Pubdate: Wed, 6 Aug 2008 Source: Aldergrove Star (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Central Fraser Valley Star Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.aldergrovestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/989 Author: Monique Tamminga Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Marijuana and Driving) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) NEW IMPAIRED DRIVING LAWS CRACK DOWN ON DRUG USERS If you are suspected of driving while high on drugs, a police officer now has the right to demand a bodily fluid sample. New federal law gives police more power to investigate and charge a driver impaired by drugs. "We're giving police better tools to detect and investigate drug and alcohol impaired driving, and we're increasing penalties," said Langley MP Mark Warawa. Prior to the new laws, which took effect July 2, drivers suspected of being high could refuse sobriety tests that include first roadside physiological and psychological test followed up by either a saliva or urine sample. Now, just as with breathalyzers, drug testing is mandatory. Should a driver refuse, the person can face a charge of refusing to provide a saliva or urine sample, which carries the same penalties as a driver failing to provide a breathalyzer sample. Sgt. Gerard Sokolowski of Langley RCMP traffic section has handed out numerous 24-hour driving suspensions to drivers suspected of being high. "A lot of the times it's dual impairment, with alcohol and drugs like cocaine or marijuana. It's quite the cocktail," he said. "I've done traffic initiatives where I've stopped three or four drivers in a row who were high." But Langley Mounties won't be bringing anyone in to their detachment for a saliva or urine test just yet. Just as officers have to be specially trained to handle the breathalyzer machine, Mounties will need to be trained to conduct drug tests, said Sokolowski. "No one is totally certified yet but they could be shortly," he said. But the debate continues about the test results. Marijuana stays in a person for around 30 to 40 days, while traces of some drugs dissipate quickly. In 2004, a Langley teen was acquitted of drug-impaired driving (involving marijuana) in a fatal car accident that killed two 16-year-old boys and permanently brain damaged another boy in Aldergrove in 2002. The driver's blood was taken at the hospital and an analysis showed he had high amounts of THC (the drug component of marijuana) in his system. While the sample was allowed as evidence, the integrity of the sample was in doubt by the judge and therefore dismissed. Parents of one of the victims had hoped their son's death would result in drug impairment being treated the same as drunk driving. The Conservative government has been working on this legislation and change to the Criminal Code since that time, said Warawa. "We had been doing drug recognition for about 10 years but it was voluntary up until now," said RCMP Cpl. Daryl Dalby, the provincial co-ordinator for drug recognition experts and field sobriety testers. The trained officer will look at things like blood pressure, pulse and changes in eye movement and dilation, he said. Then a mandatory body fluid test can determine what of seven categories of drugs the person has taken and the level of impairment. "Marijuana may stay in the body for up to six weeks, but a person is only impaired for a few hours and we are testing level of impairment," he noted. He's hoping to have a drug recognition expert officer at each detachment in the province. Along with these new laws, which are part of the federal government's Tackling Violent Crime Act, amendments to Canada's Criminal Code will ensure there is more effective sentencing and monitoring to prevent dangerous, high-risk offenders from offending again, he said. The Conservative government has raised the age of consent from 14 to 16, increased sentences for serious gun crime, ended conditional sentences (house arrest) for serious personal injury and violent offences, including sexual assault, made dangerous offender status more accessible, increase penalties to convicted street racers and created mandatory jail time for serious drug crimes along with changes to an offender getting bail. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake