Cannabis Law and Collisions
Cannabis Law and Collisions
Candor
Trust
Interpretation of the relationship of legal
status of other drugs than alcohol to road safety levels is
problematic, due to a lack of data. What is apparent is
that 30-50% of deceased drivers in modern societies have
drugs in their blood, of which alcohol is causing a little
over half of the related trauma problem, and treatment for
drug drivers is not being accessed through Courts conferring
discriminatory treatment versus drink
drivers.
Pursuant to decriminalisation in parts of
Australia cannabis use has become less unacceptable (10%
now say it's OK). W.A. decriminalised marijuana use
several years ago, only adding random drug testing of
drivers in October 2007. W.A. has fared worse in road safety
death reduction per capita than States which have not
decriminalised, some of which also drug test drivers and
have reported reduced prevalence of drug impaired
driving.
Clearly prevalence of drug impairment among live
and deceased Australian drivers is a harm indicator that
would be good to discuss not only in the context of
classifications, but also with regard to any permutations
added by the respective levels of relevant education and
DUID policing in various States. Unfortunately few reliable
Police statistics pertaining to their yearly random or
suspicion based tests and testing targets are
identifiable.
Reinarman et al (2001) have tested
the premise that punishing cannabis use deters use and
thereby benefits public health, finding no evidence among a
sample of experienced Dutch and American users to support
that criminalization reduces use or that decriminalization
increases use. However MacCoun and Reuter found while
depenalisation of the possession of small quantities of
cannabis does not of itself increase cannabis, the Dutch
experience suggests commercial promotion and
sales increase cannabis use.
One aim of
prohibition has been to up prices, but this hasn't been
successful with cannabis as affordability is good. Policies
more tolerant of personal use could facilitate regulation
of demand by the imposition of punitive taxes (along the
line of tobacco control) but ability to homegrow reduces
saliency. Whether the price factor would impact road safety
is questionable, as alcohol taxes rank low in potency as a
mean to address DUI.
The Economist J Williams has
examinied the effects of price and policy on marijuana use
in Australia. He found that every age group is price
sensitive (and alcohol experience is similar),
decriminalisation is only associated with an increases in
the prevalence of use by males over the age of 25. This
group contains a high risk fordrug crashes
demographic.
Altered status does have potential to
reduce the glamorisation and excitement factor for youth and
novice drivers contemplating or involved in rebellion by
drug use, and Police and Court time and drug
hunting resources could be freed up to concentrate more on
demand reduction and on trouble shooting anti social
victimising drug use, including impaired driving,
and evaluating and improving anti measures. Are resources
best used on helicopters spotting plantations or on removing
drug drivers from our roads?
A
possible disadvantage of cannabis decriminalisation could
be that Police would have less inroads to discover
methamphetamine labs - many were stumbled on as the result
of cannabis investigations last year. More Clan labs
operating would be just as noxious to road safety
interests as the prevalence of irresponsible cannabis
use.
An important is unknown whether the current
reductions in youth use in NZ under prohibition and
community worker efforts would continue under a changed
status, and also whether generally reduced use is any true
indicator of reduced harm (Peele) as the question is whether
it is problem users quitting or not establishing dependency.
Reducing use under discretionary fines and diversion
programs suggests that - if it aint broke (in our road
safety risk group) why fix it. Well reducing youth use
sounds good NZ still has high cannabis involvement in
youthful road tolls..
It is worrrying that males
in a high road risk age group could increase use and and
dependency which does link to drug driving frequency.
As statistics indicate dependency frequently occurs in the
context of poly drug use so exacerbating this groups extant
high road safety risk. Small groups like recidivist drink
drivers cause disproportionate harm. Substantially increased
resourcing of any random drug testing regime may be required
to control the additional traffic problem on the
roads.
While the increased use rates in the risk
group of drivers could occur overnight and likely would here
in New Zealand, given the poor level of risk acceptance that
surveys among cannabis users have shown, the experience with
drink driving have shown that it takes years of random
tests to bring about widespread behavioural
change. Yet the technology is only beginning to now reach
required forensic standards, as we experience huge increases
in deceased drivers who smoked so recently as to be
impaired.
Candor finds no evidence cannabis
availability under liberal regimes reduces use of other
illicit risk drugswith road safety benefit, or offers relief
from extant drink driving rates. A free market could tend
more to enabling the mixing of cannabis, alcohol and other
illicits with ill impact on road safety. The assertion that
freeing up of Police resources to go after hard drug dealers
with a reduced supply being the theorised long term
outcome, thereby reducing polydrugging which is a road
safety issue, is a red herring. Due to the wide
availability of alcohol, which is the most common drug
drivers fatally mix with cannabis.
While
decriminalisation does not appear to greatly increase use of
the most used illicit road risk drug, and could enable
better education and dependency management with long term
gains,altered status may be particularly deleterious to the
road safety of males 25-45 and their victims, in the time
it would take to set up responses. Prospective road safety
impacts of decriminalising would take years to assess, in
the real world local context. New Zealanders drive more than
tourists in Amsterdam and the Dutch have a far more
comprehensive road safety program and safer roads and
vehicles. Australian road safety impacts of legal
liberalisation are of more interest to us, and perhaps to
the U.S.A.
The current model has a negative effect
upon ability to freely communicate education messages, and
adds an unhelpful stigma we believe to anybody seeking help
or directed to it for any other than licit drug issues. A
shift away from the current cannabis prohibition model may
not set back road safety, given time, but could well
increase the impaired driving toll in the medium term,
dependent upon whether sufficient monitoring, education and
rigorous enforcement of drug driving are provided. Eager
drug policy reformers seem happy to place the horse before
the cart and test lofty theories with wide ranging
implications. On the road safety front they are not yet
welcome to do so.
Candor recommends against any
change in cannabis legal status until sufficient road safety
data is gathered to show benefits of decriminalisation, and
transport safety systems for harm reduction are well in
place. Candor would not wish to see commercial promotion
and sales as per the Netherlands model or increased drug use
in males over 25, as occurred with the Australian
decriminalisation model. Vienna delegats must consider the
rights of non drug users, which aren't inconsistent with
rights of drug users
to safety.
ENDS