many people driving to work after a Christmas party the night before would not pass a Breathalyzer if there was zero tolerance. Surely there has to be a little lee-way?
I hope by zero tolerance you don't mean "zero alcohol" - that is virtually unenforceable in practice and leads to all sorts of 'exceptions' being exploited by expensive lawyers.
The current limit is (possibly) too high - other countries have one around 60% of the English figure - so a reduction might make sense, but not to zero.
Retrochic - //many people driving to work after a Christmas party the night before would not pass a Breathalyzer if there was zero tolerance. Surely there has to be a little lee-way? //
I disagree.
I think we need to move away from the perception that driving is a God-given right for everyone - as is alcohol consumption.
Taking control of a lethal machine with the possibility of impairment through alcohol should be against the law.
If you are going to drive tomorrow, don't drink tonight - it's that simple.
andy - are you seriously suggesting that if one wants a couple of glasses of wine with their evening meal, then they need to take the next day off work to avoid getting breathalyzed? You can fail a 'zero tolerance' breathalyzer if you swig too much mouthwash (so I've been told)
Baldric " No if you're above the limit, you get done, no exceptions.:
pardon? no one is saying there should be a leeway if you are ' over the limit' -thats the whole point -with zero tolerance' there is no 'over the limit'. many meds have alcohol in them
Retrochic - //andy - are you seriously suggesting that if one wants a couple of glasses of wine with their evening meal, then they need to take the next day off work to avoid getting breathalyzed?//
That is exactly what I am suggesting.
Driving is not a right, nor is drinking, and we should stop acting as though they are.