Pubdate: Wed, 11 May 2016 Source: Minneapolis Star-Tribune (MN) Copyright: 2016 Associated Press Contact: http://www.startribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/266 Author: Joan Lowy, Associated Press STANDARDS FOR DRIVING WHILE HIGH IMPUGNED Measuring Impairment Is Ineffective, AAA Says. Motorists are being convicted of driving under the influence of marijuana based on arbitrary state standards that have no connection to whether the driver was impaired, says a study by AAA. The problem is growing as more states contemplate legalizing the drug. At least three, and possibly 11 states, will vote this fall on ballot measures to legalize marijuana for medicinal or recreational use, or both. Bills to legalize the drug have been introduced in a halfdozen states. Six states - Colorado, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington - have set specific limits for THC, the chemical in marijuana that makes people high, in drivers' blood. Marijuana use is legal in those states for either recreational or medicinal purposes, with the exception of Ohio. The laws presume that a driver whose THC level exceeds the threshold is impaired. But the study by AAA's safety foundation says the limits have no scientific basis and can result in innocent drivers being convicted, and in guilty drivers being released. "There is understandably a strong desire by both lawmakers and the public to create legal limits for marijuana impairment in the same manner we do alcohol," said Marshall Doney, AAA's CEO. "In the case of marijuana, this approach is flawed." Another nine states, including some that have legalized marijuana for medical use, have zero-tolerance laws for driving and marijuana that make not only any presence of THC in a driver's blood illegal, but also the presence of its metabolites, which can linger in a driver's bloodstream for weeks after any impairment has dissipated. That makes no sense, said Mark A.R. Kleiman, a New York University professor specializing in issues involving drugs and criminal policy. "A law against driving with THC in your bloodstream is not a law you can know you are obeying except by never smoking marijuana or never driving," he said. The problem is that determining whether someone is impaired by marijuana, as opposed to having used the drug, is more complex than tests for alcohol impairment. The degree to which a driver is impaired by marijuana use depends a lot on the individual, the study said. Drivers with relatively high levels of THC in their systems might not be impaired, while others with low levels may be unsafe behind the wheel. Some drivers may be impaired when they are stopped by police, but by the time their blood is tested they have fallen below the threshold because THC dissipates rapidly. The average time to collect blood from a suspected driver is often more than two hours because taking a blood sample typically requires a warrant and transport to a police station or hospital. Frequent marijuana users can exhibit persistent levels of the drug long after use, while THC levels decline more rapidly among occasional users. Colorado's 5-nanogram limit for THC in blood "was picked out of thin air by politicians," said Robert Corry, a Denver criminal defense attorney. "Innocent people are convicted of DWI because of this." Studies show that using marijuana and driving doubles the risk of a crash, Kleiman said. Talking on a hands-free cellphone while driving - - legal in all states - quadruples the crash risk, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom