New research from AAA reveals that many cannabis users drive not long after consuming, increasing the risk of impaired ...
The state is using roadside tests to check whether drivers have used drugs, similar to tests for alcohol. A pilot program found that 87 percent of tested drivers had used cannabis or illegal drugs.
Law enforcement officers across Minnesota have long had tools to administer roadside tests to determine whether drivers have been drinking alcohol. Now they’re hoping to get devices that will allow ...
A new survey has found that most U.S. cannabis users drive the same day as they consume it, highlighting little knowledge ...
Similar to portable breath tests to detect if a driver has been drinking, Minnesota law enforcement has tried roadside tests ...
It’s a fair question to ask why would three county supervisors have given the go ahead to allowing marijuana to be smoked or ingested at retail businesses in the unincorporated areas of the ...
More than half of all marijuana users claim they get behind the wheel within an hour of using the drug, and most don't ...
A California Court of Appeals decision brought one auto policyholder decidedly down from “cloud nine” in Murphy v. AAA Auto Insurance of ...
Unlike alcohol, cannabis affects drivers in ways that are not easily quantified like sleepiness, brain fog, impaired body ...
Jan. 28, 2025 — A new study explores the effects of both recent and lifetime cannabis use on brain function during cognitive tasks. The study, the largest of its kind ever to be completed ...
AAA found in a survey that 84.8% of people who use cannabis drive the same day that they consume cannabis. 53% said they ...