Pubdate: Thu, 21 Mar 2002
Source: Independent  (UK)
Copyright: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Charles Arthur
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

OUTCRY AT REJECTION OF LOWER DRINK-DRIVE LIMIT

Safety campaigners reacted angrily yesterday to the Government's 
decision not to lower the drink-driving limit.

David Jamieson, a Transport minister, said the limit would remain 
unchanged at 80mg of alcohol to 100ml of blood. Road safety groups 
had wanted the threshold reduced to 50mg/ 100ml - the equivalent of 
two small glasses of wine.

"We feel badly let down by this," said Jane Everson, the secretary of 
the Campaign Against Drinking and Driving. Her son Gareth was 19 when 
he was killed by a teenage drink-driver in May 1998.

Ms Everson said: "Other European countries have lower limits. I can't 
understand why the British Government does not fall into line. It is 
estimated that a lower limit would prevent 50 deaths and 250 injuries 
a year."

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents said not lowering 
the limit was "a missed opportunity". Its spokesman, Roger Vincent, 
said: "We think the lower limit is a good idea. Annual drink-drive 
deaths rose slightly in 2000 and we fear that the anti drink-drive 
message is not getting through to young people. We would like to see 
novice drivers being given a lower limit -even as low as 20mg."

Before government campaigns began in the mid 1970s there were as many 
as 2,000 road deaths a year from drink-driving offences. The 
campaigns lowered the figure to 1,640 in 1979 and 460 in 1999. The 
provisional figure for the year 2000 showed a rise to 520. Figures 
for 1999 showed 180 of the 460 drink-drive deaths were among people 
aged 20 to 29, with only 70 involving drivers aged 40 or more.

The police have long campaigned for a lowering of the limit, although 
the Association of Chief Police Officers declined to comment 
yesterday.

The RAC's campaigning arm, the RAC Foundation, said the limit should 
remain the same. "There is no evidence that lower limits lead to 
fewer accidents and we think drivers understand, and respect, the 
current 80mg limit," said the foundation's executive director, Edmund 
King. "European countries with 50mg limits also have graduated 
penalties while we automatically ban drivers who are over our 80mg 
limit.

"The majority of drivers killed in drink-driving incidents are more 
than twice over the UK limit. Let's enforce the current limit and 
target hard-core drink-driving offenders."

An unpublished study funded by the Government has found that drinking 
one glass of wine impairs a driver's ability more than smoking a 
single joint.

The draft findings by the Transport Research Laboratory showed that 
people given enough alcohol to put them on the 50mg limit took more 
risks and drove faster than those who had smoked a joint. But 
cannabis smokers suffered short-term concentration problems when 
asked to hold a constant speed in a driving simulator and to follow a 
figure-of-eight loop system.

People who drank and smoked a joint also became more careful than 
those who were drunk, the research found, because they were more 
aware of their state despite still driving worse than those who had 
only one drug.

"Whereas alcohol promotes risk-taking ... cannabis promotes 
conservative driving," Nicholas Ward, technical adviser to a European 
trial evaluating the effects of drugs on driving, told New Scientist. 
"But it may cause attention problems and misperceptions of time."
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