Feds not planning to lower blood-alcohol limit for drivers
OTTAWA — The federal government is counting on stricter roadside testing — not a lower criminal blood alcohol limit — to stem the carnage caused by impaired driving.
In May, Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould sent a letter to her provincial and territorial counterparts, asking for their views on lowering the criminal blood alcohol concentration level to 0.05 from 0.08.
Wilson-Raybould’s office now says there are no plans to introduce legislation to lower the limit.
A bill already before Parliament would revise the Criminal Code’s impaired-driving regime, addressing both alcohol and drug use.
Proposed mandatory alcohol screening measures in the bill would allow police to demand a breath sample from any driver they lawfully stop — a lower bar than the current threshold of suspicion that the person has been drinking.
The aim is to help police catch more drivers at the wheel with more than the legal limit of alcohol in their bloodstream, the government says.
Research indicates that fatal crash risk doubles for drivers with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.05 and triples for drivers with a concentration of 0.08, the government acknowledges.
But most provinces and territories have already set a provincial administrative limit of 0.05 for all drivers under the authority of their highway traffic laws, and some have an even lower limit of 0.04.