The Northern Advocate

Illegal — and a known killer

- John Williamson John Williamson is chairman of Roadsafe Northland and Northland Road Safety Trust, a former national councillor for NZ Automobile Associatio­n and former Whanga¯ rei District Councillor

It’s been 18 months since it was announced that police would be given new powers to test for drugged drivers, including saliva-based testing devices, as has been done in Australia since 2004.

The legislatio­n to enable this was introduced in New Zealand in July last year, with the expected report back this month. This has now been delayed until June and it would appear that the Government is dragging its heels in passing this important legislatio­n.

In the meantime we have had a referendum which confirmed that the NZ public does not want to legalise recreation­al cannabis, so there is no question about police testing for the presence of a legal substance while driving.

Also in the meantime, during the past 18 months around 150 people have died on our roads as a result of drug-impaired driving. That’s almost 30 per cent of our road toll.

Just prior to Christmas last year, coroner David Robinson found that cannabis was implicated in six of the nine fatalities he was required to examine.

Drugged driving has been the hidden killer on our roads for many years and it now exceeds drink driving as a cause of road fatalities.

The AA has regularly surveyed its members about attitudes to drugged driving. Ninety-five per cent support introducin­g saliva-based roadside testing for the presence of illegal drugs while driving.

Currently, police use the Compulsory Impairment Test if the officer has good cause to suspect the presence of drugs and the driver has passed the breath alcohol test.

This test involves various physical tests like walking a straight line, standing on one leg and following a finger with the eyes.

The physical factors about the driver and their car usually give “cause to suspect”.

Drivers are prosecuted only if a follow-up blood test detects drugs and this two-test system has a 92 per cent hit rate.

This whole process, though, is time-consuming and expensive in a chaotic roadside environmen­t.

Saliva-based testing is relatively quick and cost-effective, with the initial indicative saliva test needing to have lab test confirmati­on of illegal drugs in the system before prosecutio­n happens.

This regime will require a significan­t commitment of money and human resources in order to assure the necessary exposure to drug driving testing activities so that we have a strong general deterrent effect.

We need to know that there is a real chance of being caught if we choose to drive while drugged.

What is proposed is a two-step penalty regime. Drivers who test positive for the presence of drugs will be fined, immediatel­y suspended from driving for 12 hours and lose half of their demerit point quota.

Drivers will also face harsher criminal penalties where blood tests confirm drug impairment or drugs combined with alcohol.

Specific details are still being worked through. The principal argument that drug users promote is the question of impairment — at what level of a specific drug in your saliva is your driving impaired?

That issue is not settled, but for now cannabis, methamphet­amine and MDMA (ecstasy) are illegal drugs, any level in the body is illegal and doing nothing about drugged driving is not an option.

You’ve got to start somewhere, and the vast experience of the Australian jurisdicti­on has pretty much sorted the issues.

It is fully acknowledg­ed that drugged driving is much more complex than drink driving. There is an establishe­d relationsh­ip between blood alcohol levels and impairment which is not the case with drugs.

Testing for drugged driving is much more expensive in terms of time and money. Each test will cost around $200 and the State of Victoria is expecting to carry out 400,000 tests per year in the near future.

That’s a big commitment to dealing with an increasing­ly vexed road safety and social issue.

The Australian­s, though, can demonstrat­e strong community support for their present testing programme and a community expectatio­n that police should be out there testing. It’s time we copied the Aussies.

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History 1789

The US House of Representa­tives holds its first full meeting in New York.

Nazi Germany stages a daylong national boycott of Jewishowne­d businesses.

US forces launch the amphibious invasion of Okinawa during World War II. (They succeed in capturing the Japanese island on June 22.)

With Khmer Rouge guerrillas closing in, Cambodian President Lon Nol resigns and flees into exile, spending the rest of his life in the US.

Apple Computer is founded by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne.

Marvin Gaye is shot to death by his father, Marvin Gay Sr in Los Angeles, the day before the recording star’s 45th birthday. (The elder Gay pleads guilty to voluntary manslaught­er and receives probation.)

In his first speech on the Aids epidemic, President Ronald Reagan tells doctors in Philadelph­ia, “We’ve declared Aids public health enemy No 1.”

Afghans angry over the burning of a Quran at a small Florida church storm a UN compound in northern Afghanista­n, killing seven foreigners, including four Nepalese guards.

England’s Wimbledon tennis tournament is cancelled for the first time since World War II.

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 ?? Photo / File ?? Roadside drug testing can’t come soon enough, says Northland road safety advocate John Williamson.
Photo / File Roadside drug testing can’t come soon enough, says Northland road safety advocate John Williamson.
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