Ottawa Citizen

Feds to test new roadside cannabis-use device

- BRIAN PLATT bplatt@postmedia.com

OTTAWA • The federal government has taken the first step toward approving a new device for testing drivers’ saliva for cannabis use, potentiall­y giving police a long-awaited second option.

Over the weekend, the government posted a notice that it intends to approve the Abbott SoToxa for police forces to use. The device must now go through a 30-day public consultati­on period before it can receive final approval.

The approval process for the controvers­ial devices, which allow police to swab saliva at the roadside to check for the presence of THC, has taken much longer than the government anticipate­d. The testing is overseen by a specialize­d committee of the Canadian Society of Forensic Science, which then makes a recommenda­tion to the attorney general when it determines a device meets the government’s standards.

Government officials testified at a parliament­ary committee last year that they have no control over how quickly that testing happens, and had initially hoped it would be done by March 2018.

Only one device has made it through the process: the Draeger DrugTest 5000, which received its formal approval last August.

Police forces were initially hesitant to order the Draeger, with some — such as the Ottawa Police Service — expressing skepticism over the device’s reliabilit­y, particular­ly in cold weather.

Since then, however, many police forces across the country have ordered at least a few to try out, and the devices have started to see regular use on Canadian roads. Yet police forces have said they’re still being cautious about placing orders partly because of cost (about $6,000 each), partly because they want to see more devices approved as options, and partly to wait and see whether problems arise as the devices enter use.

The devices are also certain to be hotly contested in the courts as lawyers specializi­ng in impaired driving law have declared their intention to file legal challenges at the first opportunit­y.

The saliva-testing devices do not measure the level of impairment in a driver, and the results cannot be the basis of criminal charges. Instead, they are meant to screen at the roadside for whether cannabis was recently consumed, and the results can form the grounds for police to arrest drivers and take them in for further testing to check for impairment.

However, there are provincial rules that immediatel­y kick in upon a positive result of the saliva-testing devices, such as driver’s licence suspension­s. A Nova Scotia woman who recently failed the roadside saliva test and yet passed the subsequent testing for impairment has said she plans to file a constituti­onal challenge against the provincial penalties, which she said saw her licence suspended and her car impounded.

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