Calls to tackle drug driving 'epidemic' with drivers failing half of roadside tests

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Calls to tackle drug driving 'epidemic' with drivers failing half of roadside tests
Author: Neil Lancefield
Published: Jan, 23 2025 00:07

There have been calls to tackle the “growing epidemic” of drug driving with half of motorists failing roadside drug tests. In 2023, 51 per cent of drivers pulled over for a roadside drug test were found to be positive. In the first seven months of 2024 that figure was 49 per cent, according to road safety charity IAM RoadSmart.

 [PA]
Image Credit: The Independent [PA]

This information is based on data from 17 out of 45 police forces across the UK in response to Freedom of Information requests. Drug-driving rules consist of very low limits for eight illegal drugs such as cocaine and cannabis, risk-based limits for eight drugs that have a medical use, and a separate approach to amphetamines that aims to balance legitimate medical use with abuse.

Roadside swab tests identify whether a motorist has used cannabis or cocaine. The presence of other drugs is identified via blood and urine tests at police stations. Police officers must have a reasonable suspicion that a driver is under the influence of drugs before asking them to take a test.

More than 3,000 people were caught drug-driving on four or more occasions in the 11 years to July 20 2024. Department for Transport (DfT) figures show the number of people killed in crashes on Britain’s roads when a driver was impaired by drugs rose from 55 in 2014 to a record 134 in 2023.

In October 2024, Shaun Mulligan, then 48, of Seaside in Eastbourne, East Sussex, was given a five-year prison sentence and disqualified from driving for seven-and-a-half years after admitting causing death by careless driving while over the limit for drugs and alcohol.

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