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Bluelighter
Drug test blitz
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Liam Houlihan
July 05, 2009 12:00am
EXCLUSIVE: EVERY person admitted to hospital after a crash will be tested for drugs as police vow a zero tolerance crackdown to curb the rising road toll.
The new mandatory testing - of both injured drivers and passengers - is expected to boost prosecutions and convictions of drugged and culpable drivers who might previously have slipped through the net.
Starting this month, each road-related casualty admitted to hospital, previously only screened for alcohol, will be tested for cannabis, ecstasy and amphetamines.
The State Government has bankrolled the $4 million blood screening project and police expect it to lead to hundreds more drug driving convictions every year.
The compulsory drug screening move follows revelations one in five people killed in a motor vehicle collision last year were affected by drugs.
It also follows a weekend that saw the state's road toll overtake the toll for the same time last year.
Police said the reforms were brought in after alarming evidence highlighted the major role drugs played in road deaths.
Of the 332 deaths from collisions in 2008, one in five had illegal drugs in their system.
While the public is increasingly aware of drink driving dangers, police believe young people using drugs and driving are a silent, but major contributor to death and road trauma.
Victoria's head of road policing, Deputy Commissioner Ken Lay, said the state of our road toll called for the new measures.
"The road toll will always ebb and flow, but this is a big step forward and sends a clear message to drivers that substance abuse has no place on our roads," he said.
"It is blatantly obvious and alarming that one of the main reasons for these collisions is the fact that many people are impaired by either drugs or alcohol when they get behind the wheel," Mr Lay said.
"We are leading the world on this. We got the power for random drug testing years ago, but last budget we got funded to do the (hospital) tests."
Working Against Culpable Driving head Penny Martin, whose son, Josh, died in a car being driven by a drunk driver, welcomed the reforms.
"It's fantastic they're filling in the gaps. Nothing that protects the public from dangerous drivers is too harsh," Ms Martin said.
"Any driver involved in any crash should automatically have that done.
"If not, they might end up with a clean record and just go out and do it again.
"The focus should not be the rights of the driver, but protecting the public."
Mr Lay said forensic drug screening of all admissions would make the roads much safer.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,25733761-661,00.html
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