Why Victim’s Stories Aren’t Enough to Stop Impaired Driving
Episode 05: April 27, 2026
Click to Watch the Episode on YouTube, Spotify or Apple Podcasts
Why does impaired driving still happen after decades of heartbreaking victim stories, awareness campaigns, police crackdowns, and public outrage?
In Episode 5 of LIVID: Learning, Insights, and Voices on Impaired Driving, Amanda Bickell asks a difficult question many people are afraid to say out loud:
What if victim stories are not enough to create change?
After losing her daughter Abbey to an impaired driver, Amanda examines why emotional appeals, memorial campaigns, tragic headlines, and pleas from grieving families have failed to end one of Canada’s deadliest preventable crimes.
This episode explores:
• Why cautionary tales often fail to change behaviour
• Why many impaired drivers believe nothing bad will happen to them
• How sentencing realities weaken deterrence
• Why empathy-based messaging may miss the highest-risk offenders
• Canada’s struggle between individual rights vs collective safety
• Why anti-impaired-driving groups are outspent by alcohol marketing
• Whether awareness campaigns can truly solve the problem
• The staggering $29.25 billion annual cost of impaired driving in Canada
• What every Canadian is already paying for this crisis
Amanda also explores whether a different message—financial consequences, personal accountability, and collective responsibility—may be more effective than emotional appeals alone.
This is not an attack on victims sharing their stories. It is a challenge to ask whether Canada has relied on the wrong strategy for too long.
Because while we wait for awareness to work…
More people die.
More families grieve.
More stories are ignored.
Content Warning:
This episode discusses death, traumatic loss, impaired driving, grief, and failures within the justice system.
If this episode matters to you:
• Share it
• Talk about impaired driving
• Intervene when someone is about to drive impaired
• Call 911 when necessary
Real change starts with uncomfortable conversations.

