Pubdate: Sat, 11 Oct 2008 Source: Record, The (Kitchener, CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Record Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/942MrkRX Website: http://www.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 Author: Melinda Dalton Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) DRIVERS IMPAIRED BY DRUGS AND ALCOHOL ARE TARGET OF OKTOBERFEST RIDE CAMPAIGN WATERLOO REGION If you get behind the wheel this weekend, consider yourself warned. Waterloo Regional Police will not only have their eyes out for drivers who've tied one on at the festhallen. For the first time during an Oktoberfest RIDE campaign, police will also be looking for drivers impaired by drugs. "Anyone being stopped at the side of the road or in a RIDE program who has drug in their system, we are in a position now to remove those people from the roadways," said Staff Sgt. Scott Diefenbaker of the traffic branch. In July, Bill C-2 came into effect, allowing police to demand drivers who they suspect are impaired to submit to a field sobriety test and an evaluation by a drug recognition expert. Waterloo Regional Police have eight drug recognition experts, the second highest per service in the province. The specially trained officers conduct a series of 12 tests to determine the class of drug that is causing the impairment. The targets are illicit drugs, such as marijuana and cocaine, as well as misuse of over-the-counter and prescription drugs, Diefenbaker said. "There's no difference between doing that and drinking and getting behind the wheel of the car," he said. "Those people who are doing that as an alternative to drinking and driving are making the wrong decision." Since the law came into effect, the service has laid eight charges of driving while impaired by drugs. Those charges probably wouldn't have been laid before the legislation, Diefenbaker said. This year, police have more than 100 officers devoted to the Oktoberfest Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere program and will be running checks every night of the festival. Yesterday marked the kickoff to Oktoberfest RIDE and the national road safety initiative, Operation Impact. Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner Julian Fantino, Waterloo Regional Police Chief Matt Torigian and RCMP district commander Supt. Thomas Bucher were in Cambridge for the event. "It's a weekend to think about all of our many blessings, but at the same time, there's this euphoria and celebration going on," Fantino said. "We urge people to act responsibly and if they are drinking, they ought not to be driving. The consequences of doing otherwise are so grave." Torigian said the police service this year is co-ordinating RIDE efforts with the OPP to ensure all areas of Waterloo Region are covered efficiently. "We have to do our part to ensure this is a safe and successful Oktoberfest," he said. Last year, Waterloo Regional Police checked nearly 20,000 vehicles during Oktoberfest RIDE. Thirty-one 12-hour suspensions were issued, along with six charges for exceeding the legal blood alcohol limit and three impaired driving charges. Police will conduct both stationary checks and mobile patrols throughout the 10-day festival this year. But they can't be everywhere at once and need the public's help to keep drunk drivers off the roads, Torigian said. "If people are out on the roads and observe what they believe to be an impaired driver, please call." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin