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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Should DUI Alcohol Limit Be Lowered To 0.05 Percent?

The National Transportation Safety Board recommends reducing the limit. Some say it would save lives. Others say it's unreasonable.

By David Mills One drink could be the standard for drunken driving – at least for some people if the National Transporation Safety Board has its way. On Tuesday, the NTSB recommended states lower the blood-alcohol threshold for driving under the influence from 0.08 percent to 0.05 percent. What do you think? Is the proposal reasonable? About 10,000 deaths a year are related to drunken driving. The NTSB says the lower limit would save 500 to 800 lives a year. Officials at the American Beverage Institute called the proposal "ludicrous." It said the average woman could reach the 0.05 percent limit by having one drink. In 2011, 323 people were killed by alcohol-related crashed in Illinois, which makes up 35 percent of the 918 total crash …

Alan Hudson

7:41 am on Friday, May 17, 2013

It's just another way to grab some more money from the working man. Next they'll give tickets for smoking in your own car!! Then what?Tickets for having your radio on? Tickets for having your window opened too much? It's just plain stupid!!!!   more ›

Monday, December 31, 2012

How Many Drinks Will Get You A DUI? (Chart)

If you insist on driving after a few drinks, here's what you should know about how alcohol affects your system -- and your criminal record.

Do you know how many drinks you can have before you're in danger of getting a drunken driving violation?  When police pull drivers over for suspected drunken driving, officers ask them to perform field sobriety tests and to take a breath test to measure blood alcohol content. A BAC test measures the percentage of alcohol present in a person's bloodstream. The legal limit in Illinois is 0.08. According to the Virginia Tech Alcohol Abuse Prevention website, every 40 minutes, 0.01 percent of alcohol leaves your system.  The limit for people under 21 is 0.00.  These charts show -- in general -- how many drinks it takes to become too impaired to drive. They're not exact, and they don't take a person's tolerance into account. Police say the best…

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