this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2024
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I'm curious to hear views from others on this. This article claims both that medical users are careful not to drive under the influence, then later claims they may drive under the influence of something else so as to avoid being caught.
Personally 50k a year seems like such a low number it's barely a pilot (there were 3 million breath tests in 2023).
From Schedule 5 of the legislation:
What is the difference?
Medsafe says:
To get an idea of what other countries are doing see https://www.ncids.org/2021/marijuana-impairment-faq/
How long can THC be detected in the blood after ingestion of marijuana?
Don't get me wrong. I don't want to be on the road with a bunch of stoned people but it seems pretty bleak to me. A medical user could definitely hit 1ng/ml without being impaired.
There is another RNZ story on this from 11 Oct.
Thanks for this! I read through a bunch of your link and had many of my questions answered. It seems pretty clear that people want a way to test similar to breath testing so some government made one up, despite marijuana impairment not being correlated to blood levels in the same way.
Was this legislation introduced by the previous government? Did it go through the select committee process?
You're right. They were looking for something like breath testing for alcohol. You can see that in the bill history.
On legislation.govt.nz, you can see the legislative history under the "View whole" tab.
Legislative history
If you go back through all the versions and amendments, you can see they originally tried to introduce a saliva test. The transport minister then recommended blood tests. One could speculate that was due to research and submissions.
Committee of the Whole House included amendments to use saliva only as an indicator of use, while relying on blood tests to measure levels. This enables officers to administer compulsory road-side oral swabs as a precursor to taking someone in for a blood test.
Section 71A "Who must undergo first oral fluid test", which includes "a driver of, or a person attempting to drive, a motor vehicle on a road". This enables random roadside testing without a specific reason. This was acknowledged as a violation of NZBORA which was deemed in the public interest by the Land Transport Act 1998.
So, if you drive a car in any mental state, get ready for the cops to stick stuff in your mouth.
Yeah, based on the link in your first comment the answer is that there is basically no way to test impairment without just giving people impairment tests. So even though we may have moved to this because saliva tests are a bit dodgy, it's probably not much better.
Honestly, I think we should just throw loads more money into getting self-driving cars sorted. Well, I guess there is already loads of money being thrown at it so we should wait it out. Then we can just ban driving and solve the whole problem.