Impaired Driving
Impaired driving, which means driving while your ability is affected by alcohol or drugs, is a crime under the Criminal Code of Canada. If convicted, you can lose your licence, be fined, or spend time in jail. Your vehicle does not even have to be moving; you can be charged if you are impaired behind the wheel, even if you have not started to drive.
Drinking and Driving
Drinking and driving is a deadly combination. One drink can reduce your ability to concentrate and react to things that happen suddenly while you are driving. The more alcohol in your blood, the more difficulty you have judging distances and reacting to sudden hazards on the road. To make matters even worse, your vision may become blurred.
Drugs and Driving
Any drug that changes your mood, or the way you see and feel, will affect the way you drive. This is not only true for illegal drugs. There are prescription drugs and some over-the-counter drugs that can also impair your driving ability.
Tips to remember
- If you are planning on drinking, plan not to drive.
- Ask your doctor about side effects if you use prescription medication or get allergy shots.
- Read the information on the package of any over-the-counter medicine, including allergy and cold remedies.
- Drugs and alcohol together can combine to impair your driving even more drastically; ask your doctor or pharmacist.
Remember, fatigue and stress will also affect your ability to drive.
Consequences of Drinking and Driving
Ontario leads the way in combating drinking and driving through some of the toughest laws and programs in North America.
Roadside Licence Suspension
Fully-licensed drivers will face immediate roadside licence suspension for:
- refusing a breath test.
- registering a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.05 or more (this means there is 50 milligrams of alcohol in every 100 millilitres of blood).
Novice drivers in the Graduated Licensing System (GLS) must maintain a zero BAC while driving or face an immediate suspension at roadside, a 30 day licence suspension and a fine upon conviction.
Consequences for impaired driving are serious: you can lose your licence, be fined, or spend time in jail.
You don’t have to be over the Criminal Code blood alcohol limit of 0.08 to face serious consequences.
As of May 1, 2009, Ontario has targeted measures to help take more drinking drivers off the roads. Drivers who register a BAC from 0.05 to 0.08 (known as the “warn range”) lose their licence at roadside for 3, 7 or 30 days. Consequences also get tougher for repeat occurrences.
Convicted Impaired Drivers
If you drive impaired, and your blood alcohol concentration (BAC) is more than 0.08, or you fail or refuse to comply with alcohol or drug testing, you can be convicted under the Criminal Code. Individuals convicted for impaired driving offences face penalties under the Canada’s Criminal Code and Ontario’s Highway Traffic Act. Upon conviction, consequences include additional suspension period, alcohol education and treatment programs, Ignition Interlock Program and fines.
Driving-related Criminal Code convictions remain on a driver’s record for at least 10 years.
Regardless of whether the vehicle is rented, leased or loaned to a friend or family member, the vehicle will be impounded. The vehicle owner will be liable for all towing and impoundment costs.
To verify a valid driver’s licence through the Ministry of Transportation
- Call 1-900-565-6555 ($2.50 per check applied to phone bill)
- Access MTO’s website. ($2.00 per check payable by Visa or MasterCard)
- Obtain a driver’s abstract at Driver and Vehicle Licence Issuing Offices, Driver Exam Centres or ServiceOntario Kiosks ($12.00 to $13.00 per abstract)