A new car comes with all kinds of advanced technology, and the list could soon add alcohol detection.
A touch of your finger or just breathing may be the difference between your car letting you drive or not, taking in your blood alcohol level to see if you’ve been drinking.
“This technology has been available for a long time, and it wasn’t put in cars,” said Alex Otte, the national president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD).
On Tuesday, the National Transportation Safety Board recommended all new cars have alcohol detection systems to help prevent drunk driving crashes. That could have made a difference in Otte’s life.
“The man who ran me over had many prior DUI offenses on the roadway. Having this technology in his vehicle may have made it so number one, he could never drive his car drunk,” said Otte, who explained that she was injured in a boating crash where the boater was impaired.
Otte said MADD has waited years for momentum, and she said she feels grateful.
“Honestly, you know, this is something that we have been working so hard for and so many victims and survivors have advocated for this and talked about this,” said Otte.
MADD advocates, victims’ families and crash survivors convinced Congress to take action last year through the infrastructure law. It requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to make automakers install monitoring systems within three years.