Evidence of meeting #15 for Justice and Human Rights in the 39th Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was drivers.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Frank Hoskins  Q.C., As an Individual
Thomas Brown  Researcher, Addiction Research Program, Douglas Institute, McGill University, As an Individual
Douglas Beirness  Manager, Research and Policy, Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse
Kwei Quaye  Chair, Strategy to Reduce Impaired Driving, Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators
Robert Langille  Chair, Alcohol Test Committee, Canadian Society of Forensic Science
Greg Yost  Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section, Department of Justice
Hal Pruden  Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section, Department of Justice
Paul Boase  Co-Chair, Strategy to Reduce Impaired Driving, Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators

3:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

I would like to call the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights to order. Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), we are studying matters related to impaired driving.

We have a number of witnesses, and again I'd like to express my appreciation for their attendance. I'll just go down the list briefly. The order of the witnesses on the agenda is the order in which they will be speaking.

First, as an individual, we have Mr. Thomas Brown, a researcher with the addiction research program of the Douglas Institute at McGill University. Welcome, sir.

From the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse we have Mr. Douglas Beirness, manager, research policy.

From the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators, we have Mr. Kwei Quaye, chair of the strategy to reduce impaired driving, and Mr. Paul Boase, co-chair, strategy to reduce impaired driving. Welcome.

From the Canadian Society for Forensic Science, we have Mr. Robert Langille, chair of the alcohol test committee. Welcome, sir.

As an individual, we have Mr. Frank Hoskins. You're with the prosecutors?

3:30 p.m.

Frank Hoskins Q.C., As an Individual

Yes. I'm with the Public Prosecution Service of Nova Scotia.

3:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

It's the Public Prosecution Service. Thank you.

From the Department of Justice, we have Mr. Greg Yost, counsel from the criminal law policy section, along with Mr. Hal Pruden, counsel from the criminal law policy section.

Welcome, all.

I will turn the floor over to Mr. Thomas Brown. Could you try to keep your comments to approximately ten minutes or less, if possible? That will give ample time for the members to ask questions of the witnesses.

Mr. Brown.

3:30 p.m.

Thomas Brown Researcher, Addiction Research Program, Douglas Institute, McGill University, As an Individual

I'd like to thank the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights for this invitation to contribute my perspective to your comprehensive review of matters related to impaired driving.

I'm a clinical psychologist and behavioural scientist affiliated withe the Douglas Hospital Research Centre in Montreal at McGill University. My research program into impaired driving, DUI, is focused on the why and the wherefore of recidivism--that is, what are the characteristics that contribute to DUI recidivism and what does that knowledge tell us about how to prevent it?

The focus of my brief is on repeat offenders who are associated with the greatest risk and burden to health and society, some of the most significant findings we have collected in our work, and what they may mean and how we address a problem in the future. Frequently when people discuss DUI recidivism and what to do about it, it often is from very specific perspectives with implicit or explicit assumptions about who recidivists are and what they're like.

First off, measures such as lowering the legal limit for blood alcohol and increasing fines and other deterrents as well as providing remediation to treat problem drinking seem reasonable to reduce the incidents of DUI in general. However, such measures have proven of more limited value in addressing the problem of recidivists, who, by definition, are impervious to these measures. Our work has attempted to find out why the usual deterrents and remedial measures do not work. What we have found is that recidivism is associated with several individual characteristics that go beyond the severity of alcohol abuse or dependence or even other individual characteristics often linked to recidivism, such as criminality, anti-social tendencies, and so on.

We have evidence that risk of DUI recidivism is linked to important neuro-cognitive problems, particularly in domains influencing memory, learning, and planning. We know that problems in these areas reduce the effectiveness of many kinds of psycho-social interventions for all sorts of behavioural problems. For example, if some offenders have difficulty remembering plans they made to avoid a drinking-driving occasion, not to mention remembering them when intoxicated, it is obvious that even the best laid plans to change drink-driving will not be very successful.

This is a fairly novel finding, although it makes intuitive sense if we remember that alcohol can be quite toxic for the brain, especially if one drinks early on in life, when the brain is still developing, for example binge drinking in adolescence, or if one has a genetic susceptibility to drink a lot, and again, early on. In fact, recidivists do tend to report earlier problem drinking than non-recidivists. That is not to say that all recidivists have brain damage, but many more of them do compared to what we might expect in the general population.

Another finding is that recidivists, more than those who are not likely to be so, have specific hormonal responses to stress that suggest they may not respond to fear-provoking situations and risk or danger in the same way as others. A situation that would provoke an unpleasant emotional reaction such as fear and foreboding in us, such as the threat of being arrested a second time for a DUI offence, does not have the same emotional impact on these individuals. This may explain why for some offenders our strategies of deterrence, that is, the fear of arrest, conviction, fines, and even prison, just do not have the desired dissuasive impact, no matter how tough they are.

We also know that many individuals after a DUI conviction do not participate in the remedial measures required for re-licensing in a timely manner. And the numbers are staggering. About 50% in Quebec delay for significant periods of time their re-licensing procedures and up to 80% in other North American jurisdictions. Our research indicates that these individuals share some common reasons for not doing so. One main reason is that reacquiring their licence is simply too costly. By the way, these individuals are also economically more disadvantaged, so their perceptions of costliness seem to make sense. Another is that they have made other transportation arrangements, making paying all the costs and changing their behaviour, especially drinking, unnecessary. One problem we have found is that some who do not reacquire their licence continue to drive unlicensed. That means that they are driving and have not participated in the remedial intervention programs that we have developed to help them deal with alcohol problems.

It is not surprising, then, that our data indicate that while these individuals drive less than those who reacquire their licence, when they do drive, the risk that they are impaired while they're driving is much higher. So here's the paradox: the individuals who most need to have help in resolving a drink-driving problem and pose the greatest DUI risk are the very ones who are least capable of accessing the remedial help they need.

What do these findings suggest to us concerning what can be done to help reduce the risk of DUI recidivism? First, measures that are effective in reducing recidivism in some may not be effective in others. More specifically, if an offender has difficulty remembering his plans to avoid a drink-driving occasion, if he has difficulty even making feasible plans, clearly this will alter how we might envision helping such an individual to reduce the risks they pose. Furthermore, if an offender has a reduced reaction to fear and stress-provoking experiences, the threat of future arrests, punishments, and so on are not winning strategies and other approaches need to be considered.

Finally, if participation in remedial programs to reacquire a licence remain costly, we will tend to dissuade those individuals who really need these services from participating and getting back their licence. One might argue that keeping some of these individuals off the road by making it difficult for them to reacquire a licence is a good thing. Maybe so, but clearly in a rural area, where alternative transportation arrangements are virtually non-existent and the risk of arrest is low, it seems almost inevitable that in order to work, play, or socialize, driving unlicensed will be considered a viable solution for some offenders, rather than dealing with the alternatives--no work, no play, no socializing.

Being able to figure out who's who, and then what precisely they need in the way of remediation, becomes essential. Currently, our DUI assessments are quite limited in scope, focusing mainly on alcohol and drug use. Moreover, the importance of a lot of the information collected, even biological markers of alcohol use, to predict recidivism is quite limited. It's about 50-50. In fact, the accuracy of the vast majority of evaluation protocols currently being employed have not been objectively evaluated.

Concerning intervention, the impact of participation in remedial counselling programs is modest, estimated at about a 7% to 9% improvement in reducing DUI recidivism. Interlock seems to work better, for as long as they are installed and for those who actually sign on to use them, which I understand is about 10%.

Given that these statistics are based only upon those who are involved in remedial programs to begin with, and it looks like the majority of recidivists do not engage in these protocols, we are not doing as great as we might like to think. But as modest as the benefits of these programs are, they are the best we have.

What are some of the solutions suggested by our work? First, we need to remove all obstacles to participation in our remedial strategies. Intervention programs, interlock devices--whatever--should be made as available as possible if we believe them to be effective and we want as many people as possible to benefit from their use. We may even consider decoupling any notion of punishment or deterrence from measures that could help people deal with their problems. Even providing incentives for them to participate in remedial measures should be part of the debate.

Second--and this comes from a researcher--we need to invest in research in order to address the following three priorities: first, objectively evaluate the effectiveness of current assessment protocols; second, develop new approaches to assessment that are more effective in appraising risky characteristics associated with recidivism; and third, develop new and more varied approaches to intervention that take into account the fact that recidivists, the toughest ones, are not all the same and may not respond to interventions that are effective with people more like those in this room.

Driving research, and DUI research specifically, is not well funded by public funding agencies relative to other health concerns. It should be, because the burden on health and society is staggering. Car accidents, about 40% of which involve alcohol, are the source of the greatest morbidity in children and young adults.

Finally, and at the risk of complicating life, we need to acknowledge that recidivists are very different one from the other, and that any one approach to reducing recidivism is not likely to be adequate. But as we see in the alcoholism and other problem behaviour areas, a shotgun approach—throw everything at them—is not very effective and not particularly cost-efficient either. It seems likely that in looking to the future, we will have to be prepared to better tailor our strategies to the individual characteristics of offenders.

Thank you.

3:40 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Thank you very much, Dr. Brown.

Now we go to the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse. Mr. Beirness.

3:40 p.m.

Dr. Douglas Beirness Manager, Research and Policy, Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse

Thank you, Mr. Chairman and committee members. The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse appreciates the opportunity to address you today to share our views on the issue of impaired driving.

As you may know, CCSA is Canada's national non-governmental organization, formed in 1988 by an act of Parliament, to provide national leadership and evidence-based analysis and advice on substance use and abuse in Canada. Accordingly, the issue of alcohol and drug-impaired driving is of great interest to our organization, and we believe we're well positioned to contribute meaningfully to the discussion. It is also an issue that has been the primary focus of my own research over the past 25 years.

Today I want to talk about three issues: first, lowering the blood alcohol limit in the Criminal Code; second, random breath testing, or RBT; and third, repeat offenders.

Last year CCSA, in collaboration with Health Canada and the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission, released recommendations for a national alcohol strategy. The 41 recommendations included in this document were developed through extensive consultations with a wide variety of stakeholders and represent a comprehensive approach to establishing a culture of moderation around alcohol use in Canada. Recommendation 38 calls for the adoption of the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators' model to address drinking drivers with lower blood alcohol concentrations. CCSA supports this recommendation.

The CCMTA model outlines a series of steps to improve our current provincial system of short-term licence suspensions for drivers with blood alcohol concentrations below the criterion for criminal charges. In many cases, the threshold for these suspensions is 50 milligrams per decalitre.

Currently, all provinces and territories, with the exception of Quebec, give police the power to issue these drivers an immediate 12- or 24-hour suspension. The CCMTA model calls for longer periods of suspension—seven to 14 days—increased suspensions for repeat violations, rehabilitation and interlock programs for repeat offenders, and a system of escalating reinstatement fees.

The short-term suspension approach is administrative and avoids the complications associated with the processing and prosecution of criminal charges. Short-term suspensions are not necessarily a severe sanction, but they are applied swiftly and with certainty at the time of the offence—two factors deemed essential to effective deterrence. Short-term suspensions are applied quickly and easily at the side of the road. Because of these laws, the police are able to remove from the road at least twice as many drinking drivers as they might otherwise if criminal charges were the only option available to them.

Short-term suspensions have been used in this country for over 30 years. Surprisingly, few evaluations have been conducted. A few years ago, I was involved in a major study of the introduction of short-term suspensions for drivers with blood alcohol levels between 40 and 80 milligrams per decalitre in Saskatchewan. This study revealed a decrease in driver fatalities with BACs below 80 milligrams per decalitre associated with the new law. Also, drivers issued a short-term suspension were less likely to have a subsequent Criminal Code conviction than drivers whose first alcohol-related offence was a Criminal Code conviction.

As part of the same study, we found differences in the characteristics of drivers who were issued a short-term suspension and those who were convicted of a Criminal Code offence. Whereas drivers issued a short-term suspension were characterized by their involvement in risky driving practices, drivers charged under the Criminal Code were distinguished by the extent of their heavy drinking. These data revealed differences between the two groups that go well beyond the magnitude of their blood alcohol level when they were stopped by the police and suggest that more pervasive differences in psychosocial and behavioural characteristics may underlie their drinking-and-driving behaviour. The two groups of drivers are clearly different, and these differences should be reflected in measures to deal effectively with them.

Over the years, many arguments have been advanced in support of a lower BAC limit, specifically a limit of 50 milligrams per decalitre. Most of this evidence is open to interpretation. Nevertheless, two indisputable facts remain. First, most alcohol-related fatalities are accounted for by drivers with blood alcohol levels in excess of 150 milligrams per decalitre. Second, in most provinces, a lower alcohol limit is already being enforced.

We at CCSA believe that the CCMTA model for improvements to short-term suspensions remains the preferred system for dealing with lower-BAC drivers.

Random breath testing, or RBT, refers to a policy that requires a driver to provide a breath sample at any time in the absence of reasonable suspicion or cause.

First of all, let me say that there is nothing truly random about random breath testing. The term random is used in place of more accurate and contentious descriptors, such as arbitrary or capricious.

Nevertheless, whatever label you choose, the strategy works, at least when used as part of a year-round intensive enforcement campaign. When used in this fashion, RBT increases the perceived and the actual probability of being detected by the police, both of which are key factors in general deterrence.

The Australians have pioneered RBT as part of an intensive enforcement campaign and have demonstrated some pretty remarkable success with it.

Thirty years ago, Parliament gave police the power to stop vehicles without cause to check drivers for alcohol use. However, police were not given the power to demand a breath test without a reasonable suspicion that the driver had consumed alcohol.

Although the threshold for suspicion is not high—generally the smell of alcohol is sufficient—it has been demonstrated that police officers vary considerably in their ability to detect the signs and symptoms of alcohol use. In a study where researchers collected voluntary breath samples from drivers immediately downstream from a police checkpoint, it was determined that the police failed to detect more than 50% of drivers with a blood alcohol level in excess of 80 milligrams per decalitre.

Now, I don't say this to discredit our police. I raise it to illustrate the fact that the detection of alcohol can be a very difficult task, especially in a brief interaction at the side of the road. Nevertheless, if an impaired driver escapes detection at a checkpoint, it serves to reinforce the behaviour and increases the likelihood of its recurrence. Clearly, a better model of detection is needed.

In the past, any suggestion of random testing has been quickly dismissed as a violation of our constitutional rights. Perhaps it's time to reconsider that position. Sometimes we have to make small sacrifices to achieve a greater goal. Consider for a minute the procedures we're now subjected to in this country in order to board an airplane. By comparison, providing a quick and easy breath test while sitting in the relative comfort and privacy of your own vehicle seems almost trivial. The need is great, the benefits are substantial, the sacrifice is minimal.

I would suggest that it's at least worth having the discussion. This discussion of random breath testing should include alternatives as well. One such alternative is the use of passive alcohol sensors. These portable, hand-held devices detect the presence of alcohol in the air surrounding the driver. The presence of alcohol would provide the officer with the reasonable suspicion of alcohol use necessary to make a demand for an actual breath test on an approved screening device.

Passive sensors are in use by numerous police departments in the United States, where they have been considered an extension of the officer's nose.The procedure is virtually transparent to the driver, and because drivers are not generally considered to have ownership of the ambient air or their expired breath, use of a passive sensor does not constitute an unreasonable search or seizure.

The passive sensor would provide reasonable suspicion of alcohol use; evidence of a violation is provided by approved breath testing instruments. Passive alcohol sensors may actually provide a compromise between the need to increase the perceived and actual probability of detecting impaired drivers and the protection of individual rights and freedoms.

The final issue I want to address is repeat offenders. Recommendation 40 of the national alcohol strategy focuses on those strategies to deal effectively with repeat offenders. Extensive research over the past 20 years has demonstrated that convicted impaired drivers continue to drive after drinking, often with high BACs, even while prohibited or suspended. They present an unacceptable risk on the road.

As we heard a minute ago, many of these drivers have chronic alcohol problems as well as other problems and require treatment and rehabilitation. There's an urgent need for more and better assessment and treatment services and a means to ensure that they're accessible to all impaired driving offenders.

Dealing with alcohol problems is not a simple process. It begins with assessment and can be a prolonged and intensive process. Relapses are common. In the interim, between an impaired driving offence and an acceptable resolution to the drinking problem, there's a need to incapacitate the offender to prevent a repeat occurrence of the behaviour.

A simple driving prohibition or licence suspension just simply is not sufficient. It's too easily circumvented. Something more is needed and that something is an alcohol ignition interlock. This device prevents a vehicle from being started if the driver has been drinking. Nine provinces as well as the Yukon have such programs. They've been proven extremely effective in reducing the rate of repeat offences among convicted impaired drivers. The primary drawback of interlock programs is that they are grossly underutilized. In light of the danger imposed by repeat impaired driving and the proven success of ignition interlocks, there's an urgent need to ensure that more offenders, including first-time offenders, participate in interlock programs as soon as possible following the offence to prevent further impaired driving behaviour. In this context perhaps it's time to reconsider the traditional mandatory driving prohibition and replace it with a mandatory period of interlock program participation.

In summary, we recommend the following: allow provinces to deal with lower BAC drivers with an improved system of short-term licence suspension according to the model proposed by CCMTA; give due consideration to the implementation of random breath testing and/or the use of passive alcohol sensors; and finally, encourage the widespread use of alcohol ignition interlock programs for all offenders by eliminating the mandatory period of prohibition and replacing it with a requirement for ignition interlock program participation.

I appreciate the opportunity to present our views to you today and I look forward to any questions that you may have.

3:50 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Thank you, Mr. Beirness.

Next is the Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators. Mr. Quaye, will you be presenting?

3:50 p.m.

Kwei Quaye Chair, Strategy to Reduce Impaired Driving, Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators

Yes, I will. Thank you.

The Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators, or CCMTA, wishes to thank you for the opportunity to speak to the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights on the issue of alcohol-impaired driving.

CCMTA is a non-profit organization comprised of transportation representatives from the federal, provincial, and territorial governments and includes associate members from the private sector, non-governmental organizations, and other government departments. CCMTA reports through a board of directors to the Council of Ministers Responsible for Transportation and Highway Safety.

CCMTA oversees Canada's road safety vision 2010, otherwise known as RSV 2010, which targets a 30% reduction in deaths and serious injuries on Canadian roads by 2010. RSV 2010 has a number of soft targets related to the issues of road safety, including an impaired driving target of a 40% decrease in the percentage of road users fatally or seriously injured in crashes involving a drinking driver.

Data from 1987 to 2005 indicate that there have been improvements in the number of fatally injured drivers who had been drinking, but much of the improvement occurred in the 1980s and 1990s. Over the past seven years the rate of improvement has plateaued.

3:55 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Excuse me, Mr. Quaye.

I've just been informed that you're speaking a little too fast for the interpreters. Would you just slow down a tad, please. I know your presentation is fairly long. We'd like you to keep it to about ten minutes, if you could. Perhaps as you read you could think about where you might want to shorten it up a little.

Thank you, sir.

3:55 p.m.

Chair, Strategy to Reduce Impaired Driving, Canadian Council of Motor Transport Administrators

Kwei Quaye

CCMTA is of the view that for impaired driving programs to be effective, they should combine the elements of certainty and swiftness of apprehension, severity of penalties, and appropriate remedial action. In light of the foregoing, CCMTA would like to take this opportunity to specifically address the four areas under review by the committee.

The first one is lowering the Criminal Code blood alcohol concentration threshold from 0.08 to 0.05. CCMTA believes there is sufficient evidence to suggest that drivers pose a safety risk below the current legal threshold of 0.08. At issue is how a lower threshold can best be incorporated into the existing process while minimizing any adverse systemic impacts of such a change. Currently, all jurisdictions except Quebec have existing administrative programs to address the issue of lower BAC drivers. These programs generally entail the issuing of short-term administrative suspensions to quickly remove low-BAC drinking drivers from the road. These programs can be used by police officers for drivers below the legal threshold but above 0.04 or 0.05, depending on jurisdiction. While knowledge of the current legal limit among drivers is high, evidence suggests that the administrative limits and the associated penalties are not.

To strengthen and increase the effectiveness of existing short-term administrative sanctions, CCMTA developed a model as a standard for jurisdictions to consider, so as to update the existing roadside suspension programs for drivers with lower BACs. Indeed, a number of jurisdictions have already strengthened existing programs since the model was approved. This model takes a swift and measured approach to lower-BAC drivers without unduly increasing the workload on police, court services, or transportation agencies.

Number two is random breath testing. A number of surveys have indicated that the public does not have a high expectation that impaired drivers will be caught by police. That is to say, the certainty or perception of certainty of apprehension is low. The goal of random breath testing, or RBT, programs is to increase the probability of an impaired driver coming into contact with the police, increasing the perception of apprehension and increasing the general deterrent effect of police enforcement. Currently, a police officer may stop a vehicle but may not make a demand for a breath sample unless there is suspicion that the driver has consumed alcohol. As a result, many drivers who are stopped in spot checks are allowed to proceed without providing a breath sample. The use of RBT in which all drivers stopped in the check stop will be required to provide a breath sample or be charged with failure to provide a breath sample will significantly increase the number of drivers tested who have been drinking. While such a system would be challenged under sections of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Supreme Court has indicated a number of criteria for such a violation to be justified, which we believe the use of RBT for managing impaired driving will meet.

Number three is advances in technology to enforce laws. Ignition interlock programs have been shown to be effective when installed on the vehicle of a convicted driver who uses that vehicle. However, a number of challenges exist with interlock programs. Currently, the alcohol test committee of the Canadian Society of Forensic Science is responsible for approving screening devices and instruments, but not for ignition interlocks, as programs are fully within provincial and territorial jurisdiction. In order to improve national consistency and elevate the technical standard for ignition interlocks, it would be beneficial if the alcohol test committee could be given the responsibility for approving specific ignition interlock devices as meeting an approved technical standard.

A second issue with ignition interlock programs is the low number of eligible drivers who actually use the devices. This is a significant concern, as there is evidence that these drivers may not be honouring their suspensions but choosing to drive without valid licenses. In further developing ignition interlock programs for convicted impaired drivers, one challenge is to increase the number of eligible drivers who install the device and the provision of swift and sure sanctions for those who drive a vehicle without the equipment installed. An RBT program is a necessary element to increase the perception of being caught driving without a licence or an ignition interlock device, and to support existing provincial and territorial programs.

CCMTA also believes that research into other technologies that can be used to immobilize the vehicle or monitor the alcohol use of an offender should be pursued further with the goal of making these technologies available for jurisdictions to consider integrating into their programs.

Number four is federal, provincial, and territorial programs. The partnerships among provincial and territorial programs and the federal Criminal Code of Canada have been effective in reducing the incidence of impaired driving. Provincial and territorial jurisdictions have invested a great deal of time and resources in impaired driving programs that have been developed over the years. As new programs are developed, it will be important to consider the impact on existing programs and the resources before a specific initiative is implemented. For example, the implementation of measures in Bill C-2 is likely to be significant with respect to human and fiscal resources, training for police and prosecutors, purchases of new equipment, and changes to the handling of evidence and cases. These must all be managed along with other priorities. It is necessary to consider the capacity of police, courts, and transportation agencies to implement and support new programs or program changes in an efficient and timely manner. In addition, each proposal must be fully costed, and a funding source identified before implementation can be considered.

Many of these problems can be overcome by streamlining the necessary forms and processes for federal, provincial, and territorial legislation. This streamlining should be a priority, as it speaks directly to the provincial and territorial capacity to deal with new programs or additional changes generated by random breath testing or changing the blood alcohol concentration threshold.

In conclusion, impaired driving remains a significant challenge, which Canadians believe can and should be addressed by governments. To do so effectively requires coordination and cooperation. Federal legislation must dovetail with provincial and territorial programs and have the support of police agencies and the general public as well as the necessary funding to be successful. We must be cognizant of the comprehensive impaired driving programs that are already in place in the various jurisdictions, and be careful to ensure that new broad and far-reaching initiatives do not jeopardize our goal of having swift, certain, and significant initiatives to help reduce the incidence of impaired driving and its consequences in Canada.

CCMTA recommends that the Criminal Code threshold not be lowered from the existing level, with the exception of one of the jurisdictions that is not in full agreement in with this.

CCMTA also recommends that Parliament make mandatory a demand for a breath sample by a police officer at a random breath test stop.

CCMTA recommends that Parliament authorize the alcohol test committee to approve alcohol ignition interlock system standards to ensure that all the technology functions at a minimum acceptable level.

Finally, CCMTA recommends that a comprehensive research and evaluation framework be developed and funded with a goal of recommending evidence-based solutions to the challenge of impaired driving and reducing unnecessary technicalities that place an undue burden on police, the courts, and transportation agencies.

Together, we have made significant improvements in rates of impaired driving over the past 30 years, and together we can move forward and achieve our collective goal of 40% reduction in deaths and serious injuries by alcohol-involved drivers by 2010, thereby reducing the $21 billion in societal costs related to impaired driving each year.

Thank you for the opportunity to express our considerations and concerns. We will be happy to take any questions.

4:05 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Thank you very much, Mr. Kwei, and also for keeping your presentation to the limit. We appreciate that.

Now we go to the Canadian Society of Forensic Science, and Mr. Robert Langille.

February 28th, 2008 / 4:05 p.m.

Dr. Robert Langille Chair, Alcohol Test Committee, Canadian Society of Forensic Science

Thank you, Mr. Chair and members, for allowing me to act on behalf of the alcohol test committee as a witness before you today.

After giving you an overview of the Canadian Society of Forensic Science and the alcohol test committee, we'll just be presenting a summary of the highlights from the brief that I and my colleagues prepared in response to the issues raised in the extract.

The Canadian Society of Forensic Science was founded in October 1953 by scientists with an interest in forensic science and the growth and development of forensic science in Canada, including the RCMP lab, other federal labs, and the Centre of Forensic Sciences in Toronto, the laboratory where I work. The alcohol test committee was formed as a committee of the Canadian Society of Forensic Science in 1967, at the same time as Parliament was considering Canada's first driving laws, per se. The focus of the alcohol test committee is to develop recommended procedures for breath testing, minimum standards for police training in the use of breath-testing equipment, and the evaluation of equipment for breath and blood alcohol testing, primarily breath alcohol testing.

Currently the alcohol test committee is an adviser to the Minister of Justice in the area of impaired driving, especially with respect to the evaluation of breath testing equipment for use in Canada. We're comprised of forensic sciences from the RCMP, the Centre for Forensic Sciences, and the Laboratoire de sciences judiciaires et de médecine légale in Montreal, and we represent all regions of Canada.

In the brief that I prepared we addressed the issues outlined in the extract primarily from a toxicological point of view. I will begin with an innovative approach, which is random breath testing.

It's well known from pharmacological and toxicological studies that intoxication is an advanced state of impairment. Consider the findings of publications from me and colleagues at the Centre of Forensic Sciences and others that the average blood alcohol concentration of drinking drivers in Ontario--our work was done with Toronto data--is an average of 160 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood, or 160 milligrams percent.

4:05 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Can I just briefly interrupt you for a moment? If you could slow down for the interpreters, we would appreciate it. Thank you.

4:05 p.m.

Chair, Alcohol Test Committee, Canadian Society of Forensic Science

Dr. Robert Langille

This must include a significant number of frequent drinkers and individuals who have significant tolerance to the effects of alcohol, such that they would show few or no signs of intoxication. In low-traffic or low-demand situations, their poor driving may not be as identifiable to traffic and other police officers, but they are still impaired in their ability to operate a motor vehicle. This is the rationale for the RIDE program and approved screening devices used at the roadside.

On the list of references accompanying my brief, reference number five is the abstract of a study performed by two RCMP officers in 1977, which looked at the advantages of the RIDE program. I'll just pick out three of the cases from that study, in which police officers could not detect the intoxication of individuals who had substantial blood alcohol concentrations. These are the comments from police officers: One individual with a blood alcohol concentration of 200 was not obviously impaired. Another at 290 had no strong visible signs of impairment according to the officer who was investigating that individual. A third, who had a blood alcohol concentration of 160, smelled of liquor but did not look or act impaired. Those are the views of the officers at the roadside at the time.

The police need a better tool to identify these drivers before they enter high-traffic or high-demand situations, such as an emergency situation. Randomized breath testing would complement RIDE programs, and increase the possibility of catching these problem drinking drivers, and put added pressure on the majority of the driving public to act responsibly.

Next I'd like to address the per se limits, and the topic of reducing the per se limit to 50. There is no doubt that there is good toxicological evidence for impairment in individuals' abilities to operate a motor vehicle at blood alcohol concentrations between 50 and 80 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood. What occurs is that as one drinks, one's blood alcohol concentration increases and the degree of impairment increases in a graded fashion.

What we would like to do, though, is to address the fact that although the limit is currently set at 80, the reality is that individuals are not charged until their blood alcohol concentrations exceed 100 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood. Furthermore, due to the safeguards and the instruments that are used to determine blood alcohol concentrations, and the calibration of those instruments to ensure that no one is falsely charged due to falsely high results, this actually translates into no charges being laid until their blood alcohol concentration reaches a minimum of 110. Therefore, we think that through some changes in legislation, that level could be brought down to an actual level where criminal charges would apply at the realistic level of 80 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood.

Three suggestions that would assist that would be, first, to include 80 in the legislation. Currently paragraph 253(b) states that someone is in violation when their blood alcohol concentration exceeds 80 milligrams, so 80 is not included. Due to certain good practices, that means that anyone whose blood alcohol concentration is between 80 and 89 would not be considered to exceed 80. Including 80 would eliminate that, and that would be an initial reduction in the limit at which individuals would be charged.

Something that has been used in the U.S. and elsewhere is to include a third category or a third offence, which is that individuals be charged when their breath alcohol concentration exceeds 80 milligrams of alcohol in 210 litres of breath. This is the exact equivalent of 80 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood. This is what breath-testing instruments actually calculate, and then it is transcribed into a blood alcohol concentration. This would eliminate a lot of the defences around variability in the blood-breath ratio, that although the instrument read an individual's blood alcohol concentration as greater than 80, the person might have been below 80 at the time due to physiological properties.

A third one would be to include wording that would direct the courts to consider the actual readings of breath-testing instruments. Breath-testing instruments today are set to read low so that there are no falsely high breath readings. If the wording were changed to include the actual results, rather than any variability around them, the inclusion of these three changes would bring the limit where people are actually charged from 100 down to 80, and the realistic levels would be from 110 down to at least 89 milligrams per hundred. It would not unfairly prejudice those individuals who are around 80, and would still be in the interests of public safety, because someone whose blood alcohol concentration is 78 is still just as much a risk to the public as someone whose blood alcohol concentration is 81. With the safeguards that are enacted in this country with the breath-testing instruments, it is our belief that individuals who have breath readings of 80 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood and above would not be unfairly prejudiced by being included in criminal charges.

We also agree with the CCMTA and the others here that the combination of provincial statutes being applied at blood alcohol concentrations between, essentially, zero, or certainly between 50 and 80 for most adults, and even lower levels for youth, combined with criminal prosecutions above 80 is defensible toxicologically because it increases the penalty with increasing degree of impairment from increasing blood alcohol concentrations.

We would also ask you to consider more strongly imposing even greater sanctions when blood alcohol concentrations go beyond 160 milligrams of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood. There is absolutely good scientific evidence to show that individuals at 200 and 300 are a much greater risk, and they deserve much greater penalties than those who are at 80. Currently there is only a statement that the courts consider blood alcohol readings in excess of 160 as an aggravating factor. From personal observations in court, that doesn't lead to a whole lot of difference in the types of fines for individuals convicted at blood alcohol concentrations of 200 and those convicted with blood alcohol concentrations of 110, unless they are repeat offenders.

Finally, the alcohol test committee would invite the committee to consider adding, either as a separate category or an additional category, the point that the readings not only be considered at the time of driving but also be considered at the time of testing, so that readings at the time of testing be admissible in court. Currently individuals are able to use a defence of bolus drinking, or drinking large amounts of alcohol shortly before driving, as a valid defence against being prosecuted under paragraph 253(b), where their blood alcohol concentration was greater than 80 milligrams in 100 millilitres of blood at the time of driving.

The rationale for this apparent defence is that they were under 80 at the time, they had consumed a large amount of alcohol shortly before driving, and by the time they were tested they were over 80. But frankly, the consumption of large amounts of alcohol and a rapidly rising blood alcohol concentration is even more impairing than regular social drinking.

The use of this dangerous practice as a loophole to evade prosecution of over 80 seems irrational and contrary to public safety. Allowing a court to view the results at the time of testing would eliminate that. It's a procedure that has been called the “perilous rush home”--the consumption of large amounts of alcohol, and then the rush to get home before one's blood alcohol concentration exceeds 80. All those individuals are still impaired in their ability to operate motor vehicles, and this issue should be addressed.

I would like to end by stating that with consideration of any new technologies, the overriding concern of the alcohol test committee is that new equipment be properly tested and approved, and that it be used by properly trained officers in a program that is subject to strict quality assurance and quality control procedures to ensure that the evidence meets the acceptable standards of reliance for court purposes.

Thank you for your attention.

4:15 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Thank you, Mr. Langille.

We will now move to Mr. Frank Hoskins from the Nova Scotia crown prosecutors office.

4:20 p.m.

Q.C., As an Individual

Frank Hoskins

Mr. Chair and committee members, I'm appearing here today as a crown attorney; however, my views expressed here today are not intended to represent the Province of Nova Scotia or the public prosecution service.

My position with the public prosecution service is that of chief crown attorney of the Halifax region and special prosecutions. As chief crown attorney, my responsibilities include the supervision of 40 crown attorneys, whose responsibilities include the prosecution of offences under the Criminal Code and numerous provincial statutes.

I am pleased to have been invited here today, as I believe that the need to prevent, investigate, and deter impaired driving is unchallenged as a laudable and necessary objective. Indeed, there is no question that reducing the carnage caused by impaired driving continues to be a compelling, important, and worthwhile government objective.

The effective regulation and control of this activity gives rise to a unique challenge when it comes to protecting users of the highway from the menace posed by impaired driving. This challenge arises from the fact that drinking and driving is not itself illegal; it is only driving with an impermissible amount of alcohol in one's body or driving while one's faculties are impaired that is criminalized.

Consequently, there is not always a clear, bright line to easily discern the permissible and the impermissible amounts of alcohol in one's body. The necessary screening can only be achieved through field enforcement officers, who must be equipped to conduct the screening with minimal intrusion on the individual motorist's charter of rights.

The challenge in this area of law enforcement is increased by the fact that the activity in question is ongoing and the impaired driver who has exceeded the permissible limits represents a continuing danger on the highway. Effective screening at the outset is necessary to ensure the safety of the drivers themselves, their passengers, and other users of the highway. Effective screening should also be achieved with minimal inconvenience to legitimate users of the highway.

It is important to recognize that the need for regulation and control is achieved through an interlocking scheme of federal and provincial legislation. The regulation of impaired driving is not confined exclusively to the criminal law, but rather includes effective enforcement by roadside screening techniques contemplated by provincial legislation, which provide a mechanism for combating the continuing danger presented by impaired driving.

In Nova Scotia, our provincial legislation imposes strict restrictions and rigid or exacting impositions on impaired drivers, which are intended to serve as an effective deterrent and protection for the public.

4:20 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Excuse me, Mr. Hoskins. I know that as all of you get into your presentations you move along quite rapidly, but the interpreters are having a problem again.

Thank you, sir.

4:20 p.m.

Q.C., As an Individual

Frank Hoskins

Furthermore, it is expected that the alcohol ignition interlock program will come into effect later this year, sometime in June. Against this backdrop, and from a prosecutorial perspective, I wish to briefly comment on the new legislative initiatives in the area of impaired driving as contained in Bill C-2, and then briefly comment on both the legal and practical issues that frequently arise in the prosecution of impaired driving cases.

Before I briefly comment on the initiatives of Bill C-2, I want to recognize and commend this committee and Parliament for the important work that has been done in attempting to protect Canadian citizens from drivers impaired by alcohol, drugs, or both in the manner consistent with the values enshrined in the charter.

Given the time allotted, I will touch upon only two initiatives contained in Bill C-2: the drug-impaired driving provision, and the provision that restricts evidence to the contrary.

It is an understatement to suggest that the drug-impairment driving enforcement provisions are long overdue. The lack of clear, effective responses to drug-impaired driving has been a longstanding concern. The new legislative provision will undoubtedly enhance the prosecution of drug-impaired drivers.

Although Bill C-2 permits video recording of test, in my view such video recording, where practical, should be conducted both at the roadside and later in the evaluation process during the drug-recognition test, as this is one way to import more objectivity into what will be argued as a subjective interpretation of the officer.

Furthermore, the audio and video recording of test for drug and alcohol impairment could be the most compelling evidence in the prosecution of an impaired driver, as it could clearly demonstrate the demeanour, behaviour, and condition of an accused person.

With respect to the provision that restricts evidence to the contrary, this amendment will undoubtedly limit or restrict the often-asserted defence of “I had only a couple of drinks”, or the Carter defence, but it does not eliminate the defence of bolus drinking that could occur before or after operating a motor vehicle. While the defence of bolus drinking is still possible, with the amendments the defence will be very difficult to establish.

There is a multitude of legal and practical issues that frequently arise in the prosecution of impaired driving cases; however, I'm going to focus on the following five: first, the effects of contextual definitions; second, police and crown training; third, blood alcohol concentration limit; fourth, random breath testing; and fifth, the necessity of a preamble.

With respect to the legal issues, there are phrases or words contained in the Criminal Code that are frequently litigated because they have been given contextual definitions by the courts. Examples include “care or control”, “forthwith”, and “as soon as practicable”. While these phrases or terms can cause uncertainty and unpredictability, they do provide a major flexibility that is consistent with the charter values. Thus, practically speaking, because of the contextual nature of these legal terms frequent litigation of the application of these terms to any given case should be expected.

With respect to police and crown training, I would like to make a few comments. The proclamation of the new Criminal Code provisions or amendments to the code related to impaired driving offences should be accompanied by funding sufficient to include adequate resources for enhanced police and crown training. Often an accused will challenge the police investigation, or lack thereof, which will include arguments involving insufficient grounds to make the demand, charter violations, and/or procedural mistakes made during the course of police investigation. Therefore continuous training in this area is necessary to ensure that investigations and prosecutions are conducted efficiently and effectively.

With respect to the issue of lowering the blood alcohol concentration limit from 0.8 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood to 0.05 milligrams, I'm not qualified to provide any meaningful commentary on this issue. It would appear to be a scientific inquiry examining the effects of impairment at 0.05 milligrams. However, I would add as a practical caveat to this issue that the common practice of the police in Nova Scotia is to lay charges only where blood alcohol exceeds or equals 0.10 milligrams. This is because of the presumed margin of error involved in the breathalyzer equipment.

In effect, then, the BAC level is elevated in practice, although it should be noted that in Nova Scotia, under provincial legislation, a BAC level of 0.05 milligrams empowers the police to temporarily suspend a driver's licence. Furthermore, a zero BAC level is statutorily mandated for newly licensed drivers.

I will now touch upon the issue of random breath testing. I do so not as a constitutional expert but as a practitioner in criminal law.

While random testing may be used in other countries, it would undoubtedly be challenged in Canada as a violation of the charter unless the courts found it to be a reasonable limit on the freedom of our citizens. In Canada, Parliament has set a statutory scheme whereby a screening test can be administered by the police merely upon entertaining a reasonable suspicion that alcohol is in a person's body--for example, the mere smell of alcohol on the driver's breath.

While the Supreme Court of Canada has upheld the constitutionality of this statutory scheme as a reasonable limit, it is arguable that the court may not uphold the statutory scheme that authorizes random breath testing where the police have no reason to suspect that the person is impaired. However, limiting the application of random breath testing to specific situations, such as motor vehicle accidents that cause death or bodily harm, may alleviate the charter concerns. Again, that is a matter best left with constitutional experts.

In any event, every aspect of any legislative scheme that authorizes random breath testing will invariably be subjected to detailed constitutional scrutiny.

Lastly, is it necessary to have a legislative preamble? While preambles can serve a useful purpose with new legislative schemes, if it is Parliament's intention that the amendments be judicially interpreted according to certain enumerated principles, it would be preferable to have these principles clearly and succinctly contained in amendments themselves.

That concludes my remarks, Mr. Chair. I'd be pleased to answer any questions.

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Thank you, Mr. Hoskins. It's always good to have a crown opinion statement. That doesn't happen too often in our committee, so we appreciate your presence.

Now to Mr. Yost or Mr. Pruden.

4:30 p.m.

Greg Yost Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section, Department of Justice

I'll be presenting. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Okay, Mr. Yost, you have the floor.

4:30 p.m.

Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section, Department of Justice

Greg Yost

Mr. Chairman, members of the standing committee, I trust you've received the paper that Mr. Pruden and I prepared, “Impaired Driving Issues”. It was submitted through the clerk about two weeks ago, I do believe.

Between us, Mr. Pruden and I have more than 40 years of dealing with impaired driving issues.....

Vous ne l'avez pas reçu?

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

Rick Dykstra Conservative St. Catharines, ON

I think the only question is whether it was distributed to members of the committee.

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Art Hanger

Electronically it was distributed, yes.

4:30 p.m.

Conservative

Rick Dykstra Conservative St. Catharines, ON

It was?