National Post

Minister backs random breath tests for drivers

- Joanna Smith

OTTAWA • Demanding a breath sample from a motorist is no different than asking for their licence and registrati­on, Canada’s justice minister argued Thursday as the federal government defended its proposed crackdown on impaired driving.

Jody Wilson- Raybould tabled a “charter statement” in the House of Commons comprising the arguments why the government believes the new measures are permissibl­e under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

“The Supreme Court of Canada has recognized as reasonable the authority, under provincial law and common law, of police officers to stop vehicles at random to ensure that drivers are licensed and insured, that the vehicle is mechanical­ly fit, and to check for sobriety,” Wilson-Raybould’s statement says. “The informatio­n revealed from a breath sample is, like the production of a driver’s licence, simply informatio­n about whether a driver is complying with one of the conditions imposed in the highly regulated contexts of driving.”

Bill C- 46, which includes new powers for police and harsher penalties for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, was introduced in the Commons last month alongside the government’s plan to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use.

The new mandatory alcohol screening measures would mean police could demand a breath sample from any driver they lawfully stop — even if they had no suspicion the person was drinking before being pulled over.

The roadside test alone could not lead to a charge, but it would allow the police to continue investigat­ing and to subject the driver to further testing.

The bill would also allow police to demand a saliva sample from a driver if they reasonably suspect the person has drugs in their body, such as by noticing unusually red eyes, abnormal speech patterns or the scent of marijuana.

The statement outlines why the Liberal government considers the new powers to be consistent with what the Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees about search and seizure, as well as life, liberty and security of the person.

The statement does come with a caveat: “A statement is not a legal opinion on the constituti­onality of a bill.”

The statement also says Bill C-46 would help the government achieve its “compelling objective” of cutting down on drinking and driving. Currently, it can be difficult for officers to identify a driver who should be administer­ed a breath test.

“It would reduce the impact of this kind of human error,” it says. “It would also increase the deterrent effect of roadside stops by eliminatin­g the perception that motorists could avoid having to give a sample by hiding their impairment.”

Research done in other countries that have taken a similar approach, including Australia, New Zealand and Ireland, has shown a substantia­l reduction in alcoholrel­ated crashes and deaths, the government argues.

Anthony Moustacali­s, president of the Criminal Lawyers’ Associatio­n, is concerned the law could lead to a higher number of random stops of visible minorities.

“I think the one area of constituti­onal attack would be that, given the developing statistics on subconscio­us racism by the police, or unconsciou­s racism, and the increased empirical data on misuse of random stops by police for visible and other minorities.”

Robert Solomon, national director of legal policy for MADD Canada, said people already have to go through mandatory screening to do all sorts of things.

“Mandator y alcohol screening serves exactly the same protective purpose as airport, border and courtroom searches, but is far more effective and addresses a far greater risk,” said Solomon, a law professor at Western University in London, Ont.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada