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As Mass. Prepares For Retail Pot, A Warning On Driving While Impaired

As Massachusetts prepares to open retail marijuana shops this summer, a public safety official from a state that introduced them a few years ago has some words of caution.

The state of Washington opened recreational marijuana dispensaries in 2012. Since then, the number of fatal car crashes involving marijuana-impaired driving has almost doubled.

Darrin Grondel is the director of the Washington Traffic Safety Commission.

"Though it is legal, it doesn't mean you're legal to drive after you've consumed marijuana," he said. "We're not anti-marijuana. We're just understanding that it's like alcohol. You know, you have to understand how it impairs and when it does, is not to be driving at all."

Grondel said that in his state, more than half of drivers ages 15 to 20 believe marijuana use makes their driving better.

He spoke at UMass Amherst at an event sponsored by the School of Public Health on the implications of legalization. 

Darrin Grondel, Washington State Traffic Safety Commission Director, at an event at UMass Amherst on April 2, 2018.
Alden Bourne / NEPR
/
NEPR
Darrin Grondel, Washington State Traffic Safety Commission Director, at an event at UMass Amherst on April 2, 2018.

Copyright 2018 New England Public Media

Before joining New England Public Radio, Alden was a producer for the CBS NEWS program 60 Minutes. In that role, he covered topics ranging from art, music and medicine to business, education, and politics. Working with correspondent Morley Safer, he reported from locations across the United States as well as from India, Costa Rica, Italy, and Iraq.

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