Advertisement

What you need to know about Utah’s .05% drinking limit in 7 numbers

Shoppers at the Sugarhouse State Liquor store in Salt Lake City. Utah now has the lowest blood-alcohol concentration limit for drivers in the country.
(Steve Griffin / Associated Press)
Share

It’s official: Utah has approved the lowest blood-alcohol driving limit in the country.

Proponents argued the new legal standard will improve public safety, while opponents assailed it as hurting the state’s tourism industry.

Here’s what you need to know — in seven numbers — about the new law.

.05%

It will become the legal blood-alcohol limit for driving in the state.

In approving the new limit, Utah is the lone state in compliance with recommendations from a 2013 National Transportation Safety Board report that called on states to lower the limit for blood-alcohol concentration, known as BAC, to this level.

.08%

The unofficial national BAC standard. Every state — besides, of course, Utah — has eschewed suggestions from the NTSB to redefine what constitutes drunk driving.

Advertisement

28

The number of people who die every day nationally in motor vehicle crashes involving an alcohol-impaired driver, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

.02%

It’s the limit in Poland. Indeed, in many European countries, the BAC limit is lower than .08%.

Colton Prestwich works behind a so-called Zion curtain, a barrier that had been required in Utah bars and restaurants to shield patrons from workers preparing alcoholic drinks.
(Rick Bowmer / Associated Press)

60%

The percentage of Utah residents belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a faith that prohibits the use of alcohol. The state’s unique demographics explain why Utah has a complicated relationship with alcohol. (Gov. Gary Herbert, who signed the new BAC bill into law, is Mormon.)

During the legislative session, which ended this month, lawmakers addressed several issues centered on alcohol.

Among them was a 2009 law that required restaurants to erect a wall or partition — known as a “Zion curtain” to locals — to shield patrons from seeing alcohol being mixed, poured or prepared. Many restaurant owners hated the law. In a compromise proposal passed this year, restaurants would be allowed to stop using the Zion curtain if they set up a child-free buffer zone around their bar.

Advertisement

$396.4 million

The amount Utah generated in liquor sales in 2015 — a sign that, despite the presence of the Mormon Church, plenty of state residents or visitors partake of a drink now and then. According to the Utah Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 2015 booze sales were about $29 million higher than those in 2014, which hit $367.2 million.

03/23/2017

The date Herbert signed the .05% bill into law. It’s set to take effect in December 2018.

kurtis.lee@latimes.com

Twitter: @kurtisalee

ALSO

Virginia federal judge rules in favor of Trump’s travel ban

Trump administration approves Keystone XL pipeline, but its future remains in question

Advertisement

After the GOP healthcare bill fizzles, Trump blames the Democrats and says he ‘learned a lot about loyalty’

Advertisement