Earlier this year, the Utah Substance Use Advisory Council, was asked to investigate a tiered system of penalties for Utahns arrested for drunken driving under the state’s stricter 0.05 threshold.



But, after months of study, the group — made up of legal experts, law enforcement and alcohol policy officials — said creating lighter penalties for those arrested between 0.05 and the current 0.08, would only weaken law enforcement and prosecution efforts.

On Tuesday, the council voted unanimously — with two abstentions — to support Utah’s 0.05 BAC law as it is currently written. The lower limit isn’t scheduled to take effect until Dec. 30, 2018.

“I‘ve tried to follow through on each of these models, but I’m not crazy about any of them” said Salt Lake City prosecutor Paul Boyden, who led the DUI committee’s research.



He did come up with a set of possible changes, which he dubbed “Do No Harm Amendments,” but those are “fairly complicated” and would require changes to nearly two dozen sections of code, he said.



Proposed amendments for first time offenders could include:



• No mandatory jail time; compared to the 48 hours at 0.08.

• 12 months as an interlock restricted driver, compared to 18 months at 0.08.

• 120-day suspension with possible reinstatement after 90 days. Under 0.08, suspension is 120 days with no possibility of early reinstatement.



Boyden said the proposed penalties aren’t much different than the lesser charge of “impaired driving,” which most first DUI offenders currently negotiate after an arrest.



While the council didn’t adopt them, the “Do No Harm Amendments” are available as a starting point if lawmakers do want to make changes, said Carlene Walker, the DUI’s committee chairwoman.

“If we have to compromise, we will do it; but this is basically saying we support 0.05,” Walker said. “The bottom line is, we believe in what we already have.”

When Gov. Gary Herbert signed the bill creating the strictest DUI threshold in the country, he acknowledged there might be unintended effects on insurance rates or other matters. He agreed to examine those and consider lighter punishments — similar to what is done in Colorado — for DUIs between 0.05 and 0.07 blood alcohol content.

Utah’s restaurant, hospitality and ski industries have opposed the law, saying it punishes responsible drinkers and perpetuates the Mormon-dominated state’s reputation as unfriendly to those who drink alcohol.

However, proponents of the 0.05 limit, including the National Transportation Safety Board, say people become impaired with a first drink.

Art Brown, president of the Utah chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving who represents victims on the council’s DUI committee, believes keeping the law and penalties intact will save lives.

“With 0.05, people will live that otherwise would die,” he told the council. “If we walk away from what is written now, it will diminish the effectiveness and won’t get the impaired driver off the road.”