Nez Rouge gives rides to 2,800 people on 1st night of the season - Action News
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Montreal

Nez Rouge gives rides to 2,800 people on 1st night of the season

Nearly 3,000 people called Nez Rouge for a ride home on Friday, on the campaign's first night of operation for the 2018 holiday season.

Annual tradition has volunteers coming back year after year

Organizers with Nez Rouge are calling the first night of the 35th edition a success, with volunteers responding to more than 2,800 calls across the province. (Opration Nez Rouge)

The first phone call at the Cgepdu Vieux Montralheadquartercame in at 8:04 p.m., just minutes after the phone lines opened for the 35thedition of theNez Rouge campaign.

Danielle Giroux picked up one of 2,887 callsthat came in across Quebec on Friday night.

"People who are calling are not very drunk, they're just very funny. I have a lot of fun talking to them," said Giroux,who is volunteering for her seventh year.

"If it can help and maybe save one life, it's worth it."

Knowing they are making a difference keeps volunteers like Giroux comingback year after year, according tooperations managerMark Infante.

"It's fun to help people gethome safely, so that's the main reason people come, andthey make friends," said Infante, who has been volunteering for 25 years himself.

Improved app

There were almost as many people volunteering yesterday as they were in need of a ride 2,513 volunteers showed up across Quebec.

In teams of three, they head out to a home or a bar, pick up the customers and drive them and their car home.

"It's a lot of fun to spend the evening with my friends, drive people around who have funny stories. That's why we come back every year," saidBruno Deslauriers.

Bruno Deslauriers signed up for his sixth year as a volunteer with Nez Rouge in Montreal. (CBC)

The organization has updated its app to make it easier for dispatchers to stay in touch with drivers while they're on the road, which should bring down wait times, according to Infante.

People who use the service can also download the app to have the local phone number handy.

Police target impaired drivers

Provincial and municipal police, along with Quebec's automobile insurance board (SAAQ), launched a provincewide campaign on Thursday to prevent impaired driving.

Road checkpoints will be set upregularly until Jan. 3. Police will also be paying attentionto drivers who may have consumed cannabis before taking the wheel.

As ofDec. 18, police officers who have been trained to recognize the signs of cannabis use will be able to suspendlicencesfor a 90-day period positive test resultscould also lead to criminal charges.

Thursday night, police stopped more than 800 vehicles at the entrance of the Jacques-Cartier Bridge in Montreal. No one was arrested.

According to theSAAQ, between 2012 and 2016, 19 per cent of drivers killed incollisions had cannabis in their blood system, while alcohol was the cause of an average of 110 deadly collisions.

A checkpoint at the entrance of the Jacques-Cartier Bridge on Nov. 29 did not lead to any arrests. (Alain Bland/Radio-Canada)

Infante said it's too soon to say if the heightenedpolice presence will translate intomore calls for his teams.

"We don't know yet, but we make nojudgment. Someone calls us, we go and get them, we bring them home safely for Christmas, that's our goal."

OprationNez Rouge is in operation until Jan. 1 and can be reached at 1-866-Desjardins.

You can also download the app or sign up to volunteerhere.

With files from Antoni Nerestant