We Aren't Ready for the Future of Impaired Driving. #opinion
Let me start this rant by saying that I am proud to live in a country with a government that is fair, just, and democratic. By and large, I do not have to worry about corruption, human rights violations, or an absence of the rule of law. Is my government perfect?
Let me start this rant by saying that I am proud to live in a country with a government that is fair, just, and democratic. By and large, I do not have to worry about corruption, human rights violations, or an absence of the rule of law. Is my government perfect? Absolutely not, but it does its job reasonably well for the most part.
And, yet, the justice system failed a 70-year old car enthusiast from my community.
The story starts Wednesday morning in court. A 17-year old boy went to court to answer to a series of charges. According to his mother and step-father, he was so high that he was slurring, slobbering and swearing throughout the court appearance. For the sake of being topical, I am going to assume that the teenager was high on marijuana, but that is purely speculation at this point. Now, I’m not a legal expert by any means, but I am pretty certain that showing up to court high is a pretty good reason to find a defendant in contempt of court.
Apparently, the judge didn’t. He released the teenager despite pleas from his family to do something to get their son off of the streets in his condition. Now, I get it. Contempt is a very discretional charge, and there has to be some pretty significant evidence in order to jail someone for it. In this situation, I get that the judge is running the risk of violating that teen’s civil liberties by throwing him in jail for being high on something. The other side of the story has yet to be told, and a lot of assumptions are being made, but the end result is a real wake-up call to any countries looking at the possibility of legalizing cannabis.
The same 17-year old who, impaired as he was, was released from court, later crashed his girlfriend’s car into a telehandler (the same thing that Jules Bianchi crashed into), and careened across the centre median directly into the path of a Volkswagen Type 1 driven by a 70-year old man, who died at the scene. The impact was so violent that debris was scattered all the way across the freeway (motorway), which caused the road to be shut down for several hours. The 17-year old survived and was charged with, among other things, dangerous driving causing death.
Although it’s merely speculated at this point that the teenager was under the influence of drugs in court and at the time of the crash, let’s just assume that he was. Like I said before, that seems to be, in my mind, reasonable grounds to be found in contempt of court. The judge should have remanded the teenager; and, by his failure to do so, the judge is an accessory (to some extent) in the death of the Volkswagen driver.
But maybe the judge didn’t have much other choice.
You see, field testing for marijuana and/or other cannabis products is controversial. Field testing kits are notorious for generating false positives, so I would find it hard to believe that they would be used as an evidenciary benchmark. In addition, it’s highly possible to test positive long after the effects of marijuana have worn off. But the most worrying evidence comes from a study done by the AAA, which claims that there is no scientific way to determine if a driver is stoned.
In the case of drunk driving, police have a reasonably accurate, minimally-invasive, easy-to-administer roadside test for intoxication: a breathalyzer. This means that, if you get pulled over while driving drunk, you will be caught and there will be evidence against you. Now, you would think that drunk driving would be a thing of the past in light of this invention. You would think that the massive barrage of emotionally-charged PSAs and criminal penalties would make drunk driving a thing of the past. You would think that drunk driving would become so socially unacceptable that people would be conditioned to avoid it.
In my home province of Saskatchewan, however, drinking and driving is still a huge problem. The deputy premier of our province, Don McMorris, recently pleaded guilty to DUI of alcohol. Imagine that: if a high-ranking member of our legislature is not immune to doing something so blatantly stupid and irresponsible, then what is stopping the blue-collar average Joe from doing the same? Are we that devoid of conscience?
Apparently, we are. The AAA study mentioned earlier found that the rate of fatal crashes involving drivers who recently used cannabis doubled in Washington after they legalized marijuana. Remember, we don’t even have a scientific way to prove if someone is stoned, so the risk of getting caught and convicted of stoned driving seems to be a lot lower. Yet, knowing that he would fail a fairly accurate alcohol sobriety test, and realizing that his political career would be ruined if he got caught, even Don McMorris decided that the risk was worth it.
This highlights a major issue in the debate on legalization of cannabis. Any DUI lawyer would easily be able to argue reasonable doubt for clients on trial for driving while stoned. And this has me worried. What’s to stop someone who just did some fat dabs from driving, knowing that he is unlikely to be punished? You could open up a whole Pandora’s box at the expense of public safety.
At the end of the day, if we are going to legalize marijuana, we need to be able to have some sort of effective punishment to keep people who are too stoned to drive off of the roads. Failing that, and the 70-year old Volkswagen enthusiast will be far from the last person to pay for that with his life.
Comments
Schlawyaya Ian Wright Dylan Smit Matt Robinson
Me. Hate the fact that at some point in my life driving may become something of the past…
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The kid? I read that he was an honour student whose life got ruined by drug abuse, so I actually feel kinda bad for that whole situation in that regard.
The politician? Agree with you 100% but he won’t spend a day in jail.
I support legalization, but we have a long way to go when it comes to addressing the implications of it :(
Exactly. Too bad that people can’t take accountability for their own actions anymore.
I have no issue with marijuana being legalized BUT I have a MASSIVE issue with impaired/distracted driving, I think if someone is a present threat to road conditions they should face heavy punishment. As you stated it is easy to test for alcohol and very difficult to test for marijuana which makes the situation difficult. I think until we have a way of truly determining whether not someone in under the influence at the time of driving, we should leave the decision of whether or not to release a driver back to the road to police officers. Obviously if there is no charges that can be brought against a driver they can’t be arrested but should at least be brought to the station to have someone pick them up.
BUT if an individual is obviously unsuited to be operating a motor vehicle similarly to if they were drunk they should be arrested on driving under the influence.
Even Pokemon Go is a problem…absolutely agree with your $0.02
Well i have to agree with OP .i have a problem with legalizing marijuana until we have a working method to test people who consume and drive. Why? Because people are extremely stupid.
Hate to be that one person, but it doesn’t take a genius to know it’s a silly idea to take something like that, or any sort of drugs/alcohol then put yourself behind the wheel of a car. Not hard to look around and see the other people your sharing the road to..but everyone’s mind works differently I guess🙄😞
No you are absolutely correct, which makes it very difficult for me to understand why we still have such a problem with it.
I understand where you are coming from, but I have a few counter arguments. First, the fact that he was 17 means that he was already illegally high due to the fact that he was underage, regardless if weed was legal or not.
My other argument is that it’s not that weed is necessarily detrimental. The real issue, at least in the US, is that Governments has had a “because I said so” approach to why weed is bad, rather than explaining why. Personally, I believe in legalization simply because treating it the same as serious drugs (such as meth or heroine) is causing more and more people to see only its benefits. Yes, it can impair your memory, reaction, and reasoning, but so does alcohol (which is legal).
There definitely should be a more effective way of judging DUIs when it comes to THC levels, but banning it all together due to the act of a few reckless individuals is frankly irresponsible.
I agree with part of your argument. While marijuana might be ok (I personally believe it isn’t), derivatives certainly aren’t. I’ve seen people do dabs and be unable to walk, let alone drive.
We have pretty effective mobile drug testing here. But it’s far from perfect. For me if you drink/take drugs you should not drive a car and even more important never get in the car with someone who has!
http://roadsafety.transport.nsw.gov.au/stayingsafe/alcoholdrugs/drugdriving/
I’d rather get in the car with my friend who smokes a lot of weed but is a great driver 10/10 times than with my girl friend who can barely control herself SOBER.
Stop just reciting random words and see the facts that its more about the PERSON rather than the substance.
Legalize marijuana or criminalize alcohol.
People don’t tend to get aggressive when stoned on weed.
Weed is illegal, yet people drive stoned. Meth is illegal, but people drive method up. Coke, heroin, speed… People drive on them all.
And there’s a high chance they have also been drinking because that’s the socially acceptable one.
It’s illegal to drive impaired. Period.
i know it’s a serious topic and all but you said
high chance
Here’s how I see it: Distracted driving of ANY KIND is totally wrong. Phones, drugs, alcohol, infotainment, etc. If you can’t give 100% of your undivided attention to driving than you shouldn’t be driving period.
I think alongside reassessing our relationship with drugs we should also be reassessing our relationship with driving. For those of us who aren’t driving enthusiast it has more or less become a secondary task (driving.) The cars essentially drive themselves and you are free to talk on the phone, fiddle with the apps on the radio, sing along to the music, all while kind of autopiloting around, and I think that is so wrong.
It’s more dangerous statistically speaking to text and drive than it is to drink and drive, neither is acceptable but it proves distracted driving is still a major issue.
So, like this, I think the same is true for Cannabis in particular. It’s nothing close to alcohol but it is still MAJOR distraction from driving. Which falls under impairment. Talking on the phone and driving is impared driving. Fiddling with Twitter is impared driving. impared driving needs to stop overall
If every car was a race car we’d all have a more respectful relationship with driving…
Anyway, that’s my two cents. Great write up! And some great points being made in the comments, I like posts like this!
My favorite part in this comment is the racecar part
I strongly disagree. If anything cannabis helps tremendously with concentration and can be used to enhance performance driving.
Just because some dumb sl\/t gets high and texts on her phone and crashes doesnt mean everyone will.