ubiquitous
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There are a few things wrong with that report.Even if your assertion that the long term trend in the vol. of road deaths/accidents has not fallen the fact that there is much more traffic on the roads today indicates an improvement in road safety . That aside the chart on page 10 in here [broken link removed]
shows a decrease in road deaths in absolute terms and , more importantly in my view, in relative terms.
No doubt banning cars would have a similar effect. Again, no mention of any other possible factors that may have attributed to this reduction.AFAIK when random breath testing was introduced in Australia there was a large reduction in drink related accidents.
I don't know.If so, how should we (the citzens) do our best to ensure that people do not drink and drive, or of they do, that there is a reasonable chance that they will be caught?
I try not to assume anything, but I'm human. I do find it strange though that a pub car park can be full and most people in the pub appear to be drinking. At closing time, very few cars are left in the car park. I draw my own conclusions from this crude analysis.So, do you assume that publicans actually support drink driving? Isthere any evidence that publicans have stood in the way of anti drink driving measures before?
I don't claim to know all the answers. Soon it appears, I risk been stopped and breath tested, even if I've never touched a drop of booze in my life.And with regard to alternative means of transport-who would provide this, what form would it take and how would it be financed? Is there any guarantee that if alternative means of transport available, people would use them as opposed to their own car?
umop3p!sdn said:a pub car park can be full and most people in the pub appear to be drinking. At closing time, very few cars are left in the car park.
soy said:Under the existing laws the guards would surely be able to 'form the opinion' that the drivers of these cars may have been drinking. This allows them to pull over these drivers and investigate further / breathalise them.
We should be asking why is this not being done today under the current laws?
ubiquitous said:If you read my post you will see that it obviously refers to the commonly-accepted fact that there has been no appreciable fall in the volume of road deaths SINCE PENALTY POINTS WERE INTRODUCED.
Your point that road deaths have been falling anyway since 1995 & 1999 would support the contention that any falls since October 2002 should not necessarily be attributed to the introduction of penalty points from that date.
If you wish to continue to quote selectively and misleadingly from my earlier posts, then you can debate the issue with someone else.
umop3p!sdn said:Soon it appears, I risk been stopped and breath tested, even if I've never touched a drop of booze in my life.
If I am driving on a long journey cross-country late at night and stone-cold sober, I don't see why or how a Garda should be allowed to detain me along the roadside in order to take a breath sample.
Neither do I want to be delayed on my way to work in the morning in order to be breathalysed where it is blatantly obvious that I, and the drivers in front of me, are stone cold sober.
There are serious civil liberties implications for citizens in this proposal. Imagine how the rogue Gardai in Donegal would have used such powers. There are also obvious personal safety implications, especially for women, given that paramilitiaries and other gangsters have sometimes passed themselves off as Gardai at otherwise genuine-looking checkpoints in the past.
Isn't the Irish Government considering introducing random breath testing? - If this is the case, then I (along with other motorists) risk being breath tested. An invasion of my privacy by the state.What/where is the risk?
ubiquitous said:In my first contribution to this thread, I outlined some of the risks/drawbacks, as I see them
ubiquitous said:Quite simple really. As the law currently stands, when I am driving, and I am stopped at a formal Garda checkpoint, there is rarely any need for the Garda to (1) ask me to get out of my car; or (2) detain me for a period longer than a minute or two. A 10-second conversation will give a Garda a very good indication as to whether or not I have drink taken.
Random breath testing exercises will (presumably) require drivers to (1) wait to be tested if there are other drivers being tested in front of them; (2) get out of their car to be tested; (3) wait while the Garda reads them the standard statutory warnings etc in advance of the test; (4) undergo the test itself; (5) wait for the results, and presumably some sort of written confirmation that they have passed (which I presume will be necessary to protect both the interests and rights of the driver and of the Gardai involved in the testing procedure).
All of this will take some time and it is reasonable to expect that the process in each individual case could take maybe 5 minutes, maybe longer. This would mean in practice that each individual Garda could only test 10 or 15 drivers an hour. Even at the most optimistic estimate, a Garda will not be able to test much more than 30 drivers an hour, or one every two minutes.
Now consider that most stretches of national road carry over 20,000 vehicles per day, some a large multiple of this figure. This equates to roughly 1,000 vehicles per hour on average. To test 30 drivers out of an average of 1,000 per hour means that 97% of drivers would be flagged through without being checked at all (which defeats the purpose of the exercise in the first instance as a drunk has only a 3% chance of being caught. Even at a checkpoint.) Otherwise, large traffic jams would ensue as drivers would be forced to wait interminably to be tested.
Even at night when road use would be only 10% of the daily rate, a drunk driver would still stand a 70% chance of being waved through.
I honestly can't see any merit in this proposal.
In all of this post, you seem to be forgetting the term "random" in all this. Testing 10/15 drivers an hour in the same sport of road is hardly random.
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