The Mercury News Weekend

Utah governor signs strict new DUI limit

State will have the lowest in the country at 0.05 percent

- By Michelle L. Price Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY — Utah’s governor signed legislatio­n Thursday giving the predominan­tly Mormon state the strictest drunken driving threshold in the country, a change that restaurant groups and representa­tives of the ski and snowboard industry say will hurt tourism.

Republican Gov. Gary Herbert said lowering the blood alcohol limit for most drivers to 0.05 percent from 0.08 percent will save lives.

The change means a 150-pound man would be over the 0.05 limit after two beers, while a 120-pound woman could exceed it after a single drink, though that can be affected by a number of factors, including how much food a person has eaten, according to the American Beverage Institute, a national group.

Opponents, including the group, had urged Herbert to veto the bill , saying it would punish responsibl­e drinkers and burnish Utah’s reputation as a Mormon-centric place unfriendly to those who drink alcohol.

“People are going to try to say this is a religious issue. And that is just absolutely false. This is a public safety issue,” the governor, who is Mormon, said at a news conference.

Restaurant groups said they don’t support drunken driving but a 0.05 percent limit won’t catch drivers who are actually impaired. Plus, the law is “a total attack on the state’s hospitalit­y industry, customers and the tourism industry,” American Beverage Institute executive director Sarah Longwell said.

The group took out fullpage ads Thursday in Salt Lake City’s two daily newspapers and USA Today, featuring a fake mugshot under a large headline reading, “Utah: Come for vacation, leave on probation.”

But proponents say the law will send a resounding message that people should not drink and drive — no matter how little somebody has consumed. The Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety applauded the change, saying it’s a “sensible solution” to deter drunken driving.

If drivers are not impaired, they won’t violate the law, said Rep. Norm Thurston, the bill’s sponsor. The Republican says police won’t measure someone’s blood alcohol level until they have seen visible signs of impairment and the person fails a field sobriety test.

He also said Utah became the first state to lower its blood alcohol limit to 0.08 percent in 1983, and since then tourism has flourished. Utah’s Tourism Office said it’s not concerned about the law discouragi­ng visitors, noting that a number of foreign countries such as France, Australia and Italy have similar laws and don’t have a problem attracting tourists.

 ?? RICK BOWMER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ed Staley appears at a rally in Salt Lake City in support of a plan to lower the Utah DUI limit to 0.05. Gov. Gary Herbert signed the legislatio­n Thursday.
RICK BOWMER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ed Staley appears at a rally in Salt Lake City in support of a plan to lower the Utah DUI limit to 0.05. Gov. Gary Herbert signed the legislatio­n Thursday.

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