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Ashcroft
2023-12-30 15:09 HNP
Under the Official Languages Act, this office provides services to the public in English only. You will find general information in both official languages at bc.rcmp.ca and rcmp.ca
Aux termes de la Loi sur les langues officielles, ce bureau n'offre des services au public qu'en anglais. Vous trouverez des renseignements généraux dans les deux langues officielles au cb.grc.ca et grc.ca.
Welcome to the Ashcroft RCMP Blog.
Through this blog, we are hoping to keep the Ashcroft, Cache Creek, and surrounding communities more informed about our ongoing efforts to serve you all. It will be available through local media outlets as well as through the Ashcroft RCMP Media Website, which can be accessed here.
Thinking ahead and planning a safe ride home for after your New Years festivities can be the difference between starting the New year out well or starting with a worse hangover than any alcohol could ever provide you.
Operating a motor vehicle impaired after consuming alcohol (or drugs, for that matter) is a danger to not only yourself, but to everyone with you, everyone that happens to be driving or walking by you… just – everyone.
If I may present you with a hypothetical situation:
You are driving your best friend home after having several drinks at the bar together. You feel fine (FYI – alcohol has been proven to bolster your sense of personal ability) and believe that you are able to drive home safely. A family of five with three young children is driving alongside you. Something unexpected happens and you lose control of your vehicle - it could be anything: impairment/ice/an animal running across the road - and you can’t react in time to prevent a collision. Your vehicle strikes the vehicle carrying the family of five before hitting the roadside ditch and rolling over. People are hurt, possibly dead. A mother. A father. Children. You. Someone you care about.
Then the police come.
While your head is reeling from the realization of what has happened and swimming from your impairment, the investigation begins. Breath samples are taken. A police officer reads you something. A lawyer says something to you. Your driving license is gone. Your vehicle is impounded. People are asking you about what happened because, let’s face it, we live in a small town and everyone is aware of what is going on.
Is it worth it?
Why not arrange for one of the following alternatives:
Have fun and get home safe,
Cst. Richard WrightAshcroft RCMP
Diffusé par :
Courriel : richard.wright@rcmp-grc.gc.ca