The law of diminishing returns
This was the story this weekend, couple that with the story of an impaired driver being chased down and booked as part of normal policing in Cobourg on Saturday evening and one has to question the efficacy of RIDE programs. The number of impaired people being caught up in RIDE programs has been going down for years and yet we spend wads of cash on them. Admittedly the cash comes in the form of Provincial grants - read political slush money, but honestly is spending this cash a good return on our policing dollars?
Talking about this with the Chief of Cobourg's police service yesterday the BR was told that it is conventional policing wisdom that the police can catch all the drunks they can but until the courts start to put some of them away for a long time you will always have drunks behind the wheel. "Impaired driving charges are the most litigated of all criminal charges and if you have the money to fight a charge you can succeed in reducing it or winning in court. The seriousness of the offence is not recognised by the courts." Chief Sweet said. And I agree. Until we do what the Scandinavian countries have done - put drunk drivers in jail on the first offence, after catching them with normal police work not a stunt like RIDE, we will not get the offenders off the road. And MADD can huff and puff all it wants but random police checks will not be working either. But, then which politician wants to stand up for civil liberties in the face of MADD - even Jack Layton has caved on this one!


