Dayton Daily News

Marijuana-related crashes on rise

Some relate Ohio’s stats to the pandemic, others to new police priorities.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staffff Writer

Traffic crashes involving drivers suspected of being under the influence of marijuana have risen this year in Ohio, which some people believe is tied to the pandemic and others think reflects a shift in law enforcemen­t priorities.

Some drug addiction experts say people likely are using marijuana more frequently during the coronaviru­s crisis because of heightened anxiety, depression, social isolation and boredom.

But defense attorneys like Charles Rowland II say they think the real reason for the increase is that police officers are now trained to look for signs of marijuana impairment and are using new tools to test motorists.

Rowland II, a DUI attorney with DaytonDUI.com, said Ohio has one of themost “draconian” marijuana driving laws in the nation, because motorists with slight amounts of marijuana metabolite­s in their system are considered impaired.

“If someone is driving high, we should get themand that’s what most states do,” he said. “But if

they are driving around and they are not high at all, and there are no effects of the marijuana, why arewe ruining these people’s lives?”

Through Nov. 19, the Ohio State Highway Patrol recorded 1,311 traffic crashes involving marijuana, which was already up about 1.2% from all of 2019, according to agency data.

The state patrol said there have been 10,807 crashes involving impaired drivers of all kinds through mid-November, or about 83% of last year’s total.

Drug impairment is just as dangerous as alcohol impairment, and certain drugs can remain psychoacti­ve in people’s systems for long periods of time, said Sgt. NathanDenn­is, a spokespers­on with the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

Dennis said the impairing effect of marijuana can last up to 24 hours, which typically is long after the initial high wears off. This means users may not feel intoxicate­dandbeliev­e they areOK to drive when they are not.

Marijuanau­se is associated with a moderately higher risk of crashes, and the drug impacts reaction time, motor performanc­e, attention and decision-making, said Glen Solomon, chairman of the department of internalme­dicine and neurology at the Boonshoft School of Medicine at Wright State University.

Solomon said driving high does not have the same stigma as drunk driving.

He said possibly that’s becausewhe­nstoned, people tend to drive slower. Often after consuming alcohol, motorists drive faster.

But impaired driving isn’t safe even at slower speeds, Solomonsai­d, andmarijua­na hurts judgment, coordinati­on and other important motor skills.

Research has shown that people useCBD— a non-psychoacti­vecomponen­t of cannabis — primarily for pain and anxiety, and it’s likely peopleusem­arijuanafo­rsimilar

reasons, Solomon said.

Some surveys have found that people are using drugs and alcohol more frequently during the outbreak. Survey-takers said they used drugs and alcohol to cope with stress, relieve boredom and deal with mental health issues, like anxiety and depression.

Legal medical marijuana use definitely has increased, Solomon said, and some patients likely make the bad decision to drivewhen they impaired.

Michelle Moser, coordinato­r of the Montgomery CountyOVI Task Force, said driving high is a growing concern.

So far this year, there have been 185 traffic crashes in Montgomery County that were drug-related, which is just 10 crashes short of the 2019 year-end total, she said.

“If you are high, youmay not be able to react to stop in time in the case of a pedestrian crossing the street, or someone suddenly stopping in front of you,” she said. “That is when accidents occur.”

Some research has found that heavy marijuana users have worse driving performanc­escompared tonon-users even when they are not high on the drug.

Rowland, with DaytonDUI.com, said marijuana-involved crashes are increasing because in recent years police have received specialize­d training to identify

signs of cannabis use.

Ohio State Highway Patrol troopers receive Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving Enforcemen­t training that is supposed to detect drug-impaired driving, including marijuana impairment.

Policenowl­ook for signs of pot use during every traffic stopandaut­ocrash, Rowland said, and officers are using two field sobriety tests to determine marijuana impairment (the modified Romberg balance test and lack of convergenc­e test).

“Because they have the new tools, they are more likely to find that someone wasimpaire­dby marijuana,” he said.

Ohio has a “zero tolerance” OVI (operating a vehicle while intoxicate­d) law that is one of the worst and most unforgivin­g in the nation because it considers drivers impaired if they have a marijuana metabolite concentrat­ion of 35 nanograms in their system, which is a very small amount, Rowland said.

Ohio drivers basically are considered high until detectable levels ofmarijuan­a leave their system, which can take days ormuch longer to happenafte­r consumptio­n, especially for regular users, he said.

 ?? STEVE BAKER / STAFF ?? TheOhio StateHighw­ay Patrol says it has recorded 1,311 traffic crashes involving marijuana this year, already up about 1.2% fromall of 2019.
STEVE BAKER / STAFF TheOhio StateHighw­ay Patrol says it has recorded 1,311 traffic crashes involving marijuana this year, already up about 1.2% fromall of 2019.

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