THE EFFECT OF ENFORCEMENT UPON SERVICE OF ALCOHOL TO INTOXICATEDPATRONS OF BARS AND RESTAURANTS

Author(s)
MCKNIGHT, AJ NATL PUBLIC SERVICES RES INST, LANDOVER, USA STREFF, FM MICHIGAN UNIV, ANN ARBOR, USA
Year
Abstract

Laws prohibiting the service of alcohol to already intoxicated patrons of bars and restaurants are seldom enforced. Following introduction of an enforcement effort in Washtenaw County, Michigan, observed refusals of service to "pseudopatrons" simulating intoxication rose from 17.5% to 54.3%, declining eventually to 41.0%. At the same time, the percentage of those arrested drunk drivers coming from bars and restaurants declined from 31.7% to 23.3%. In a comparison county, refusals of service rose to a significantly smaller extent, from11.5% to 32.7%, while the percentage of DWIs coming from bars and restaurants showed no significant changes. Service refusals were related to volume of business and numbers of intoxicated patrons in an establishment at the time of observation, while numbers of arrested DWIs was related to the nature of the establishment's clientele, policies, and practices. While enforcement of alcohol service laws offers a potentially cost beneficial means of reducing highway crashes, replication across additional jurisdictions is needed. (A).

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Publication

Library number
I 861977 IRRD 9401
Source

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION 1994 /02 E26 1 PAG: 79-88 T21

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