Regarding the 0.05, I think you can assure the brewer in your riding that the 0.05, which, as we discussed earlier, would effectively be enforced at 0.07, given the margin of error that is used by the courts, for most people--given that essentially each person is going to burn off about 0.015 milligrams or percent per hour--it's equivalent to having roughly five drinks in their system plus any drinks that they actually burned off for the period of time that they were drinking.
I'm certainly concerned about the person who takes the wheel and who has the equivalent of five drinks in their system. That is where this committee should be focusing its attention, not on some of the mythology that the brewers or others may be promoting about what the impact is going to be on their industry. I think it is none. The reality is that you have to look at the scientific amount that represents, the 0.05 versus the 0.08 or the 0.07 versus the 0.10, and then the equivalent that represents for the average person who is consuming that amount of alcohol.
As I challenged the committee before, if you take the Pepsi challenge and do the test, I think you'll be surprised at how much alcohol you can drink before you're going to go over those amounts.