ChatterBank3 mins ago
Lowering Of Legal Drink-Drive Limit 'to Save Lives' Urged
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -391552 82
Seems like a good idea to me....what do we all think about this ?
Seems like a good idea to me....what do we all think about this ?
Answers
We have debated the rights and wrongs of drink- driving many times, and my position remains as it has for as long as I have been driving - forty-five years and counting. We have a cultural history of people regarding being caught drink- driving as being rather bad luck, instead of what it is - criminal behaviour. We also have a culture of imposing limits, and then...
17:19 Sat 04th Mar 2017
Busy work, that's all. Takes our minds off what our leaders aren't doing.
When the new limit was introduced in Scotland we were warned that it would take less than one pint of ordinary beer to put a driver over the limit. Worked wonders for the hospitality trade.
Even our local Wetherspoons has closed.
I just wonder how many involved in accidents are borderline, and it is an absolute line, and how many are off their faces and don't care anyway.
When the new limit was introduced in Scotland we were warned that it would take less than one pint of ordinary beer to put a driver over the limit. Worked wonders for the hospitality trade.
Even our local Wetherspoons has closed.
I just wonder how many involved in accidents are borderline, and it is an absolute line, and how many are off their faces and don't care anyway.
Zacs the 'Morning After' effect is well known. Someone goes out for a night at a pub but is sensible and leaves the car at home. They still have enough alcohol in their system the next morning to be over the limit on the way to work. They may have been drinking till midnight or later and are still over the limit 7 or 8 hours later when it's time for work.
I also agree with the link where it says 'stricter enforcement of the current limit is a better option'
I can't remember the last time I saw a police car stopped beside the road and the officers pulling over cars at random for a breath test , it used to be common. Police also used to go round pubs taking note of reg numbers of cars in the car park and then looking out for them to stop them for a breath test. Is that illegal now? it used to happen.
I can't remember the last time I saw a police car stopped beside the road and the officers pulling over cars at random for a breath test , it used to be common. Police also used to go round pubs taking note of reg numbers of cars in the car park and then looking out for them to stop them for a breath test. Is that illegal now? it used to happen.
I was doubtful before reading the link, but now I have done, the figure quoted are misleading.
// Between 2010 and 2015 the number of people killed in reported drink-drive accidents has remained between 220 and 240 a year.
The LGA said it was estimated that lowering the limit in England and Wales could save up to more than 300 lives in the sixth year. //
So 240 die now, and lowering the limit will save 300 lives? How the hell can ALL deaths be eliminated, and a further 60 lives saved?
// Between 2010 and 2015 the number of people killed in reported drink-drive accidents has remained between 220 and 240 a year.
The LGA said it was estimated that lowering the limit in England and Wales could save up to more than 300 lives in the sixth year. //
So 240 die now, and lowering the limit will save 300 lives? How the hell can ALL deaths be eliminated, and a further 60 lives saved?
“I read ael's posts as the person not drinking at all. After re reading it, I now understand what they meant.”
I’m with you on the misunderstanding, Zacs. I interpreted “a lot of people who didn't drink and drive the previous evening” as people who did not drink the previous evening (so where’s the problem?). But I realise what ael meant was “people who had a drink the previous evening but did not drive (until the following morning)”. Glad we sorted that between us.
“Some smart ass lawyer has probably argued that car park surveillance is an infringement of civil liberties or entrapment.”
I think it’s more the case that there are simply not enough officers to do that, Zacs. Many of them are too busy looking into allegations against people who are dead. It’s certainly not entrapment. That’s encouraging somebody to commit a criminal offence.
I tend to agree that putting resources into preventing mobile phone abuse whilst driving would certainly be a greater contribution to road safety. Lowering the limit by a few points (or pints) will not prevent the hard core of miscreants who regularly drive well over the current limit and they are by far and away the worse problem. All it will do is apprehend those who currently do so within the limit (i.e. those who provide readings of 50 to 79 in blood, 22-34 in breath or 67-107 in urine). Having said that, I’m quite sure most people in that category have no real idea whether they are legal or not and just believe (and/or hope) that they are.
I’m with you on the misunderstanding, Zacs. I interpreted “a lot of people who didn't drink and drive the previous evening” as people who did not drink the previous evening (so where’s the problem?). But I realise what ael meant was “people who had a drink the previous evening but did not drive (until the following morning)”. Glad we sorted that between us.
“Some smart ass lawyer has probably argued that car park surveillance is an infringement of civil liberties or entrapment.”
I think it’s more the case that there are simply not enough officers to do that, Zacs. Many of them are too busy looking into allegations against people who are dead. It’s certainly not entrapment. That’s encouraging somebody to commit a criminal offence.
I tend to agree that putting resources into preventing mobile phone abuse whilst driving would certainly be a greater contribution to road safety. Lowering the limit by a few points (or pints) will not prevent the hard core of miscreants who regularly drive well over the current limit and they are by far and away the worse problem. All it will do is apprehend those who currently do so within the limit (i.e. those who provide readings of 50 to 79 in blood, 22-34 in breath or 67-107 in urine). Having said that, I’m quite sure most people in that category have no real idea whether they are legal or not and just believe (and/or hope) that they are.
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