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Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee
(AATC)
2013 First Annual Report


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4501 South 2700 West, Box 141775, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-1775 telephone main # (801) 965-4518
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Acknowledgements
It is with much appreciation that the AATC (Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee)
acknowledges the following agencies, groups and committees for their continuous support to
identify and eliminate alcohol abuse in the State of Utah and for providing information for
this report: Statewide Epidemiological Outcome Workgroup (SEOW); Behavioral Risk
Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS); Student Health and Risk Prevention (SHARP); Utah
State Substance and Abuse Epidemiological Profile (Epi Profile); Eliminating Alcohol Sales
to Youth (EASY); Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice (CCJJ); Utah State Courts,
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC); Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control
(DABC); Department of Corrections (DOC); Department of Technology Services (DTS);
Department of Workforce Services (DWS); Department of Public Safety, State Bureau of
Investigation (SBI); Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), Utah County.

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Table of Contents

Purpose of the Report ........................................................................................................04
Statewide Epidemiological Outcome Workgroup (SEOW) ..............................................05
Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) .....................................................06
Alcohol Indicators ........................................................................................................07
Student Health and Risk Prevention (SHARP) ..................................................................08
Utah State Substance and Abuse Epidemiological Profile (Epi Profile) ...........................08
Epi Data ........................................................................................................09
Alcoholic Liver Disease
Alcoholism Fatalities
Homicides
Other Cirrhosis Fatalities (Non-Alcoholic)
Emergency Department Encounters for Alcohol Overdose
Eliminating Alcohol Sales to Youth (EASY) ....................................................................10 10
Compliance Summary
Detailed Compliance Checks Data
Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice (CCJJ) ......................................................13 13
Cost Benefit
Law Enforcement
Sanctions
Driver License Control
Alcohol Education, Assessment, Treatment
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) ......................................................................23 22
Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (DABC) .......................................................24 23
Violations by County
Compliance Report
Repeat Offenders/Penalty Frequency
Department of Technology Services (DTS) ......................................................................28 47
Department of Workforce Services (DWS) .......................................................................29 48
Department of Public Safety, State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) ...................................30 49
Covert Undercover Buyer Sales
Compliance Violations by Type

Attachments
Acronyms ........................................................................................................33 52
Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee Participants .................................................34 53
Resources ........................................................................................................35 54
Annual DUI Report (Separate Attachment)

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Purpose of the Report


prior AATC report was submitted to the Business and Labor Interim Committee on
October 17, 2012; however, this is the First Annual AATC Report being submitted to
the Governor and Legislature. This report was prepared in accordance with 2012
Legislative Session House Bill 354 Utah State Code 53-1-119 (7):

(a) The committee shall begin to collect the information described in Subsection (6)
by January 1, 2013. For fiscal year 2012-13, the committee is required only to
report the information collected between January 1, 2013 and June 30, 2013.
(b) Beginning December 31, 2013, the committee shall report the information
collection under Subsection (6) annually to the governor and Legislature by no
later than the December 31 immediately following the fiscal year for which the
information is collected.


he Alcohol Abuse
Tracking Committee
(AATC) was created as
a result of the 2012 Legislative
Session House Bill 354
Alcohol Beverage
Amendments. The Committee
is made up of several
Divisions, Agencies,
Department, Committees,
Organizations, and individuals
throughout Utah. The
committees responsibilities
are to determine if data is
being collected and if not how
it can be collected in the
following areas:

53-1-119(6)
(a) the number of individuals statewide who are convicted of, plead guilty to,
plead no contest to, plead guilty in a similar manner to, or resolve by
diversion or its equivalent to a violation related to underage drinking of
alcohol;
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(b) the number of individuals statewide who are convicted of, plead guilty to,
plead no contest to, plead guilty in a similar manner to, or resolve by
diversion or its equivalent to a violation related to driving under the
influence of alcohol;
(c) the number of violations statewide of Title 32B, Alcoholic Beverage
Control Act, related to over-serving or over-consumption of an alcohol
product;
(d) the cost of social services provided by the state related to abuse of alcohol,
including services provided by the Division of Child and Family Services
within the Department of Human Services;
(e) where the alcoholic products are obtained that results in the violations or
costs described in Subsection (6)(a) through (d);
(f) Any information the committee determines can be collected and relates to
the abuse of alcoholic products.


he Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee (AATC) began meeting in May 2012 with
subsequent meetings being held thereafter. Communication continues among
committee members and agencies to identify alcohol abuse problems within the State
of Utah. A variety of resources have been used to gather alcohol related information
including SEOW (Statewide Epidemiological Outcome Workgroup) report, BRFSS
(Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System), SHARP (Student Health and Risk Prevention)
survey, Epi Profile (substance and epidemiological profile), EASY (Eliminating Alcohol
Sales to Youth) report, CCJJ (Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice) report, AOC
(Administrative Office of the Courts) report, DABC (Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control) report, DOC (Department of Corrections) report, DTS (Department of Technology
Services) mapping, DWS (Department of Workforce Services) CAGE report, SBI (State
Bureau of Investigation) report, and various websites. The compiled information has been
gleaned from January 2013 through June 2013 and is presented in this AATC First Annual
Report.



Surveys and Reports

Statewide Epidemiological Outcome Workgroup (SEOW)

he SEOW report is an estimate of costs of alcohol abuse in the State of Utah. This
report is not available at this time as information will continue to be collected through
December 31, 2013. An amended AATC Report will be submitted once this
information is received.



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Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)

his is a telephone survey conducted by the Utah Department of Health to collect
information on a variety of health behaviors including alcohol use. This survey
includes questions that identify patterns of high risk alcohol consumption, chronic
drinking and binge drinking.


tah BRFSS included two additional alcohol consumption questions in 2013.
Respondents who report drinking alcohol in the past 30 days are asked where they
did most of their drinking on the last occasion and where they bought the alcohol
they consumed on the last occasion. People who report having binged will be asked the
questions regarding the last time they binged (4 or more drinks for women, 5 or more drinks
for men). By asking these questions of anyone who consumed alcohol, not just binge
drinkers, we will be able to analyze whether there are differences in behavior between those
who do and those who do not binge drink. So far in 2013, the Utah BRFSS Program has
collected approximately 4,000 completed surveys. Of these, an estimated 1,000 respondents
have answered these additional questions. We estimate that we will have approximately
3,600 responses to these questions by the end of the year. The results to these two questions
are shown below along with a comprehensive summary of alcohol indicators.


1
During this most recent occasion, where were you when you did most
of your drinking? Results:

Read only if necessary:


1 At your home, for example, your house, apartment or dorm room 59.3%

2 At another persons house 18.9%

3 At a restaurant 9.4%

4 At a banquet hall 0.5%

5 At a bar 5.6%

6 At a club 1.2%

7 At a public place, such as a park, concert, or sporting event 1.7%

2
During this most recent occasion, where had most of the alcohol you
consumed been purchased? (Read only if necessary)

1 From a grocery or convenience store 30.2%

2 From a Restaurant 9.7%

3 From a banquet hall 0.1%

4 From a Bar 6.1%

5 From a Club 1.0%

6 From a State liquor store 47.7%

7 From an Alcohol package agency 0.5%

8 From a Fair, festival, concert or sporting event 0.04%
9 From another state 0.6%


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Student Health and Risk Prevention (SHARP)

he SHARP (Student Health and Risk Prevention) Survey is a biennial survey
administered to approximately 60,000 students in the 6
th
, 8
th
, 10
th
, and 12
th
grades.
The information collected is used (in part) to identify alcohol use by youth in the State
of Utah. The following data is a summary of the 2013 Survey.


2013 SHARP Survey Summary

6th
grade
8th
grade
10th
grade
12th
grade All Grades
Youth Alcohol Use-30-Day 1 4.2 9.4 14 7
Youth Alcohol Use-Lifetime 6.5 14.7 27.1 33.1 20
Youth Binge Drinking 1.4 3.4 6.1 9.1 4.9
Youth Drinking And Driving 1 1.8 2.1 3.6 2.1
Youth Need For Alcohol Treatment 0.1 1 3.1 4.2 2.1
Youth Riding With Drinking Driver 6.7 7.8 9.3 8.8 8.2



Utah State Substance and Abuse Epidemiological Profile
(Epi Profile)

he Department of Health summarizes specific data related to substance use and the
consequences. This is called the Epidemiological Profile and includes data such as,
but not limited to, adult and youth alcohol consumption, suicide rates, prescription
drug overdoses (fatal and hospitalizations) and arrest rates.


pi Profile data is collected from multiple datasets including the Drug Abuse Warning
Network (DAWN), FBI, Law Enforcement, Utah Department of Health (BRFSS,
Vital Statistics from IBIS), and National Survey on Drug Use in Households
(NSDUH) along with our Student Health and Risk Prevention (SHARP Survey. The
following information is the most current data available.



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Lp|dem|o|og|ca| Data



A|coho||c L|ver D|sease

number of
ueaLhs
number ln
Lhe
opulaLlon
Age-ad[usLed
8aLes, ueaLhs er
100,000
opulaLlon
93
Cl LL
93Cl
uL
8elaLlve SLandard
Lrror (CoefflclenL
of varlaLlon )
2011 73 2,817,222 3.03 2.37 3.82 10.82
2012 96 2,833,430 3.90 3.13 4.78 9.47
Average: 83 2,836,326 3.47 2.77 4.3 10.13



A|coho||sm Iata||t|es

number of
ueaLhs
number ln
Lhe
opulaLlon
Age-ad[usLed
8aLes, ueaLhs er
100,000
opulaLlon
93
Cl LL
93Cl
uL
8elaLlve SLandard
Lrror (CoefflclenL
of varlaLlon )
2011 37 2,817,222 2.33 1.77 3.03 12.29
2012 62 2,833,430 2.48 1.89 3.19 11.89
Average: 33 2,836,326 3.00 1.83 3.12 12.09



nom|c|des

number of
ueaLhs
number ln
Lhe
opulaLlon
Age-ad[usLed
8aLes, ueaLhs er
100,000
opulaLlon
93
Cl LL
93Cl
uL
8elaLlve SLandard
Lrror (CoefflclenL
of varlaLlon )
2011 34 2,817,222 1.98 1.48 2.61 13.37
2012 46 2,833,430 1.68 1.22 2.23 14.43
Average: 30 2,836,326 1.83 1.33 2.43 13.91



Cther C|rrhos|s Iata||t|es (Non-A|coho||c)

number of
ueaLhs
number ln
Lhe
opulaLlon
Age-ad[usLed
8aLes, ueaLhs er
100,000
opulaLlon
93
Cl LL
93Cl
uL
8elaLlve SLandard
Lrror (CoefflclenL
of varlaLlon )
2011 104 2,817,222 4.38 3.73 3.36 8.8
2012 106 2,833,430 4.33 3.71 3.31 8.78
Average: 103

2,836,326 4.37 3.72 3.34 8.79



Lmergency Department Lncounters for A|coho| Cverdose

number of
Lu
LncounLers
number ln
Lhe
opulaLlon
Age-ad[usLed
8aLes per 10,000 -
Lu LncounLers
93
Cl LL
93Cl
uL
8elaLlve SLandard
Lrror (CoefflclenL
of varlaLlon )
2010 427 2,744,104 1.39 1.44 1.76 4.78
2011 418 2,733,392 1.33 1.38 1.69 4.89
Average: 423 2,738,748 1.36 1.41 1.73 4.84

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Eliminating Alcohol Sales to Youth (EASY)

he EASY program conducted 628 off-premise underage buyer operations in nine
counties throughout Utah from January 2013 through June 2013. These covert
operations are for off-premise sale of alcohol (grocery or convenience store) to youth.
The following data concludes that Utah is 91.08% compliant (did not sale to a minor). Costs
of reimbursements to law enforcement agencies totaled $16,091.69.











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Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice (CCJJ)
Cost/Benefit

he 2013 Legislature
appropriated $5,118,400
to be distributed from
the Alcoholic Beverage
Enforcement and Treatment
Restricted Fund (State Beer
Tax) to municipalities and
counties statewide on a formula
basis.
1
These funds are used to
support DUI enforcement as
well as other alcohol-related
activities. Total amount spent
was in FY 2013 was
$4,239,508.93 in the following
categories:

Alcohol-related prevention/education;

Treatment of offenders with alcohol problems;

Alcohol-related law enforcement, including DUI;

Prosecution of alcohol-related cases; and

Confinement of alcohol law offenders.


CJJ prepared the Eleventh Annual Driving Under the Influence Report to the Utah
Legislature in accordance with 41-6a-511 of the Utah Code. The statute requires the
Utah Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice to prepare an annual report of
DUI related data, including the following:

Data collected by the state courts to allow sentencing and enhancement decisions
to be made in accordance with violations involving driving under the influence of
alcohol and/or other drugs;

In accordance with 32B-2-404 (UCA), the State Tax Commission distributes beer tax funds to municipalities
and counties in December of each year based upon the following formula: percentage of state population
residing in each municipality and county (25%); each municipalitys and countys percentage of the statewide
convictions for all alcohol-related offenses (30%); the percentage of the following in the state that are located
each municipality and county; state stores, package agencies, retail licensees, and off-premise beer retailers
(20%); and for confinement and treatment purposes (for persons arrested for or convicted of offenses in which
alcohol is a contributing factor) on the basis of the percentage of the state population located in each county
(25% to counties only).

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Data collected by the justice courts (same DUI related data elements collected by
the state courts); and

Any measures for which data are available to evaluate the profile and impacts of
DUI recidivism and to evaluate the DUI related processes of:

! Law enforcement;
! Adjudication;
! Sanctions;
! Driver license control, and
! Alcohol education, assessment, and treatment.


he Utah Department of Public Safety, through its Driver License Division and
Highway Safety Office, collects information on all DUI arrests. In FY 2013, law
enforcement officers made 12,227 DUI arrests. This was 804 fewer than in FY 2012,
representing a decrease of over six percent, and a decrease of over 11 percent since FY 2011.


uring FY 2013,
nearly 81 percent
of the arrests were
for per se violations where
the driver had a .08 or
greater blood/breath
alcohol concentration, or
was impaired by alcohol,
drugs, or a combination of
the two to the extent it was
unsafe to operate a vehicle.
Under Utah law, drivers are
considered to have given
consent to tests of breath,
blood, urine, or oral fluids
to determine whether they
are driving under the influence of alcohol or other drugs. Almost 12 percent of arrests were
for refusal to submit to a chemical test. It is also illegal to drive with any measurable
controlled substance metabolite in ones body, which accounted for almost two percent of
arrests. Violations of the Not a Drop statute, by persons under the age of 21 who drove with
any measurable alcohol concentration in their body, accounted for 4.5 percent of the arrests,
a decrease of nearly eight percent from the previous year and 22.5 percent since FY 2011.
The fewest arrests were commercial drivers exceeding the .04 limit, which represented only
0.1 percent of the total.


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he arrests made in FY 2013 included those that occurred as a result of specialized DUI
overtime enforcement events such as enforcement blitzes, saturation patrols, and DUI
checkpoints. A portion of the DUI impound fees collected was specifically designated
to fund the overtime shifts. During FY 2013, 104 law enforcement agencies throughout the
state participated in overtime events, including local police agencies, sheriffs offices, the
Utah Highway Patrol, Motor Vehicle Enforcement, Utah Parks and Recreation, Utah Wildlife
Resources, and three university police departments.


he following tables show 2013 summary of data collected in the following areas: DUI
Overtime Enforcement Events, DUI Arrests by Agency Type, DUI Arrest by Gender,
Age, Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC).


FY 2013 Statewide DUI Overtime
Enforcement Events

Total
DUI Shifts Worked

2,306
Vehicles Stopped

26,306
DUI Arrests:


Alcohol 768


Drugs 155


Drug Metabolite 73


996 996
Vehicles Impounded

629
Alcohol-Related Arrests

634
Drug-Related Arrests

489
Warrants Served

424
Other Warnings/Citations

21,370



FY 2013 DUI Arrest by Agency
Type


Number Percent
Sheriffs' Offices 1,439.00 11.8%
City Police/Other 6,542.00 53.5%
Highway Patrol 4,246.00 34.7%
TOTAL 12,227.00 100.0%



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This table shows the measures
associated with DUI overtime
enforcement events in FY 2013.
Of the total 996 DUI arrests, 778
were for alcohol.
Fifty-three percent of all DUI
arrests in FY 2013 were made by
municipal law enforcement
agencies, with the Utah Highway
Patrol responsible for almost 35
percent, and county sheriffs
offices responsible for almost 12
percent.
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FY 2013 DUI Arrest by Gender

Number Percent
Male 8,753.00 71.6%
Female 3,369.00 27.5%
Unspecified 105.00 0.9%
TOTAL 12,227.00 100.0%



FY 2013 DUI Arrest by Age

Number Percent
Age Unknown - 0.0%
Ages 13-20 1,460 11.9%
Ages 21-24 2,144 17.5%
Ages 25-36 4,838 39.6%
Ages 37-48 2,231 18.3%
Ages 49-87 1,554 12.7%
TOTAL 12,227 100.0%



FY 2013 DUI Arrest by BAC


Number

Percent
BAC Results Not
Reported 4,573 37.4%
.008 - .07 528

4.3%
.08 - .10 1,043

8.5%
.11 - .15 2,160

17.7%
.16 - .20 1,589

13.0%
.21 - .25 659

5.4%
.26 - .45 265

2.2%
Refused BAC Test 1,410

11.5%
No Test/Unknown Not Available
Drug Only Not Available
TOTAL 12,227

100.0%


In FY 2013, nearly 72 percent of
arrestees were male and 27
percent were female. The
proportions of male and female
have remained fairly consistent
over the past three years.
The youngest DUI driver in FY
2013 was 13 years old, and the
oldest were 79-81 years of age.
Nearly 12 percent of arrestees
were under the legal drinking age
of 21, and increase of nearly 40
percent since the previous year.
Drivers ages 25-35 accounted for
nearly 40 percent of all arrests for
DUI.
The average BAC in FY 2013
was .146 (median BAC was .14),
the same as in the past several
years. The highest BAC recorded
was .42, over five times the legal
limit.
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FY 2013 DUI Arrest by Month

Number Percent
January 915 7.5%
February 1,006 8.3%
March 1,210 9.9%
April 862 7.1%
May 986 8.1%
June 948 7.7%
TOTAL 6,300 51.4%


onsistent with past years, the majority of DUI arrests during FY 2013 occurred along
the Wasatch Front with Weber, Davis, Salt Lake and Utah Counties accounting for 71
percent (8,697) of the total. Salt Lake County had the highest number of arrests with
5,096 (41.7%), while Wayne County had the fewest arrests with one (.01%). The table below
also compares the percentage of DUI arrests to the percentage of both total population and
vehicle miles traveled in each county.


he following table shows repeat offender data by type of DUI-related arrest. Data
were calculated by identifying arrests that occurred in FY 2013 as a starting point,
then counting back ten years to determine previous arrests. Each arrest was placed in a
column determined by the type of the arrest or violation. Nearly 69 percent of arrests were
for a first offense, 20 percent were for a second offense, seven percent were for a third
offense, and almost four percent were for a fourth or subsequent offense.


FY 2013
Arrest
Type
Per se
Alcohol
(.08)/
Drug
Refusal of
Chemical
Test
Not a
Drop
(< 21)
Drug
Metabolite
Commercial
Driver
(.04)
Unknown
(no box
marked) TOTAL
Offense Number Percent
1st 6,909 784 499 159 16 64 8,431 68.9%
2nd 1,964 369 33 23 1 71 2,461 20.1%
3rd 668 142 14 6 0 32 862 7.0%
4th 220 60 1 3 0 8 292 2.4%
5th 68 36 0 0 0 6 110 0.9%
6th 28 13 0 0 0 1 42 0.4%
7th 10 8 0 0 0 3 21 0.2%
8th- 9th 5 3 0 0 0 0 8 0.1%
TOTAL 9,872 1,415 547 191 17 185 12,227 100.0%



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DUI arrests remained fairly
consistent throughout CFY 2013
(shown is Jan June 2013) with
an average of 1,019 arrests per
month. The highest number of
arrests occurred in March (1,210),
with the lowest number of arrests
in April (862).
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DUI-Related Crashes, Injuries and Fatalities

! From CY 2011 to CY 2012, the percentage of total crash fatalities that
were DUI/alcohol-related decreased from 16.0 percent to 9.2 percent.

! From CY 2011 to CY 2012, the percentage of total crash fatalities that
were DUI/drug-related increased from 12.3 percent to 17.1 percent.

The figure below illustrates the trend in Utahs DUI/alcohol-related crash
fatalities from calendar years 2003 through 2012.


Percentage of Total Crash Fatalities That Were
DUI/Alcohol-Related in Utah, Calendar Years 2003-2012




Adjudications and Sanctions

Justice Court DUI Data:
! In FY 2013, there were 9,023 DUI cases in Utahs Justice Courts. Among
the cases resolved, almost 58 percent resulted in a guilty plea or verdict.

! Justice Court judges ordered offenders to participate in an educational
series in 2,629 cases, ordered offenders into substance use disorder
treatment in 2,144 cases, and ordered ignition interlock devices in 767
cases.

District Court DUI Data:
! In FY 2013, there were 2,305 DUI cases disposed by the states District
Courts. Among the cases resolved, almost 76 percent resulted in a guilty
plea or verdict.

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! District Court judges ordered offenders to participate in an educational
series in 308 cases, ordered offenders into substance use disorder
treatment in 630 cases, and ordered ignition interlock devices in 275 cases.


Driver License Control

! The Department of Public Safetys Driver License Division is required to
suspend or revoke the license of a person who has been convicted or
sanctioned for the following:

! Driving under the influence;
! Driving with any measurable controlled substance metabolite in
the body;
! Not a Drop violation;
! Refusal to submit to a chemical test;
! Automobile homicide;
! No-alcohol conditional license;
! Alcohol restricted driver (ARD) violation;
! Interlock restricted driver (IRD) conviction.

! When a driver is arrested for DUI, the license is taken and a 30-day
temporary license is issued. Drivers may request a license hearing within
10 days, and the Driver License Division must schedule the hearing within
the 30-day period of the temporary license.

! The Driver License Division conducted 5,206 hearings in FY 2013 to
determine if there was sufficient information to warrant the suspension or
revocation of the individuals driver license.

As shown in the table,
there were 5,206
requested alcohol
hearings held in FY
2013. The Division is
unable to take any action
against a driver if the
arresting officer does not
appear at the hearing. To
improve appearance
rates, the Division offers
a telephonic option
whereby officers or
offenders can phone in
for the hearing.

FY 2013 Alcohol Hearing Statistics

Per Se
Not A
Drop Refusal TOTAL
Total # of
Hearings 4,475 110 621 5,206
No Officer 847 23 116 986
No Officer
Telephonic
Not
Avail.
Not
Avail.
Not
Avail. -
Other No
Action 660 6 49 715
Total No
Action 1,507 41 165 1,713
Total
Telephonic
Not
Available
Not
Available
Not
Available -

8,620
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Screening, Assessment, Education and Treatment

! Screening and Assessment: As part of any sentence for a DUI offense,
Utah law requires offenders to participate in a screening and, if indicated
by the screening, an assessment. A screening involves gathering
information that is used to
determine if an individual
has a problem with alcohol
and/or other drug abuse,
and if so, whether an in-
depth clinical assessment
is appropriate. An
assessment is a collection
of detailed information concerning the individuals alcohol and/or other
drug abuse, emotional and physical health, social roles, and other relevant
areas of the individuals life. The assessment is used to determine the need
for substance use disorder treatment
2
. The following table shows the
orders for substance use disorder screening and assessment by the District
and Justice Courts in FY 2013, for those cases where the values were
known.


! Education: The purpose of DUI education is to address any problems or
risk factors that appear to be related to use of alcohol and other drugs and
attempt to help the individual recognize the harmful consequences of
inappropriate use, with special emphasis placed on the dangers of drinking
and driving.
3
Utah DUI offenders sentenced to an educational series
attend the PRIME For Life (PFL) program developed by the Prevention
Research Institute (PRI). PRIME For Life is a motivational intervention
that provides education and strategies for individuals who have
experienced problems due to high-risk alcohol or drug use. PFL is an
interactive experience designed to motivate and guide individuals toward
making low-risk choices and adopting more accurate beliefs about
personal risk that will support those low-risk choices. The program
provides research-based, low-risk guidelines and assists participants in
making choices to best protect what they value.

Eighty-one percent of participants who completed the PRIME For Life!
(PFL) program, Utahs court-ordered educational series for DUI offenders,
reported they were highly motivated to reduce to or maintain their drinking at
low-risk levels.


2
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Screening and Assessment for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Among Adults in the
Criminal Justice System, Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series, #7.
3
Utah Sentencing Commission, DUI Best Sentencing Practices Guidebook, 2003.
SubsLance use ulsorder Screenlng and
AssessmenL Crdered by Lhe CourLs
l? 2011 l? 2012 l? 2013
!usLlce CourLs 3,122.00 3,794.00 3,436.00
ulsLrlcL CourLs 691.00 623.00 693.00
3,813.00 4,417.00 4,149.00
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?G

Most participants in PRIME for Life (during 2011) reported they agreed
or strongly agreed PFL helped them.

! Treatment: For a first and second DUI offense, the court may order
treatment; for a third or subsequent offense within 10 years, the court must
order substance use disorder treatment. Treatment involves the application
of planned procedures to identify and change patterns of behavior that are
maladaptive, destructive, and/or injurious to health; or to restore appropriate
levels of physical, psychological and/or social functioning. DUI offenders
assessed as
meeting the
diagnostic criteria
for a substance use
disorder should
participate in a
treatment program
in addition to, or in
lieu of, the
educational
course.12
Treatment should
address both
alcohol and other
drug problems. The
level of treatment
needed (e.g., day treatment, outpatient, intensive outpatient, residential) is
determined by the assessment on the basis of the severity of the substance use
disorder. The table below shows the orders for substance use disorder
treatment by the Justice and District Courts in FY 2013, for those cases where
the values were known.


Utahs Impaired Driving Media Campaign

! The Utah Department of Public Safety Highway
Safety Offices statewide media, high-visibility
enforcement, and community outreach campaign
focuses on changing Utah citizens current
perceptions and behaviors regarding driving under
the influence of alcohol. This focus supports the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations Drive Sober or Get
Pulled Over campaign goal to provide resources to communities to create
deterrence through public and private partnerships.


;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ??

Utah State Courts Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)

OC provides information from District Court, Justice Court, and Juvenile Court
statewide for: 1) Underage Drinking; 2) Driving Under the Influence; and 3) Over
Serving/Consumption of an alcohol product. This information is collected from
CORIS (Courts Information Management System) and CARE (Juvenile Case Management
System). Below is a summary of the number of charges filed and the number of convictions
January 2013 through June 2013.


DIS1kIC1 CCUk1:
- - - - Conv|ct|ons - - - -

*Charges
I||ed Gu||ty
Gu||ty
|ea
No
Contest
*1C1AL
CCNVIC1ICNS
1. Underage Dr|nk|ng of A|coho|


220 92 1 2 93



2. Dr|v|ng Under the Inf|uence


220 827 4 23 834



3. Cver Serv|ng]Consumpt|on of an A|coho|
roduct
367 161 9 S 173
1ota|: 1124
*Note: Charges Filed and Total Convictions are not necessarily related or the same charge. These
numbers represent activity in each category for this time period.



IUS1ICL CCUk1:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Conv|ct|ons - - - - - - - - - - - - -

*Charges
I||ed
8a||
Iorfe|ture Gu||ty
Gu||ty
8ench Gu||ty Iury
Gu||ty
|ea
No
Contest
*1C1AL
CCNVIC1ICNS
1. Underage Dr|nk|ng of A|coho|


1334 4 479 7 1 123 31 667



2. Dr|v|ng Under the Inf|uence


3291 4 1304 19 34 338 111 2030



3. Cver Serv|ng]Consumpt|on of an A|coho| roduct


2667 12 944 34 1 261 139 1391
1ota|: 4088
*Note: Charges Filed and Total Convictions are not necessarily related or the same charge. These
numbers represent activity in each category for this time period.

A
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?@


IUVLNILL CCUk1:
Cases Inc|dents
1. Underage Dr|nk|ng of A|coho|




383 412





2. Dr|v|ng Under the Inf|uence




20 20





3. Cver Serv|ng]Consumpt|on of an A|coho| roduct
0 0



Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (DABC)

here are approximately 1,500 active liquor licenses issued to restaurants, clubs and
taverns in the State of Utah. The following types of licenses are:

Restaurant: Must order food to order alcohol;
Minors are ok but cannot sit at bar.

Dining Club: 60% is food sales;
Can order alcohol without ordering food;
Can walk around with drink;
Minors are ok with an adult but cannot sit in bar area.

Social Club: Can order alcohol without ordering food;
Food must be available;
No minors allowed on premise.

Tavern: Same as Social Club but no wine and no spirits;
Beer is 3.2%;
No minors allowed on premise.


ABC receives referrals from SBI and local law enforcement for potential
administrative action. If the commission or department wants the right to initiate or
maintain a disciplinary proceeding on the basis of a violation alleged in a report, the
department shall notify the licensee by no later than eight business days of the day on which
the department receives the report. The DABC initiates disciplinary proceeding by issuance
of a Notice of Agency Action. Once a Notice of Agency Action is issued, the assistant
attorney general assigned to the department represents the department and commission in
the disciplinary proceeding.

T
D
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?A

99% of violations are settled out of court meaning that the establishment pays the
fine plus administrative cost. The violation stays on the record for three years. If
repeat violations occur, the penalties increase up to and including $25,000 fine
and revocation of license.

During this reporting period total fines assessed in Utah were $221,200.00 and
administrative costs totaled $29,853.50. Administrative costs were put into the
State General Fund.

There were 369 First Offender violations, 10 Second Offender violations and 7
with 2 or more offenses. Cities and Counties with repeat offender establishments
are identified below.







he following table represents a summary of DABC compliance. The Other category
includes the following: disqualifying criminal history; bounced checks to the
department; no server training records on the premises; unlocked liquor storage; open
bottles not attached to metering device; license not displayed; warning sign not posted;
engaging in false or misleading statements; allowing patron to dispense their own; having
more than 2 A/B in front of patron at one time; allowing lewd acts; discounted mixed drinks;
free pouring; failure to dispense from original containers; failure to maintain dipensing
records.
20
2
13
6
4
187
18
40
4
S9
8
8
17
DA8C Sum of V|o|at|on Count by County
Ianuary 2013 through Iune 2013
1oLal
T
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?B





The following information summarizes penalty frequency by County.




DABC Repeat Offenders, Penalty Frequency
149
2
6
4
13
2
9
8
21
6
2
3
2
13
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
Sale Lo mlnors
Allow paLrons Lo consume away from
ConsumpLlon of alcohol whlle on duLy
Clvlng away free drlnks
lu 8adge
Llquor on premls of a llmlLed servlce
Servlng alcohol wlLhouL order of food
Mlnors on Lhe remlse of a Lavern/club
lallure Lo use elecLronlc Scannlng devlce
Sale Lo lnLoxlcaLed person
Sale by a mlnor
Mlnor employed selllng or dlspenslng A/8
unLralned server
CLher
DA8C Comp||ance
uA8C Compllance
0
30
100
130
200
C
a
c
h
e

C
a
r
b
o
n

u
a
v
l
s

u
u
c
h
e
s
n
e

l
r
o
n

S
a
l
L

L
a
k
e

S
u
m
m
l
L

1
o
o
e
l
e

u
l
n
L
a
h

u
L
a
h

W
a
s
a
L
c
h

W
a
s
h
l
n
g
L
o
n

W
e
b
e
r

l
r
o
n

S
a
l
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L
a
k
e

S
u
m
m
l
L

S
a
l
L

L
a
k
e

W
a
s
h
l
n
g
L
o
n

1sL, ll8S1
2nd,
SLCCnu
CvL8
2
20
2 13
6
3
17S
1S
40
4
S9
8
7 17
1 6
3
6
1
DA8C Comp||ance kepeat Cffenders by
County
(Ianuary 2013 through Iune 2013
1oLal
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?C

January 2013 through June 2013

NUMBER OF VIOLATIONS
County City 1st, FIRST 2nd, SECOND OVER 2
Cache Logan 20
Cache Total 20

Carbon Helper 1
Price 1


Carbon Total 2

Davis Clearfield 3
Farmington 6


Layton 3


Syracuse 1


Davis Total 13

Duchesne Duchesne 3
Roosevelt 3


Duchesne Total 6

Iron Brian Head 2
Cedar City 1 1
Iron Total 3 1
Salt Lake Cottonwood Heights 1
Draper 11


Magna 3


Midvale 22 1
Murray 3


Riverton 3


Salt Lake City 84 4 6
Sandy 8


South Jordan 13


Taylorsville 8


West Jordan 10


West Valley 9 1
Salt Lake Total 175 6 6

Summit Kamas 1
Park City 14 3
Summit Total 15 3
Tooele Stansbury Park 11
Tooele 29


Tooele Total 40
DABC Repeat Offenders, Penalty Frequency, Continued Page 2
January 2013 through June 2013
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?D


NUMBER OF VIOLATIONS
County City 1st, FIRST 2nd, SECOND OVER 2

Uintah Vernal 4
Uintah Total 4

Utah Cedar Valley 15
Lehi 1


Orem 3


Pleasant Grove 21


Provo 19


Utah Total 59

Wasatch Heber 7
Midway 1


Wasatch Total 8
Washington Ivins 1
Saint George 6

1
Washington Total 7 1
Weber Ogden 3
Riverdale 13


West Haven 1


Weber Total 17
Grand Total 369 10 7



Department of Technology Services (DTS)

TS has the capability to pull address information for alcohol related offences that
have been extracted from the electronic citation submission repository (currently
available from approximately 50% of law enforcement agencies in Utah). This
information is sent to the AGRC (Automated Geographic Reference Center) for geo-coding.
AGRC can then extract summary information for mapping. Note: When the information is
shown on the map, no personal information will be seen.


D
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?E

Department of Workforce Services (DWS)

WS has approximately 20,000 individuals per year in case management. An average
of 1,491 clients per year (from 2000 to 2012) answered yes to at least one CAGE
question. There was a significant drop in 2013 to 240 clients. This is probably due
to a policy chance that no longer requires every case managed customer to answer the CAGE
questions.

CAGE is a 4-item, relatively non-confrontational questionnaire for detection of alcoholism.
The 4 questions are:

1. Have you felt the need to Cut down on your drinking?
2. Do you feel Annoyed by people complaining about your drinking?
3. Do you ever feel Guilty about your drinking?
4. Do you ever drink an Eye-opener in the morning to relieve shakes?

The first letters in the bold statements make up the CAGE acronym by which the assessment
is known.





2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2003 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
1oLal 1363 2313 2779 2464 1774 1631 1002 886 938 1219 928 1081 391
1363
2313
2779
2464
1774
1631
1002
886
938
1219
928
1081
391
0
300
1000
1300
2000
2300
3000
Department of Workforce Serv|ces
C||ents that answered "yes" to at |east one
CAGL quest|on
D
;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' ?F

Department of Public Safety/State Bureau of Investigation
(SBI)

BI agents make up an Alcohol Enforcement Team (AET) and focus on alcohol
enforcement in the State of Utah. SBI Agents focus primarily on public safety with an
emphasis on service to intoxicated persons, service of alcohol to minors or
consumption of alcohol by minors, and of DUI.


gents conduct statewide compliance operations and investigations at random and/or
as a result of a tip, complaint or anonymous report of violation(s). If violation(s) are
found, the information is gathered and referred to DABC for administrative action
and/or local prosecution in the case of a criminal violation. (See DABC Compliance Report
for a summary of SBI activity.)


ne of the areas of focus is Covert Underage Buyer (CUB) operations. Agents visited
1,034 establishments statewide during the period of January 2013 through June 2013.
This included restaurants, clubs/bars, and retail stores. 165 sales were made to
CUBs. This averages approximately 16% underage buyer sales statewide.














he SBI Alcohol Enforcement Team conducts youth alcohol operations in support of
local law enforcement (i.e. Raves, Concerts, Music Festivals, etc.). The majority of
costs for youth alcohol operations come from grant funding through the Utah
Highway Safety Office and averages approximately one-two operations per month. During
2013, SBI participated in 28 youth alcohol operations. A total of 400 citations were issued
for alcohol/drug violations.


he following table represents violation types by quantity. This report concludes that
sale to a minor is the most frequent violation with 148 violations during this period of
January through June 2013.
S
A
O
State Bureau of Investigation
Covert Underage Buyer Sales
January 2013 through June 2013



Restaurants Clubs/Bars Retail
Number Visited 806 179 49
Sold to CUB 125 30 10
% that sold to CUB 15.51% 16.76% 20.41%

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Acronyms
Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee
(updated 12/19/2013)
Acronym Description Acronym Description
AATC Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee DOH Department of Health
AET Alcohol Enforcement Team DPS Department of Public Safety
AGRC Automated Geographic Reference
Center
DSAMH Division of Substance Abuse and Mental
Health
AOC Administrative Office of the Courts DTS Department of Technology Services
BAC Blood/Breath Alcohol Concentration DUI Driving Under the Influence
BCI Bureau of Criminal Identification DWS Department of Workforce Services
BRFSS Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System (Health)
EASY Eliminating Alcohol Sales to Youth
CAGE Cut down drinking, Annoyed, Guilty
about drinking, Eye-opener drinking in
the morning
Epi Profile Utah State Substance and Abuse
Epidemiological Profile
CARE Juvenile Case Management System MADD Mothers Against Drunk Driving
CCJJ Commission on Criminal and Juvenile
Justice
NSDUH National Survey on Drug Use in
Households
CDC Center of Disease Control PFL PRIME For Life
CORIS Courts Information Management
System
PRI Prevention Research Institute
COVERT Undercover SBI State Bureau of Investigation
CUB Covert Underage Buyer SAVE SAVE System: System used by DCFS to
track alcohol and drug abuse.
DABC Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control
SEOW Statewide Epidemiological Outcome
Workgroup
DAWN Drug Abuse Warning Network SHARP Student Health and Risk Prevention
(survey)
DCFS Division of Child and Family Services SIP Serving Intoxicated Person(s)
DHS Department of Human Services TRACIP Tracking Responsibility for Alcohol
Connected Emergencies
DLD Driver License Division UCJIS Utah Criminal Justice Information
System
DOC Department of Corrections UHSO Utah Highway Safety Office
USAAV Utah Substance Abuse Advisory



;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' @@


Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee Participants

(updated 12/31/2013)
CCJJ Mary Lou Emerson, Dir Utah Substance Abuse &
Governors Office (DUI Report)
801-538-1921 memerson@utah.gov
Corrections Mike Haddon, Dir. 801-545-5913 mhaddon@utah.gov
Cottonwood PD Robby Russo, Chief of Police robby@chpolice.org
Courts Dan Becker, Administrator 801-578-3806 danb@utcourts.gov
Kim Matheson, Analyst (main contact) 801-578-3825 kimam@utcourts.gov
DABC Benn Buys, Dir 801-977-6838 bbuys@utah.gov
*Nina R. McDermott, Esq. 801-977-6805 nmcdermott@utah.gov
DHS Brent Kelsy, Dir. 801-538-4305 bkelsey@utah.gov
Craig PoVey, Administrator (SEOW, SHARP, EPI) 801-538-4354 clpovey@utah.gov
*Holly Watson, Prgm Mgr (Alcohol Trng) 801-538-4233 hwatson@utah.gov
DOH Beverly Jackson, Exec Assist, appointed 801-538-6111 beverlyjackson@utah.gov
Robert Rolfs, Dir. (Health, BRFSS) 801-538-6111 rrolfs@utah.gov
DPS

Keith D. Squires, Commissioner, Committee Chair 801-965-4498 ksquires@utah.gov
L. Jeff Carr, Deputy Commissioner, Designee 801-965-4118 jcarr@utah.gov
Debbie Johnson, Legislative Liaison 801-592-8883 debbiejohnson@utah.gov
Jill Sorensen, Prgm Specialist II, UHSO EASY 801-903-7078 jsorensen@utah.gov
Kim Gibb, DL Div. Bureau Chief 801-964-4483 kgibb@utah.gov
Mike Rapich, Mjr, UHP 801-965-4458 mrapich@utah.gov
Sherry McCusker, Financial Analyst II 801-965-3831 smccusker@utah.gov
Mjr. Brian Redd, SBI 801-532-2168 bredd@utah.gov
Lt. Troy Marx, SBI Alcohol Enforcement Team 801-965-4994 tmarx@utah.gov
*Teri Pectol, Prgm Specialist III (UHSO Alcohol) 801-580-5905 tpectol@utah.gov
DTS Phil Bates, Dir 801-209-9343 pbates@utah.gov
DWS Drew Maxfield, Exec Dir Office 801-309-5335 mamaxfi@utah.gov
LHS House of
Representatives
Ryan Wilcox, Representative 801-538-1029 ryanwilcox@ie.utah.gov
LSN Senate John Valentine, Senator 801-538-1035 jvalentine@utahsenate.org
MADD Art Brown 801-694-0219 brown.art@gmail.com
Utah County

Rebecca Winkel (Utah County) Winkel.rebecca@gmail.com
Chantelle Carter (Utah County) Chantellec.ucadm@state.ut.us
ChantelleC@utahcounty.gov

*For informational purposes only




;;<9 =2)6" ;++/#1 >'(,)" .#8' @A


Alcohol Abuse Tracking Committee

Resources




Parents Empowered http://www.parentsempowered.org

DUI Annual Report http://www.justice.utah.gov

Mothers Against Drunk Driving http://www.madd.org

Utah Department of Public Safety
- Administrative Services http://publicsafety.utah.gov/admin/
- Driver License http://publicsafety.utah.gov/dld/
- State Bureau of Investigation:
Alcohol Enforcement
http://publicsafety.utah.gov/investigations/AEindex.html
- Highway Safety http://publicsafety.utah.gov/highwaypatrol/
EASY http://publicsafety.utah.gov/highwaysafety/EASY.html
Impaired Driving
http://publicsafety.utah.gov/highwaysafety/impaired.html
Youth Alcohol
http://publicsafety.utah.gov/highwaysafety/youthalcohol.html

DABC http://www.alcbev.state.ut.us/

DOH http://utah.ptfs.com

Utah State Courts http://www.utcourts.gov/index.html

Epi Profile http://dsamh.utah.gov/docs/seow final epi report
2010.pdf

DUI Report http://www.usaav.utah.gov/Alcohol/2013%
20DUI%20Annual%20Report.pdf

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