Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Pilot Project Will Test Systems To Detect Drug-impaired Drivers

The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2016 12:14 PM
  • Police Pilot Project Will Test Systems To Detect Drug-impaired Drivers
OTTAWA — Drivers in some jurisdictions may soon find themselves asked by police to volunteer for a saliva test, part of a pilot project aimed at detecting drug-impaired drivers.
 
The federal government, the RCMP and a number of police departments across the country will conduct the experiment to see how well certain roadside testing devices work to detect drugs.
 
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says his department and the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators will collaborate with police forces on the project, which will look at how two different devices work under varying weather conditions.
 
The "oral fluid" screening systems test saliva for the presence of drugs, including cannabis, cocaine, methamphetamine and opioids.
 
The announcement comes a day after a federal task force delivered a series of recommendations about legalizing cannabis and raised questions about detecting drivers impaired by marijuana.
 
Police forces in Toronto, Vancouver, Halifax and Gatineau, Que., will take part in the project, along with the Ontario Provincial Police and RCMP detachments in North Battleford, Sask., and Yellowknife.
 
 
Police officers will be trained in the use of two types of screening devices and will use them in operational settings, but only with drivers and passengers who volunteer to anonymously provide a sample.
 
The results will not be used in any court or administrative proceeding, the department said.
 
"The testing results will help establish possible future operating procedures," the department said in its announcement. "In parallel, Canadian standards for oral fluid devices will still need to be established before a government procurement process for the device can be launched."
 
The cannabis task force recommended more study to determine the links between traffic crashes and levels of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, and a national education strategy about the effects of cannabis consumption.
 
Goodale said the pilot project will help determine how police services can counter drug-impaired driving.
 
 
"Testing these new drug screening devices is an important step in our ongoing effort to enhance the enforcement of drug-impaired driving laws, reduce drug-impaired driving and improve the safety and security of all Canadians," he said.
 
Currently, the Criminal Code authorizes police officers to conduct a standard field sobriety test on a suspected impaired driver. If the officer has a reasonable belief that an offence has been committed, a specially trained officer can be called to conduct a drug recognition evaluation.
 
Some police forces have expressed concern that legalizing marijuana will produce problems on the roads. The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police welcomed the pilot project.
 
"Keeping impaired drivers off the road is a priority for the CACP, " said association president Mario Harel. "The CACP welcomes the pilot testing of these devices as they are another potential tool for Canadian police to help keep roads safe."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Supports Housing Vacancy Tax In Vancouver To Assist With Rental Shortage

B.C. Supports Housing Vacancy Tax In Vancouver To Assist With Rental Shortage
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government will support the city of Vancouver's request for a tax on vacant housing.

B.C. Supports Housing Vacancy Tax In Vancouver To Assist With Rental Shortage

Crews Stand Down In Bog Fire Outside Vancouver, Cause Still Being Investigated

Crews Stand Down In Bog Fire Outside Vancouver, Cause Still Being Investigated
Delta Fire says the fire in Burns Bogis fully contained and crews from the B.C. Wildfire Service have also left the area.

Crews Stand Down In Bog Fire Outside Vancouver, Cause Still Being Investigated

Street Hockey, A Canadian Pastime Is Banned In Toronto, But Encouraged In Calgary

Street Hockey, A Canadian Pastime Is Banned In Toronto, But Encouraged In Calgary
Street hockey is welcomed in other major cities like Calgary, but is banned by Toronto's city bylaws for safety reasons.

Street Hockey, A Canadian Pastime Is Banned In Toronto, But Encouraged In Calgary

Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments

Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments
A Canadian Judicial Council inquiry scheduled for September is to determine whether Justice Robin Camp should be removed from his job.

Women's Coalition Gets Status At Hearing Into Judge's Sex Assault Comments

Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects

Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects
Mounties say the tractor worth $25,000 was stolen from a Stettler-area equipment dealer last Monday and the ad showed up the next day.

Online Ad Featuring Stolen Tractor Leads Alberta RCMP To Suspects

Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed

Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed
The president of the East Kootenay Hunters Association, Larry Hall, says the province must do more to protect elk and moose.

Hunters Say Elk Populations Fall In Southeastern B.C., But Hunting Ban Opposed