

| Legislative Watch |
Massachusetts |
3/28/03-The Bay State
risks losing $54 million in federal highway dollars over the next four
years if it fails to toughen its drunken driving laws.
Massachusetts is the only state in which drivers are not considered
impaired if they register a blood alcohol level at or above the legal
limit. Instead, prosecutors must prove drivers are under the influence.
Gov. Mitt Romney, who proposed the change in his fiscal 2004 budget
plan, said changing the law could be a financial boon to cash-strapped
state coffers.
Under current law, registering a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 percent
or higher on a breathalyzer test creates "a permissible inference"
that a driver was drunk - that then requires the prosecutor to
go one step further and prove the driver was impaired. The proposed
change would remove that burden of proof from prosecutors.
The state has until October to change the law or lose 2 percent -
$5.4 million - of its highway money in the fiscal year starting
in July. The losses multiply over the next four years to a total of
$54 million.
States that adopt the new limit by 2007 can recover the withheld funds.






