Police should reintroduce the alcohol trap to deal with liquor drivers. This is more effective than increasing penalties, says the government’s chief road safety adviser.
Today in this paper the National Scientific Institute for Highway Safety Research (Swov) calls for the widespread reintroduction of alcohol screenings. “Incidents of alcohol use are reduced by 17 percent when alcohol checks are used regularly,” explains traffic expert Saskia de Crane on the basis of numerous scientific studies. “In Australia, where the police really put a lot of people aside, the number of alcohol-related accidents dropped by 22 percent.”
According to the government’s chief road safety adviser, enforcement of the law on alcohol on the roads has “decreased significantly” in recent years. De Crane: Well, the police are pointing out that they no longer do widespread alcohol testing, because they’re out of date in fifteen minutes via social media. ’ But according to Swoof, the police should not get discouraged. “If friends text each other to warn, you have the information exactly where you need it.”
Potential scammers
De Craen argues that law enforcement will encourage bar-goers to properly arrange their transportation next time. “Traffic enforcement is not just about catching fraudsters, but rather giving potential fraudsters a clue: I could get caught.”
In the first 10 months of this year, more people were issued tickets for drunk driving than in all of 2021. As of November, the police have issued more than 36,000 fines. All last year: 31,600. Police say they don’t do alcohol tests more often than before. According to Swov, the fact that traffic enforcement has decreased is “a plausible explanation for the increase” in the number of people who drive drunk.
If friends start texting each other to warn you, you’ll have the information exactly where you need it
The VVD recently argued for a tougher approach to notorious drunk drivers. Now a driver’s license can be withdrawn for a maximum of ten years. VVD wants to make this set last a lifetime. “But this is not the right way to prevent accidents,” the traffic expert avoids this suggestion. For notoriously drunk drivers, increasing penalties doesn’t have much of an impact, Swoof says. “Outside you see that even the most severe punishment, imprisonment, has little effect.” On Tuesday, the House of Representatives will debate road safety.
Also listen to the Politics Close podcast, and subscribe via Spotify or Apple:
Watch all of our videos on politics here:
Unlimited free access to Showbytes? Which can!
Log in or create an account and never miss a thing from the stars.
Zombie specialist. Friendly twitter guru. Internet buff. Organizer. Coffee trailblazer. Lifelong problem solver. Certified travel enthusiast. Alcohol geek.