 |
|
December
27, 2002 12:00 p.m.
Drinking
and Driving Deaths Plummet
Is it tougher
laws or raised consciousness?
By Eric Peters
|
 |
etting liquored-up
and getting behind the wheel hasn't been cool for 20 years at least —
and the general public opprobrium has had demonstrably positive effects.
According to data just released by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA), the number of "alcohol-related" traffic
deaths has dropped by more than 50 percent since the early 1980s — 0.63
per 100 million vehicle miles traveled in 2001 vs. 1.64 per 100 million
vehicle miles traveled in 1982.
The
question is, are tighter penalties for drunk driving — and more vigorous
enforcement — deserving of the credit for this reduction in carnage? Or
is it more a consequence of mass enlightenment that drinking to excess
and driving don't mix? Groups such as Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD),
which actively pushed for ever-stricter laws and penalties in state legislatures
around the country, argue the former. It's probably a mix of both.
At some point a general
epiphany seemed to occur to most people that made them think twice about
getting behind the wheel after more than a couple drinks. The flip side,
of course, is the prospect of rolling up on a sobriety checkpoint, flunking
the Breathalyzer test — and getting a night's pass to accommodations in
the county clink.
It's interesting
how we've swung from one extreme to the other in the space of just two
decades. Before the early 1980s, having "one for the road" was
a common closing time thing to do. Remember movies like Cannonball
Run with Dean Martin driving a Ferrari with one hand on the wheel
and the other clutching a Chivas over ice? That was considered funny
in those days. Imagine the reaction today.
That brings us to
the issue of political correctness as applied to the drunk-driving issue.
It's one thing to object to the idiots who put their own and others' lives
at risk by operating a motor vehicle when they're impaired by alcohol.
Clearly, those people should feel the weight of the state descend upon
them. But we're now at the point of "defining drunkenness down"
by lowering legal standards for impairment to the point of absurdity.
For example, MADD has gone on the record arguing in favor of establishing
an almost zero-tolerance policy for any trace of alcohol in a person's
bloodstream — writing it into law that Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) levels
of .06 or even .04 be sufficient to incur a charge of driving under the
influence. Most states have set the maximum allowable BAC level at .08
— the point after which it can be proved scientifically that most people
suffer impairment in the form of diminished reaction times and so on.
However, there is no evidence that minimal BAC levels of .06 or less —
which are reached after a normal-sized person has had a single drink,
no more — correlate with a greater likelihood of having an accident as
a result of diminished capacity.
It's one thing to lock up the person who is weaving all over the road
— quite another to arrest a person at a sobriety checkpoint simply because
he has trace amounts of alcohol in his blood.
The anti-drunk-driving
groups have done a great service in helping to enlighten the general public
— and make it socially unacceptable to drive while drunk. But knowing
when to say "when" applies just as equally to social and legal
policy. Just because we went on a bender in the past doesn't mean neo-Prohibitionism
is the answer today. Reasonable people favor reasonable laws.
And that should satisfy
all but the crazies — who should be kept away from the levers of power
regardless.
Eric Peters is an editorial writer for the Washington
Times and the auto columnist for America
Online, Netscape, and CompuServe.
|