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Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jul 2006 Source: Langley Advance (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.langleyadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1248 Author: Roxanne Hooper Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?224 (Cannabis and Driving) EDUCATION: OFFICIALS UNITE IN THE FIGHT AGAINST POT USE A new public education program launched Wednesday is designed to prevent smoking pot and driving. Society's acceptance of marijuana use is killing too many local youngsters, and has prompted Langley RCMP to partner with several community service and government agencies this week in an effort to stop the senseless deaths. One of the first steps must be to change misconceptions among Langley teens that pot is harmless and legal, Cpl. Diane Blain said during a press conference Wednesday morning at the Langley RCMP detachment. "Unfortunately, it appears that our society has grown complacent about marijuana use. A lot of people simply think that it's no big deal," Blain said. "It is a big deal. Marijuana use has claimed many lives, it is a health and safety hazard, and its production is linked to organized crime." She and other speakers, including RCMP Supt. Janice Armstrong, Langley MP Mark Warawa, and B.C. Solicitor General John Les, pleaded for the public's help in discouraging the community's youth from using drugs and then driving. Blain pointed to two fatal accidents, one in Aldergrove during April of 2002, and another in Fort Langley this past April. In both cases, the drivers were believed to have consumed marijuana. Although a coroner's report on the most recent accident is not expected for another month, regional coroner Vince Stancato confirmed that THC (the plant's main psychoactive chemical) was found among the drugs and alcohol in 18-year-old Justin Dionne's system during the autopsy. In the April 10 crash, Dionne and buddy 16-year-old Kevin Molloy were in a westbound 1989 Honda Civic that spun out of control and struck a hydro pole on 96th Ave., killing both young men. "The driver involved in the incident had drug and alcohol in his system," Stancato told the Langley Advance following the press conference. "And yes, THC was one of the drugs in his system." Blain also turned the spotlight on another Aldergrove accident that dates back more than four years, in which two other young men were killed and another suffered serious injuries and brain damage. They were all passengers in the car. Dayton Unger and Simon Featherston, both 16 years old, were killed in that late-night crash, when another 16-year-old driver lost control of his 2000 Ford Mustang while attempting to pass a vehicle. The car slammed into a ditch in the 6200-block of 264th St. Unger died at the scene. Featherston was rushed to Royal Columbian Hospital, but doctors were unable to save him. The driver in that crash, now an adult, was later convicted of two counts of dangerous driving causing death, and was sentenced to six months of house arrest and two years probation, was prohibited from driving for six years, and received a two-year curfew. Blain said that, while evidence was presented during his trial that the driver was high on marijuana, he was acquitted of a related charge. Featherston's mother spoke during the press conference, supporting the need for more youth education about the ramifications of marijuana. "I am here to promote change: for parents to be more proactive; to lessen, if not eliminate these kinds of senseless, preventable deaths and the resulting devastation they cause," Featherston said. While new laws won't bring back Featherston's son or any other local young men killed needlessly, Warawa said government is preparing to table a law that would give police the ability to mandate drivers to give a sample of bodily fluid if suspected of being under the influence of drugs. "The goal is to give police officers the tools they need to remove impaired drivers from our streets and make our streets safer," Warawa said, applauding Helen Featherston for coming forward to help exact such change. Further, the politician insisted, his Conservative government will not bring forward any laws that will decriminalize marijuana, and that he would personally advocate for stricter, not weaker laws to combat impaired driving. Langley Youth and Family Services spokesman Jim Smith hoped the new joint initiative will result in a comprehensive study into marijuana use and effects, which would then give agencies and, in turn, the public accurate information dispelling the myths around pot as a harmless herb and medicine. Solicitor General John Les hoped a public education program like the one proposed Wednesday will gain momentum and eventually parallel the success of the CounterAttack campaign that through the decades has obliterated society's acceptance of drinking and driving. There is no quick-fix solution available to the problem, Supt. Armstrong told the media. But to end the senseless mutilating and slaughter of Langley's youth due to marijuana use and abuse, she reiterated, everyone must get involved and work together - everyone from children and parents, to the schools, community support agencies, governments, and police. The message has to reach people of all ages that smoking pot is illegal and that consuming marijuana then driving is deadly, the head Mountie said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin