This is the time of year when police see a spike in driving under the influence arrests, but in Utah you can get a DUI without actually driving a car.
MONTPELIER — In the first year that recreational marijuana was legal in Vermont, the number of drivers arrested by state police for impaired driving who had THC in their systems more than doubled, according to state police data requested by The Associated Press.
Alabama rates above average but not at the top among states in the strength of its laws against DUI, according to a report released today by Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
- Gov. Herbert announces Utah Department of Commerce Executive Director, Francine A. Giani is retiring
Gov. Gary R. Herbert announced that Francine A. Giani, Executive Director of the Utah Department of Commerce, is retiring from her cabinet post after giving 35 years of prominent public service to the State of Utah.
Gov. Gary R. Herbert announced that Francine A. Giani, Executive Director of the Utah Department of Commerce, is retiring from her cabinet post after giving 35 years of prominent public service to the State of Utah.
Americans are drinking less. Has (and will) the sober movement hit Alabama?
Americans have happily ridden a rollercoaster of ABV, or alcohol by volume, this decade.
Heavy hitting craft beers like Good People’s Snake Handler — clocking in at 10% — whipped the market into a drunken stupor at the decade’s genesis.
MERIDIAN, Miss. (WTOK) - Newscenter 11 got reaction from some Meridian business owners after the city council voted to create a new downtown entertainment district. It’s part of a new ordinance that will allow customers to legally walk from restaurant to restaurant in the downtown area with an open container of alcohol.
DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) -- Don't drive drunk. Those three words are amplified by authorities every year at this time with the slogan Booze it and Lose It.
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — It may be last call for cheap(er) booze from your favorite small distiller, brewer, or wine maker. The federal tax on craft beverages is set to return to pre-2018 levels if Oregon Senator Ron Wyden’s bill doesn’t get passed in an end-of-year package.