Posted on 10/28/2020 12:41:19 PM PDT by Kaslin
Four years ago, Pennsylvania allowed patients suffering from any of 17 serious medical conditions to relieve their symptoms with marijuana. But there was a catch: If they used cannabis as a medicine, they could no longer legally drive.
Last week, the Pennsylvania House of Representatives approved a bill that would eliminate that legal disability by requiring evidence of impairment to convict medical marijuana patients of driving under the influence. That reform points the way to an overdue reevaluation of DUI laws that irrationally and unfairly punish cannabis consumers who pose no threat to public safety.
Thirty-three states have legalized medical marijuana, and 11 have taken the further step of allowing recreational use. The list is likely to grow next week when voters in five states will consider marijuana initiatives.
Even as pot prohibition continues to crumble across the country, many states are still treating sober cannabis consumers as if they were intoxicated. Under Pennsylvania's current rule, any driver with a tiny amount of THC or an inactive metabolite in his blood (one nanogram per milliliter) is automatically guilty of DUI.
Eleven states are even stricter than Pennsylvania, making it illegal to drive with any amount of THC or its metabolites in your blood. Because those chemicals can be detected long after marijuana's psychoactive effects have worn off, that "zero tolerance" policy is akin to prohibiting all drinkers from driving, even when they are sober.
Half a dozen states, including Pennsylvania, have "per se" laws that define DUI based on the concentration of THC in a driver's blood, while one (Colorado) allows an inference of guilt when that level reaches five nanograms per milliliter. But these laws don't make sense either.
Because THC, unlike alcohol, is fat-soluble rather than water-soluble, there is no clear or consistent relationship between THC in the blood and THC in the brain, which means THC blood levels do not correspond neatly to degrees of impairment. Complicating the situation further, individual responses to a given dose of THC vary widely, especially when you compare occasional marijuana users to regular consumers, who may develop tolerance to the drug's effects or learn to compensate for them.
A 2016 study sponsored by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety concluded that "a quantitative threshold for per se laws" based on THC blood levels "cannot be scientifically supported." That's because, as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration explained in a 2017 report to Congress, the concentration of THC in a driver's blood "does not appear to be an accurate and reliable predictor of impairment."
The Congressional Research Service concurred in a 2019 report. "Using a measure of THC as evidence of a driver's impairment is not supported by scientific evidence," it said.
Thirty-two states recognize that THC in a driver's blood is not enough to prove impairment. They require additional evidence, such as erratic driving or physical and behavioral signs of intoxication.
The Pennsylvania bill would adopt that standard for medical marijuana patients, although it really should be extended to all cannabis consumers because the validity of a per se rule does not depend on an individual's reasons for using the drug. The marijuana legalization initiative on Arizona's 2020 ballot takes the latter approach, replacing that state's current zero tolerance standard, which already makes an exception for medical use.
Even states that have legalized marijuana for all adults 21 or older do not necessarily have rational DUI laws. Illinois, Nevada and Washington make drivers automatically guilty at THC blood levels that regular consumers commonly exceed even when they are not impaired, while Michigan still has a zero tolerance law that treats any amount of THC as conclusive DUI evidence.
Although zero tolerance and per se laws were presented as traffic safety measures, they are really just another way of punishing people for defying the ban on marijuana. When that ban is lifted, such laws are an indefensible hangover from an unjust prohibitionist regime that was rightly abandoned.
Fiddling while fires flame.
Smoking is bad, drinking is bad, texting and driving is bad, drinking and driving is bad - but using pot while driving is OK because it HeLpS.
If you smoke pot you should be arrested and jailed.
Thats not true.
“Legal” cannabis users are still Federally prohibited from owning, using, or even touching a firearm.
I’m guessing 80% of these folks are on welfare and we’re picking up the tab for their “habit” via Medicaid.
I have friends who stayed stoned on prescription meds and still drive. I know people with Dementia who drive.
If they’re cannabis users, they’re not sober.
CC
I was told by an MD that if you get caught in the state of Arizona driving with even Benadryl in your system, you will receive a MANDATORY 18 month sentence.
Justin Trudeau, or as some call him ‘Dick’ True-dope, the Prime Mistake of Canada, legalized pot here in Kanadahar two years ago. AFAIK, there is no ACKNOLEDGED way of measuring impairment via THC, as opposed to impairment due to alcohol. That said, twice a week, on average, I smell pot coming from another car, as I am driving to or from work. I have heard of NO CONVICTIONS for driving while under the influence of THC and I have heard absolutely NO REPORTS of vehicle accidents involving dope smoking individuals. TOTAL AND COMPLETE BRAVO SIERRA!
If we can hand the nuclear football to a pants crapping dementia patient, why not just let all the drunk and stoned people drive too?
A friend has a neighbor who claims to have been injured at work and is disabled. The guy does work around the house and it doesn’t seem to bother him. He and his girlfriend both use pot and alcohol. They both drive even though they both have several dui’s, been jailed and on probation. They both are nightmares for the neighbors around them. Constant chaos!
Which part?
Thats why the article and the legislature of Pennsylvania THINKS!
Plenty of common medications that impair people far worse for driving purposes, no one seems to have a problem with.
"I think we're parked, yeah"
/Cheech&Chong
A couple of college friends of mine were stoned on pot and in a car driven by a stoned driver on the freeway. The Highway Patrol pulled them over and asked them “Do you know how fast you were driving” Answer was “I don’t know, about 65 miles an hour.” The Highway Patrol office said “You were going 25 miles per hour on the freeway!” Nobody was arrested.
On the far right we can see that, as of 2017, almost a quarter of all drivers involved in fatal accidents had at least some level of Delta-9 THC (the main psychoactive ingredient) in their bloodstream. And it appears to be getting worse.
BLUF: Though more people drive under the influence of cannabis than alcohol, those individuals impaired by alcohol are 10X as likely to cause a fatal accident as someone impaired by cannabis.
“The proportion of persons driving under the influence of alcohol is estimated at 2.1% (95% CI: 1.42.8) and under the influence of cannabis at 3.4% (2.9%-3.9%). Drivers under the influence of alcohol are 17.8 times (12.126.1) more likely to be responsible for a fatal accident, and the proportion of fatal accidents which would be prevented if no drivers ever exceeded the legal limit for alcohol is estimated at 27.7% (26.0%-29.4%). Drivers under the influence of cannabis multiply their risk of being responsible for causing a fatal accident by 1.65 (1.162.34), and the proportion of fatal accidents which would be prevented if no drivers ever drove under the influence of cannabis is estimated at 4.2% (3.7%-4.8%).”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5678710/
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