Impaired driving remains a leading cause of car crash fatalities in B.C.

On average, 96 people die every year in crashes involving impaired driving.

On average, 96 people die every year in crashes involving impaired driving. That is why the RCMP is committed to enforcing our impaired driving laws.

On Friday June 27, 2014 British Columbia police agencies had a one day blitz to focus on impaired drivers.

Various strategies were launched throughout the North District and the results are in. Police spent over 160 man hours, more than 1100 vehicles were checked and 27 Approved Screening Device Tests were conducted. The results: six – three day licence suspensions issued, 11 – 90 day immediate roadside licence suspensions issued, two Criminal Code Impaired investigations completed.

Operating a motor vehicle while one’s ability to do so is impaired by drugs or alcohol is never an intelligent decision. Yet it’s done every day by individuals from all walks of life. When someone drives impaired, they cause issues that affect a society in many untold ways. These range from extensive financial tolls of the collision itself, to the extended families of those who have lost loved ones. That is why we do not call them accidents, they are preventable collision.

 

Burns Lake Lakes District News