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Governor signs DUI reform bills

by Richard Hanners For Pilot
| May 18, 2011 9:59 AM

A bill that requires repeat DUI

offenders to submit to breath tests while awaiting sentencing for a

DUI arrest was signed into law by Gov. Brian Schweitzer on May

6.

The 24/7 Sobriety Bill was promoted

heavily by Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock and sponsored by

Rep. Steve Lavin, R-Kalispell. 

“As a Highway Patrol Trooper, Rep.

Steve Lavin and law enforcement across our state see the carnage

that repeat drunk drivers cause on our highways,” Bullock said

following the bill’s passage in the legislature. 

House Bill 106, the freshman

legislator’s first bill, was approved by wide margins — 97-2 in the

House and 41-8 in the Senate. Republican Reps. Jerry O’Neil, Keith

Regier and Derek Skees and Republican Sen. Bruce Tutvedt voted in

favor of HB 106, while Republican Sen. Ryan Zinke voted against the

measure.

Under the bill, offenders arrested for

a second or subsequent DUI are required to submit to a breath test

twice a day, seven days per week, to show they’re sober from the

time of their arrest to the completion of their sentence.

Bullock tested the 24/7 concept in a

pilot program in Lewis and Clark County, but a similar program had

already been in effect in Whitefish for about a year for people on

bail awaiting sentencing . From May 2010 to April 2011, Lewis and

Clark County officials administered more than 11,400 breath tests,

and 99 percent of them came in at 0.0 percent.

The governor also signed Senate Bill

42, which makes it easier for law enforcement to get a warrant for

blood tests on repeat offenders who refuse to submit to a breath

test. Regier, Zinke and Tutvedt voted in favor of SB 42, while

O’Neil and Skees were opposed.

Several bills failed in the

legislature, including a measure that would extend the time frame

in which prior DUI convictions could count in court. Under the

current law, courts can only use DUI convictions within the past

five years when determining charges and sentencing.

Montana has long been known as a

binge-drinking state, and its highways are among the most dangerous

in the nation. But several setbacks affected efforts to strengthen

Montana’s DUI laws this legislative session. 

In mid-January, Sen. Jim Shockley,

R-Victor, was cited for an open-container violation after he was

caught drinking a beer while driving through Missoula. Shockley,

who was ready to present his DUI bill in Helena, was forced to

resign his chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Then in early April, Republican Rep.

Alan Hale, who owns a bar in Basin, surprised many with a speech

that criticized DUI reform as bad for business. The DUI bills “are

destroying a way of life that has been in Montana for years and

years,” he said.

Supporters of tougher DUI bills

included Rebecca Sturdevant, of Kalispell, representing Mothers

Against Drunk Driving. Her son, Montana Highway Patrol trooper Evan

Schneider, was killed Aug. 26, 2008, in a head-on collision on U.S.

2 near the House of Mystery. He was in pursuit of a small car that

was driving erratically but was never found. The driver of the

pickup truck that hit his patrol car during the pursuit had been

drinking. Schneider and two people in the truck died in the

crash.

“I think it’s a very, very important

step forward in dealing with repeat offenders,” Sturdevant said

about HB 106. “One of the key things with repeat offenders is they

are driving drunk many times before they are arrested. This will

make a huge difference in earlier intervention for these

people.”