Los Angeles Times

Utah getting tougher on drinking

Legislatur­e passes bill creating lowest U.S. drunk driving limit.

- By Kurtis Lee kurtis.lee@latimes.com

It’s nearing the last call — at least in Utah — for a definition of drunk driving that’s become the unofficial national standard.

Lawmakers in the state passed a measure last week to lower the legal blood-alcohol concentrat­ion for driving from .08% to .05%.

Currently, all 50 states have a .08% cap. Utah would become the first in the nation to adopt a more stringent standard and, traffic safety advocates hope, encourage other states to do the same.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board has called on states for years to redefine what constitute­s drunk driving. The legislatio­n is expected to be signed by Republican Gov. Gary R. Herbert.

“The time was long overdue for this,” said state Rep. Norman Thurston, a Republican from Provo, who championed the legislatio­n. “This is about behavior, and we hope that other states take a close look and move in a similar direction.”

In Utah, which has long had a tense relationsh­ip with alcohol — Mormons make up 60% of the state population and are not supposed to drink — lawmakers this session addressed several proposals focused on regulation. They include, among other things, the new blood-alcohol level and how beers and cocktails are prepared at restaurant­s.

For Thurston, lowering the blood-alcohol limit is about public safety.

The NTSB push to lower the threshold for drunk driving was highlighte­d in a 2013 report that noted that fatal crashes decreased 18% in Queensland and 8% in New South Wales after those Australian states lowered their blood-alcohol limits.

The agency also called for other measures, such as expanding the use of devices that prevent impaired drivers from starting vehicles.

Deaths related to drunk driving nearly doubled in Utah between 2013 and 2014, increasing from 23 to 45. Conversely, drunk driving fatalities nationally have fallen by a third in the last three decades, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion. Nationally, 28 people die every day in motor vehicle crashes involving an alcohol-impaired driver, according to the agency.

Still, some critics of the Utah legislatio­n say it could harm the state’s tourism industry; they say other measures could better promote public safety.

“Why not just make it a 0.00% limit? I’m not sure this does much in terms of keeping the public safe,” said state Sen. Luz Escamilla, a Democrat from Salt Lake City. “We should be creating laws that have real impact — not just ones that are symbolic.”

Escamilla said effective measures include a mandatory seat-belt law, which she helped sponsor for seven years and finally was able to get her colleagues to pass this legislativ­e session.

About Thurston’s measure, she added, “If anything, it just keeps Utah in line with having a weird image toward alcohol.”

Escamilla’s view is shared by groups such as the Salt Lake Area Restaurant Assn., which represents more than 100 establishm­ents.

“It’s a terrible law,” said Michele T. Corigliano, the group’s executive director, who is lobbying Herbert to veto the measure. “We feel that because .05% is so low it’s going to put a lot people in jail who should not be in jail. It’s an extremely low level. … People who use too much mouthwash could be targeted.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates a blood-alcohol concentrat­ion of .05% — about three drinks in one hour for a 160-pound man — causes, among other things, altered coordinati­on, reduced ability to track moving objects and difficulty steering a motor vehicle. Several European countries — including as France and Germany — have blood-alcohol limits of .05%.

Utah’s fraught relationsh­ip with alcohol stems from the state’s deep connection with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a faith that condemns its use.

Even so, annual liquor sales have increased, up from $367.2 million in 2014 to $396.4 million in 2015, according to the Utah Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. How liquor is prepared at restaurant­s is also an issue Utah lawmakers addressed in the 45-day legislativ­e session that came to a close last week.

In 2009, a law was passed that required restaurant­s to erect a wall or partition — known as a “Zion curtain” to locals — at least 7 feet 2 inches high to shield patrons from seeing alcohol being mixed, poured or otherwise prepared. The law dismayed many in the restaurant industry.

Under a compromise proposal passed in recent weeks, restaurant­s would be allowed to stop using the Zion curtain if they set up a child-free buffer zone around their bar — either a 5-foot zone marked off by something similar to a railing or a 10-foot open area.

Herbert supports the new legislatio­n.

Derek Monson, director of public policy at the Sutherland Institute, a conservati­ve think tank based in Salt Lake City, says it comes down to keeping a clear distinctio­n between a bar and a restaurant.

“People go to restaurant­s to eat, enjoy others — drinking is not the sole reason,” said Monson, whose group supports keeping the Zion curtain. “But here there is some leeway, and establishm­ents can now choose what they want to implement.”

Doug Hofeling, chief operating officer of Salt Lake Brewing Co., says his establishm­ents will probably choose the buffer option. “It’s a positive that this Zion curtain is going away, or at least not mandatory,” he said, though he fears that losing seats in his restaurant­s to make space for the buffer zones will cost him business.

“In the restaurant business, anytime you’re losing seats, it’s never good,” Hofeling said.

 ?? Steve Griffin Salt Lake Tribune ?? SHOPPERS WAIT to buy alcohol at a state liquor store in Sugar House, a Salt Lake City neighborho­od. Utah, whose dominant Mormon faith forbids drinking, is set to become the first U.S. state to have a blood-alcohol limit lower than .08%, and not...
Steve Griffin Salt Lake Tribune SHOPPERS WAIT to buy alcohol at a state liquor store in Sugar House, a Salt Lake City neighborho­od. Utah, whose dominant Mormon faith forbids drinking, is set to become the first U.S. state to have a blood-alcohol limit lower than .08%, and not...

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