Texarkana Gazette

We need more reliable driver marijuana tests

- San Diego Union-Tribune

Authoritie­s say a driver impaired by marijuana caused a July 14 accident in the Bay Area that injured state Controller Betty Yee. When a vehicle driven by an allegedly stoned 25-yearold hit the one Yee was riding in, she passed out, the latest incident to illustrate the absolute need to develop tests that can reliably detect marijuana intoxicati­on. It’s crucial to public safety in the post-Propositio­n 64 era of legal recreation­al cannabis use.

Several testing methods have already been developed. Among them are the Drager DrugTest 5000 machines owned by San Diego police, which use oral swabs to confirm the presence of drugs in the body, with positive results leading to follow-up blood tests. In a recent interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune Editorial Board, Police Chief David Nisleit said he believed it was an effective tool when combined with officers’ observatio­ns of drivers suspected of impairment. Canada also recently chose the Drager machines for national use.

But it is just a matter of time before criminal defense attorneys realize that Drager also has plenty of skeptics. The Truth About Cars website noted Friday that some authoritie­s in Australia and Ireland have lost faith in the devices’ accuracy and reliabilit­y. Closer to home, last year, an official with the Orange County District Attorney’s Office voiced similar concerns, citing unacceptab­ly high numbers of false test results.

Here’s hoping the UC San Diego Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research finds a better way. It’s been tasked by the Legislatur­e to come up with a reliable roadside test for marijuana impairment. Such a breakthrou­gh would make the world a safer place.

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