SafeRoads Alberta is the provincial administrative system that handles impaired driving penalties outside the criminal courts. It was introduced on December 1, 2020, and now resolves the majority of first-time impaired driving cases in the province. Instead of being charged criminally, drivers often receive an Immediate Roadside Sanction (IRS) at the roadside, with penalties enforced by SafeRoads adjudicators rather than judges.
How SafeRoads is Different from Criminal Court
A SafeRoads case is not a criminal trial. There is no judge, no Crown prosecutor, and no public courtroom. Decisions are made by a SafeRoads adjudicator, who reviews the police evidence and any submissions made by the driver or the driver’s lawyer. Reviews are held by videoconference or in writing. They are not held in person.
The Standard of Proof is Lower
In a criminal case, the Crown must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In a SafeRoads review, the standard of proof is balance of probabilities, the same standard used in civil cases, and the onus is on the driver. This is one of the reasons SafeRoads cases are difficult to win without an experienced lawyer who understands the technical and procedural arguments that succeed in front of an adjudicator.