Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Some Police Forces Question Roadside Marijuana Impairment Gauge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2018 12:46 PM
    VANCOUVER — Some Canadian police forces are hesitant to use a federally approved roadside test for marijuana impairment, raising questions about the Liberal government’s decision to give the devices the green light.
     
     
    Vancouver's police department is among those that won't use the Drager DrugTest 5000 when pot is legalized next month because it says the device doesn't work in sub-zero temperatures, is bulky and takes too long to produce a sample.
     
     
    Police in Delta, B.C., say their officers won't use the device this year but the department hasn't made a decision about 2019, while Edmonton Police and B.C.’s provincial RCMP say no decisions have been made yet.  
     
     
    Rob Clark, managing director of Drager Canada, says misinformation has been spreading about the devices and it's important to remember that police forces do take time to adopt new technologies.
     
     
    He says the main part of the device is supposed to remain in police vehicles where it is protected from the cold, while the part that collects the saliva can be heated up when plugged into the machine in the car.
     
     
    Vancouver lawyer Kyla Lee says she's planning a constitutional challenge of the devices and says the time it takes to produce a result is at odds with charter rights.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada
    Metro Vancouver announced Sunday it would continue a previous air quality advisory because of the high levels of fine particulate matter, which doctors say can be absorbed into the blood stream and lungs, causing exhaustion and confusion.

    Smoke From B.C. Wildfires Prompts Air Quality Advisories Across Western Canada

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa
    Police say a seven-year-old girl whose body was found at an apartment complex in Langley, B.C., is the victim of a homicide. Her mother has been charged in the murder.

    Mother Charged With Second-Degree In Death Of 7-Yr-Old Langley Girl Aaliyah Rosa

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death
    Video posted to twitter shows first responders performing chest compressions on a person lying on the sidewalk at the McDonald's on 96 Avenue and Prince Charles Boulevard at around 9 p.m.

    Man Dead After Fight At Surrey McDonald’s, Homicide Police Probe Death

    Parts Of Northern B.C. Asked To Restrict Water Use As Drought Level Raised

    People in parts of northern British Columbia are being asked to voluntarily reduce water consumption because it has been warm and dry.

    Parts Of Northern B.C. Asked To Restrict Water Use As Drought Level Raised

    Labour Costs, Higher Fuel Push Airfare Skyward, Boosting Rise In Inflation

    Labour Costs, Higher Fuel Push Airfare Skyward, Boosting Rise In Inflation
    Rising fuel costs drove a 28 per cent year-over-year rise in the price of airfare and helped push inflation to its highest level since 2011.

    Labour Costs, Higher Fuel Push Airfare Skyward, Boosting Rise In Inflation

    Man Dies In Penticton, B.C., Police Cell While Awaiting Court Hearing

    Man Dies In Penticton, B.C., Police Cell While Awaiting Court Hearing
    British Columbia's police watchdog has been called in to investigate the death of a man in a Penticton, B.C., jail cell.

    Man Dies In Penticton, B.C., Police Cell While Awaiting Court Hearing