COLUMBIA--The Senate Judiciary Committee on
Tuesday approved a bill that would tighten the state's drunken driving
standards.
Under the bill, the legal blood-alcohol limit for drunken driving
convictions would be lowered from the current 0.10 percent to 0.08
percent. The bill moves to the full Senate for debate.
Gov. Mark Sanford supports changing the blood-alcohol standard.
In his State of the State speech, Sanford called for passage of a 0.08
percent blood-alcohol standard.
Federal dollars also are on the line. The federal government is pushing
the lower level by threatening to take away $60 million in federal highway
funds from South Carolina.
The state already has lost $1.8 million in incentives by not going
along with new federal standards on drunken driving.
Sen. Robert Ford, D-Charleston, said he doesn't appreciate the federal
government threatening states with money.
"This is not a public policy," Ford said. "We're being forced," to
comply.
Ford, Sen. Jake Knotts, R-West Columbia, and Sen. Glenn McConnell,
R-Charleston, voted against the measure.
"I resent the federal government jamming something down our throats,"
said McConnell, who is chairman of the committee.
Sen. Larry Martin, R-Pickens, said there has been public support for
the bill. The state's outdated highway system also needs the federal
dollars, he said.
"My thinking is we can't afford to pass up federal dollars," Martin
said.
The federal funding will be withheld beginning in October, Martin said.
If the state doesn't comply by 2007, the money will be completely
withdrawn, he said.
The bill now moves to the Senate.