Pubdate: Sun, 08 Nov 2015 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2015 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Catherine Griwkowsky Page: 4 NEXT BATTLE MADD targets drug-impairment MADD Canada isn't waiting for marijuana to be legalized before coming up with an education campaign to stop impaired driving. Leila Moulder, president of the Edmonton and Area MADD chapter, said the organization is working on more campaigns involving drug-impaired driving in a five-year strategy. While MADD began as an organization against drunk driving, they are broadening awareness to stop impaired driving in many different forms. "It can even be emotionally impaired. If you're highly stressed, or if you haven't slept in two days and you're coming o of work, that's an impairment as well," Moulder said. Federally, section 253 of the Criminal Code of Canada deals with impaired driving, which prohibits operation of a car, truck, ATV, boat, aircraft or other vehicles while impaired by alcohol or drugs, including prescription drugs. Before launching campaigns, MADD is gathering research on the effects of driving while high. A 2010 survey commissioned for the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse found, of the drivers who tested positive for drugs, 63.8% tested positive for cannabis, or 4.5% of all the drivers tested. On the campaign trail, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to legalize marijuana, but gave no specifics on when the drug would be regulated, taxed and sold. Recreational and medical marijuana has been legalized in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington, while other jurisdictions have decriminalized it. A Washington Traffic Safety Commission report dated October 2015 showed a doubling in the detection of marijuana use in driver toxicology testing from 2010 to 2014. The 2014 report found 84.3% of drivers who tested positive for cannabinoids were positive for THC - the psycho-active chemical not found in medicinal marijuana - up from 44.4% in 2010. Of the 75 drivers that were involved in fatal crashes who tested positive for THC in 2014, 38 exceeded the limit of 5 nanograms per millilitre. The number of THC-positive drivers in 2014 was higher than the four-year average of 36 drivers, with 75 drivers testing positive, while the opposite was true of alcohol-impaired driving. In 2014, 51 drivers were found to have a blood alcohol concentration of .08 and no other drugs in their system compared to a four-year average of 98 drivers. A 2012 Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use survey found 2.6 % of Canadians admitted to driving within two hours of marijuana use at least once in the past 12 months. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt