at Douglas College doing an internship at The TIMES. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin