There's absolutely nothing we can do.
Of course there is:
1) Lower the permissible amount of alcohol in the Criminal Code (while driving) from .08 to .05
2) Allow non-criminal fines for alcohol exceeding .02 (this is the number Sweden allows.)
3) Introduce income-contingent fines, like Sweden, expressed as days of net income so upper-middle income and wealthy drivers feel the sting of the law equally.
4)For a first offense over .05, impound car 30 days. Driving suspension same period.
5)For a second offense within 5 years of the previous, license is suspended and car impounded for at least six months and only released when you complete a course on driving while intoxicated.
The course is required in Denmark, and the course is 12 hours in-class and you're billed for it.
6) Enforce the law, random ride checks every day of the year and at every time of day.
7) Provide good alternatives, everywhere, including in rural areas; in Toronto, ramp up 24-hour transit.
8) Do not subsidize the car insurance of bad drivers. We all do this in Ontario by the way under a program called 'facility'. It means no matter how bad a driver you are, you can always obtain
insurance, it may cost 8k per year; but for the most terrible drivers 80k is too low, never mind 8.
9) Zero tolerance for driving w/o insurance. You're caught, car is impounded for 30 days minimum; and you can't have it back without proof of valid insurance.
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Outcomes being everything..............currently 34% of traffic fatalities in Canada (as at 2015) involve alcohol. The number in Sweden is 24%. That suggests a reasonable benchmark would see us reduce
alcohol-related traffic fatalities by about 30% from today's levels. This would also be roughly in line w/stats in Italy and France.