Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Burnaby RCMP Begins Winter Impaired-Driving Counterattack

Darpan News Desk, 06 Dec, 2019 09:52 PM

    Burnaby RCMP is reminding you that driving impaired during this holiday party season will likely get you put on the naughty list.

     

    Burnaby RCMP Traffic Services officially kick-off the Winter CounterAttack Impaired Driving Campaign this weekend. Starting Friday December 6th, Burnaby RCMP and partner police agencies will be stepping up impaired driving enforcement during the month of December looking for drivers impaired by alcohol or drugs.


    Expect to see an increase in CounterAttack roadblocks throughout Burnaby where officers will be using standardized field sobriety testing and specially trained drug-recognition experts enforcing the federal Cannabis Act and B.C,’s Cannabis Control and Licensing Act.


    Impaired driving fines can range from $600 to $4,060 and will most definitely put a dent in your Christmas budget. Most importantly though, you are putting people’s lives at risk by driving impaired.


    On average, 68 lives are lost each year in the province due to impaired driving crashes involving alcohol, drugs, or medication (based on a five-year average from 2013 to 2017).


    With so many options available for transportation, there really is no excuse to drive impaired. Plan for a safe ride home by arranging a designated driver, car pooling, or take a taxi or transit, said Corporal Daniela Panesar of the Burnaby RCMP.


    Anyone who suspects a driver of being impaired should call 911 immediately, provide the vehicle’s license plate, vehicle description, and the vehicle’s direction of travel.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premium Brands Down On Indirect Fallout Of China's Swine Fever Outbreak

    Premium Brands Down On Indirect Fallout Of China's Swine Fever Outbreak
    VANCOUVER - Shares in specialty foods producer Premium Brands Holdings Corp. dropped by as much as 10 per cent Monday after it reported earnings fell in the third quarter due to indirect fallout from the African swine fever outbreak in China.    

    Premium Brands Down On Indirect Fallout Of China's Swine Fever Outbreak

    Button-Pushing Edmonton Toddler Wins His Parents A Free Trip To Tokyo

    EDMONTON - Lee Tappenden thought it was a scam when he got a call last week saying he had won a free trip to Tokyo.    

    Button-Pushing Edmonton Toddler Wins His Parents A Free Trip To Tokyo

    Digital Era Is Transforming Spycraft: Analyst

    Digital Era Is Transforming Spycraft: Analyst
    OTTAWA - An Israeli intelligence expert warns that rapid technological advances in data collection and analysis are transforming the way spy agencies work, potentially putting civil liberties at risk.    

    Digital Era Is Transforming Spycraft: Analyst

    Remembrance Day: Canadians Urged To Remember All Who Served

    OTTAWA - Thousands of Canadians braved sub-zero temperatures in the nation's capital on Monday to honour and remember all those — no matter their background — who offered up their lives to defend Canada, its values and its principles.

    Remembrance Day: Canadians Urged To Remember All Who Served

    Canada Among Three G20 Countries Least Likely To Hit Emissions Targets: Report

    OTTAWA - Canada's plan to meet its greenhouse-gas emissions targets is among the worst in the G20, according to a new report card on climate action.    

    Canada Among Three G20 Countries Least Likely To Hit Emissions Targets: Report

    Canada Supports Genocide Case Against Myanmar At International Court Of Justice

    Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a statement the move will advance accountability for the crime of genocide, which includes mass murder, systemic discrimination, hate speech and sexual and gender-based violence.

    Canada Supports Genocide Case Against Myanmar At International Court Of Justice