St. Patrick’s Day Key Messages
Don’t Push Your Luck. Plan Ahead!
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Buzzed driving is drunk driving.
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Most people in Washington believe driving impaired is unsafe and unacceptable.
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It’s not true that using cannabis after drinking will sober you up. If you use marijuana after drinking alcohol you increase your crash risk.
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Don’t hesitate – designate! All St. Patrick’s Day party plans should include a designated driver.
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Don’t test the luck of your four-leaf clover. Drive sober or get pulled over.
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Help keep the paddy wagons parked. Volunteer to be the designated driver this St. Patrick’s Day.
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Everyone is Irish on Saint Patrick’s Day. And everyone deserves to make it home safe.
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It’s better to be prepared than to be lucky. Plan ahead!
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Choose a Designated Driver
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Taxi or rideshare
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Take public transportation
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Spend the night
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Leave your car at home
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Download and use the Safer Ride app to your phone, which can help get you home safely
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There’s no pot of gold waiting when you drink and drive. Expect to pay at least $10,000 in attorney’s fees, fines, court costs, lost time at work higher insurance rates, car towing and repairs, and more if you get a DUI.
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It’s your lucky charm to get home safely this Saint Patrick’s Day: download the SaferRide app
The Dangers of Impaired Driving
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Drunk driving kills. In 2017 there were 266 fatalities in motor vehicle traffic crashes involving drunk drivers in the Washington.
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St. Patrick’s Day is one of the deadliest holidays on our nation’s roads. In 2017 alone, 59 people – 37 percent of all crash fatalities – were killed in drunk driving crashes over the St. Patrick’s Day holiday period.
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Alcohol and drug impaired driving is the leading contributing factor in Washington fatal crashes. Nearly half of all traffic deaths in Washington involve an impaired driver.
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Among drivers involved in fatal crashes 2008-2016 that tested positive for alcohol or drugs, 44 percent tested positive for two-or-more substances (poly-drug drivers).
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Alcohol and cannabis are the most common combination of intoxicants.
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Would you get in a car with someone who had difficulty steering, impaired perception and concentration, short-term memory loss and lack of speed control? These are all the effects on driving of someone who has a blood alcohol concentration of .08.
DUI Consequences
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$5,000 fine
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Legal bills of up to $10,000
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100% increase in insurance rates
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One year in jail
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Suspended license
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Installation of ignition interlock device on your car
DUI Doesn’t mean just Alcohol
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Impaired driving includes:
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Alcohol
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Marijuana
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Illegal drugs
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Prescription drugs
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Many over the counter drugs like Nyquil, Ambien, pain and allergy meds
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