New York Daily News

Pols eye tougher DWI law

Renewed Albany push to lower blood-alcohol limit to .05 from .08

- BY DENIS SLATTERY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF

ALBANY — Advocates and lawmakers want to make New York the second state to lower its legal blood-alcohol limit from .08 to .05 — a change supporters argue could save lives and keep drunken drivers off the road.

State Sen. John Liu (D-Queens) reintroduc­ed a piece of legislatio­n this year that would lower the state’s legal drinking-and-driving limit, and the bill has the backing of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and city Department of Transporta­tion Commission­er Ydanis Rodriguez.

“We have seen in recent years a continual increase in the number of deaths related to drinking while driving,” Liu said during a press conference at the state Capitol. “The trend is up. It’s totally unacceptab­le, and we can do something about this.”

The measure, also sponsored by Assemblywo­man Jo Anne Simon (D-Brooklyn), would lower the blood-alcohol content threshold for charging someone with driving while intoxicate­d (DWI) from .08 to .05.

Penalties for DWI include loss of driving privileges, fines and possible jail time.

Alisa McMorris, whose 12-year-old son Andrew McMorris was killed by a drunken driver in 2018 while hiking with his Boy Scout troop, said the change is needed to prevent other families from suffering.

“Andrew was ripped from our family, his sister, friends, teachers and scouts,” McMorris said. “Impaired driving leads to tragedy every single day on our roads, and we want to make our roads safer so no other family has to endure this 100% preventabl­e loss.

“We can no longer look the other way and need to encourage safer behavior,” she added.

According to the state Department of Motor Vehicles, one-third of the fatalities on New York roads involve impaired or intoxicate­d drivers and pedestrian­s.

Currently, drivers with a BAC between .05 and .08 can be charged with driving while ability impaired by alcohol, which carries much lower fines and shorter license suspension­s if convicted.

Several other states, including Hawaii and Washington, are currently eyeing lowering BAC limits.

In 2012, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board recommende­d states lower the limit to .05. Only Utah has done so in the decade since.

A study released this year analyzed data from before and after Utah lowered the BAC limit and found that the state recorded fewer traffic fatalities and fewer fatal crashes following the change.

The fatality rate in Utah fell by 18.3%, and the fatal crash rate decreased by 19.8% after the limit was lowered, according to the study from the federal Department of Transporta­tion and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

Rodriguez said Mayor Adams is passionate about the bill in Albany and wants to see it passed this year.

“As the Adams administra­tion has made clear: 2023 is the year we combat the most aggressive and dangerous drivers on our roads,” Rodriguez said. “Since the pandemic, we have seen an alarming increase in high-speed car wrecks, especially on highways, very often fueled by the deadly combinatio­n of driving under the influence.”

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