100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Police testing new device to detect high drivers in YK

In an effort to better identify people who are driving under the influence of drugs, Yellowknife RCMP are field-testing new roadside screening devices as part of a Canada-wide pilot project.

Related: RCMP target impaired drivers with annual traffic operation

The device, known as an oral fluid screening device, tests saliva for the presence of drugs like marijuana, cocaine, opioids and methamphetamines.

In Yellowknife, mouth swabs are administered to drivers pulled over by police and then analyzed on the roadside by the machine.

“Our main role in this is actually testing the practicality in how members can use these devices and technology in real world situations,” explained RCMP Cpl. Todd Scaplen.

Scaplen says the way police investigate drivers under the influence hasn’t changed, they’re just testing whether or not the devices can be used accurately in the field.

“We have darkness,” Scaplen said. “We have cold, we have a lot of different environmental factors for our members to work in and around to see how these devices will work for us in a practical setting.”

The tests are administered only to those who volunteer, meaning if you get pulled over it doesn’t mean you’re required to give a swab.

If you do, however, your results can not be used to arrest you.

“There is nothing from these tests that will be used as evidence,” Scaplen said, adding that results can’t be used to suspend a driver’s license either. Those who submit to a test do so anonymously.

Yellowknife was selected by Public Safety Canada as one of the testers for this pilot project. Other divisions testing this device include the Toronto Police Service, Vancouver Police Department and the Halifax Regional Police Service.

RCMP in the NWT capital will continue with these tests over the next few months, gathering data before they send it back to Ottawa to be analyzed.

“Testing these new drug screening devices is an important step in our ongoing effort to enhance the enforcement of drug-impaired driving laws, reduce drug-impaired driving, and improve the safety and security of all Canadians,” said Canada’s Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale in a press release.

Related: Woman found guilty of impaired driving had fentanyl in her system

For Scaplen, any time the RCMP gets to use a new tool to keep people safe is good in his books.

“The goal of any of these initiatives is to save people’s lives,” he said. “And if we have further tools to be able to do that, I think it’s very important.”

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

YK’s Women, 2SLGBTQIA+ left with fewer resources in facing homelessness

The women’s shelter in Yellowknife continues to see their emergency beds hit maximum capacity most nights, even as the transitional shelter has begun to accept clients now living at the new facility located on Old Airport Road. And even as the men’s emergency shelter is seeing the opposite trend, with many choosing to sleep outdoors or hidden in unseen areas of the city.

Former member of the Legislative Assembly passes away

Joe Arlooktoo, former member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories, passed away just before Christmas.  

Fire in Inuvik on Wednesday injures two

One person is critically injured and another suffered minor injuries as a result of a fire at an industrial business in Inuvik that took place on Wednesday afternoon. 

Former Tuktoyaktuk mayor calls for airmail during highway closure

Winter storms shut down Highway 10 from Inuvik to Tuktoyaktuk from Dec. 17 to Dec. 29, forcing the community to go nearly 2 weeks without mail.  

TSB releases investigation report on 2023 incident

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB) has released its investigative report regarding the controlled flight into terrain by a de Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otter aircraft, operated by Air Tindi Ltd., at Lac de Gras, Northwest Territories, on December 27, 2023