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GeorgeWendtCFI
11-15-2003, 07:17 AM
Wine Industry Urges Drinking and Driving

By LAURENCE FROST
AP Business Writer

PARIS (AP) -- France's wine industry wants drivers to know: It's OK to have a drink for the road. Or three. The $18 billion-a-year wine industry is fighting back against a government campaign to discourage drunk driving. It claims the government is scaring people away from ordering a glass when they go out and points to a 15 percent drop in wine sales at restaurants.

"People are so afraid of the police these days that they're not drinking any wine at all," Pascal Bobillier-Monnot, director of CNAOC national wine producers' association, said Friday.

Wine makers have always promoted moderate drinking to comply with the country's blood-alcohol limit of .05. But they say the government is overreacting when it tells drivers that the safest way to stay out of trouble is not to drink at all.

"We believe the government has a duty of providing information which it has failed," said Pascal Rousseaux, director of Afivin, an umbrella group for wine producers, distributors and retailers.

Diners should know they can enjoy "two or three glasses" with their meal and still be fit to drive, Rousseaux said.

Since taking office last year, the center-right government of French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin has made road safety a priority. Police have stepped up checks and toughened punishment.

The government says road deaths fell more than 20 percent to under 5,000 in the first ten months of 2003 from the same period last year - still among the highest rates in Europe relative to population size.

Amid the tightened enforcement and government warnings, sales of wine in restaurants have also fallen by about 15 percent in just months, wine producers say.

"There's no question about it. The enforcement effort and the government's rhetoric have led to a drop in wine consumption in France," Bobillier-Monnot said.

Industry groups are planning their own campaign to persuade motorists that abstaining isn't necessarily the answer. Afivin plans a $350,000 initiative to distribute alcohol breath tests to restaurants across France starting next year.

By doing so, it hopes to convince those motorists who have stopped drinking altogether that they don't need to be quite so worried.

Transport ministry spokeswoman Emmanuelle Dormond defended the government's stance.

"In case of doubt the easiest way to be sure you don't break the limit is to refrain from drinking," she said.

hfd66truck
11-15-2003, 10:22 AM
Now there's somethin you read every day.

DaSharkie
11-15-2003, 10:23 AM
Dude. It's France. They have a habit of making some very off the wall decisions.

So its OK to drink and drive adn kill someone. Remember, wine usually has a significantly higher alcohol content than beer. You can blow more than a 0.08 on a breathalizer - legally intoxicated in most states - with just two beers. So this yutz from the wine industry is wrong when he says you can have 2 or 3 glasses of wine and still be OK to drive.

Dalmatian90
11-15-2003, 11:35 AM
I used to work for a Compaigne de Saint Gobain, which is probably one of the largest global corporations you've never heard of. But in the U.S. makes everything from automotive glass to Certainteed building products to Norton grinding wheels.

At any rate, we pointedly did not have a strict "no alcohol" policy in the U.S. like many corporations -- go to lunch or dinner with visitors from France, and wine on the company tab was expected. It was mostly dinner -- we did have a 0.04 restriction for being on property.

Which is quite conservative by Saint Gobain standards - in France, their factory lunch rooms are equipped with wine fountains right next to the soda fountains. Much different cultural attitude towards alcohol, one where modest drinking in the factory is still acceptable.

CaptainGonzo
11-15-2003, 01:58 PM
To echo one of George's favorite sayings.....

screw France!

GeorgeWendtCFI
11-15-2003, 02:32 PM
Originally posted by CaptainGonzo
To echo one of George's favorite sayings.....

screw France!

My point exactly!

MIKEYLIKESIT
11-15-2003, 02:47 PM
"QUIT PICKIN ON US"

resqtek
11-15-2003, 06:01 PM
On a somewhat related note, the city of Calgary, nestled at the foot of the rocky mountains in Alberta, Canada was reported to be the #1 drinking and driving city in Canada. Everybody has to be good at something!!:D :D

Bones42
11-17-2003, 10:37 AM
country's blood-alcohol limit of .05. The US limit is .08 someplace, .10 in others.

Who has the drinking problem? :rolleyes:

Dalmatian90
11-17-2003, 01:40 PM
Like speed limits, BAC only matters if you get caught.

NJFFSA16
11-18-2003, 05:16 AM
Statement:

French whine!

End of Statement.

mcaldwell
11-18-2003, 02:07 PM
The stupidity regarding alcohol is not limited to France.

I watched with amazement as a TV personality on a popular Canadian Science & Technology show told her audience that it was OK to drink champagne in excess, because it was the bubbles that made you tipsy, not the alcohol content (what the hell is the 12-15% alcohol there for then?). Just what we need to be telling people about alcohol consumption. I wonder how many free cases she got for that little plug.

???? :( :mad:


And in regards to the French approach, I know a whole lot of smaller folks and women who are three sheets to the wind after two or three glasses of wine.

Once again it's business interests fighting the side of public safety and political good. :(