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   alt.politics.marijuana      They hate government but love a pot-tax      2,468 messages   

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   Message 2,402 of 2,468   
   useapen to All   
   After crash that killed 6 teens, NTSB ch   
   24 Jul 24 08:01:48   
   
   XPost: rec.autos.driving, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns   
   XPost: sac.politics, alt.society.liberalism   
   From: yourdime@outlook.com   
      
   DETROIT (AP) — A horrific crash that killed six high school girls in   
   Oklahoma two years ago has the head of the U.S. National Transportation   
   Safety Board urging parents to warn teenagers about the risk of driving   
   after using marijuana.   
      
   Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy made the appeal to parents Thursday as her   
   agency released the final report on the March 22, 2022 collision between a   
   tiny Chevrolet Spark hatchback and a gravel-hauling semi in the small town   
   of Tishomingo.   
      
   The board, after an investigation by its staff, determined that the crash   
   was caused by the 16-year-old driver slowing for an intersection, then   
   accelerating through a stop sign because she likely was impaired by recent   
   marijuana use and was distracted by having five teen passengers in the   
   car, the NTSB report said.   
      
   In an interview, Homendy also said the cannabis problem isn't limited to   
   teens. As more states have legalized recreational marijuana, teens and   
   adults tend to underestimate the risks of driving under its influence.   
      
   “There's a perception that in states where it's legal that it's safe and   
   legal to drive impaired on marijuana,” she said.   
      
   In its report on the crash, the NTSB cited studies showing that marijuana   
   decreases motor coordination, slows reaction time and impairs judgment of   
   time and distance, all critical functions for driving.   
      
   Currently it’s legal for people 21 and older to use marijuana   
   recreationally in 24 states plus Washington, D.C., according to the   
   Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Oklahoma doesn't allow   
   recreational use, but like most states, it's legal for medical purposes.   
   Driving while impaired by marijuana is illegal in all states and   
   Washington, D.C.   
      
   The NTSB, which investigates transportation-related crashes but has no   
   regulatory power, put out a safety alert Thursday urging parents to talk   
   to young drivers about how marijuana can impair driving, and how they can   
   make responsible choices to avoid driving while impaired or riding with   
   impaired drivers.   
      
   Homendy said states that have legalized marijuana are behind in making   
   sure people know that it's illegal to drive under its influence. Over half   
   of Americans live in a state where recreational cannabis use is legal, she   
   said.   
      
   “Unfortunately, I think state laws that are legalizing recreational and   
   medicinal use of marijuana have really come before thoughts or action on   
   what are they going to do about traffic safety,” Homendy said. "They are   
   far ahead on legalizing it, but very behind when it comes to traffic   
   safety.”   
      
   States, she said, need to collect more data on how legalizing marijuana   
   has affected traffic safety, and they need to start enforcing laws against   
   driving while impaired by cannabis.   
      
   “Enforcement has got to be there in order to deter,” she said.   
      
   One study on crashes in Washington state, which has legalized recreational   
   marijuana use, showed that more drivers involved in fatal crashes tested   
   positive for marijuana after it became legal, the NTSB said.   
      
   In Tishomingo, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Oklahoma   
   City, six high school girls got into the car designed to carry four for a   
   lunch break, the NTSB report said.   
      
   At an intersection, the driver slowed to 1 mile per hour (1.6 kilometers   
   per hour), but accelerated and didn't come to a complete stop for a sign.   
   Instead, she sped up and turned left in front of the gravel truck. The   
   truck driver braked and steered to avoid the Spark, but hit the driver's   
   side at just under 50 mph (80 kilometers per hour). All six teens died of   
   multiple blunt force injuries.   
      
   Tests on blood taken from the driver's body found a THC concentration of   
   95.9 nanograms per milliliter, the NTSB said. If such a level of THC, the   
   main chemical component of marijuana, were found in a living person, it   
   would indicate “a high likelihood that the person had used cannabis very   
   recently, and therefore was likely still experiencing acute impairing   
   cannabis effects,” the report said.   
      
   But the NTSB cautioned that body-cavity blood samples can sometimes be   
   contaminated by other body fluids or by THC from other tissues, including   
   the lungs, that may contain high concentrations.   
      
   In addition, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol found vaping mouthpieces and   
   cannabis buds in the car at the scene of the crash, the report said.   
      
   The NTSB recommended in the report that the Oklahoma State Department of   
   Education develop a drug and alcohol abuse curriculum for local school   
   districts that tells students about the risk of cannabis-impaired driving.   
   At present, only Massachusetts and Rhode Island have such course   
   requirements, the NTSB said.   
      
   The agency also wants the Governors Highway Safety Association, a group of   
   state highway safety officers, the National Conference of State   
   Legislatures and the National Association of State Boards of Education to   
   inform members about the Tishomingo crash and the need for cannabis   
   information in school and driver education coursework.   
      
   The safety association said in a statement that cannabis-impaired driving   
   is a growing safety concern, and state highway safety offices are focused   
   on eliminating all impaired driving.   
      
   “We have to start communicating well ahead of time, to kids, that driving,   
   having ingested or smoked or inhaled marijuana is impairing, and it’s a   
   risk to them and a risk to others," Homendy said.   
      
   https://apnews.com/article/six-teens-killed-marijuana-oklahoma-crash-   
   warning-e25b14eca281d43efbdc6ee100573955   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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