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Behind The Wheel

Fail! Immediate roadside prohibition
by Contributed - Story: 69115
Dec 31, 2011 / 5:00 am

I've performed many duties in my policing career, investigator, collision analyst, breath testing technician and screening device operator/calibrator/instructor. I've seen first hand the damage that impaired drivers do to themselves and others on our highways. The duty I liked the least was notifying next of kin following a fatal collision.

When I learned about B.C.'s Immediate Roadside Prohibition (IRP) program I was excited about the possibility of dealing a significant punishment to impaired drivers before they had a chance to leave the scene of the crime. Better still, they could not simply hide behind a lawyer, a collection of over-complicated case law and a legal system that was not prepared to deal with them expeditiously. I've seen the court refuse to accept a guilty plea because the accused had not consulted with legal counsel.

It was not a surprise for me when the courts were used by the people who make their living selling liquor to disrupt the use of the IRP to protect the rest of us from those who consume that liquor and then drive. Some news stories that I have read since then contain statements attributed to lawyers that do not make sense based on my experience within the system. These stories called into question the accuracy of the screening devices and suggested that innocents have been punished.

My opinion of people that choose to drink and drive is obvious and I suggest that you should be concerned too. The impaired driver presents a very serious danger to you every time you use our highways. I hope that the coming amendments to the IRP adjudication process are able to satisfy the courts for fairness but is left in the hands of the Office of the Superintendent of Motor Vehicles. We've already spent too long waiting for the new implementation.

The author is a constable with many years of experience in traffic law enforcement. To comment or learn more, please visit www.drivesmartbc.ca.



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About the author...

Tim Schewe has been writing his column for most of the 20 years in his traffic enforcement service in the RCMP. It was 'The Beat Goes On' in Fort St. John, 'Traffic Tips' in the South Okanagan and now 'Behind the Wheel' on Vancouver Island and now Castanet.net. Schewe retired from the Force in January of 2006, but the column became a habit and continues.

E-mail him your questions or concerns: comments@drivesmartbc.ca
 







The views expressed are strictly those of the author and not necessarily those of Castanet. Castanet presents its columns "as is" and does not warrant the contents.


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