Wednesday, February 1, 2012

In Canada they call this, Tuesdays

Isn't getting liquored up before you climb onto a Zamboni required.  I would guess the Canadian Embassy will be calling, demanding the release of this man on the grounds he's now a political prisoner.  I mean seriously, I'm not a fan of drunk driving whatsoever but how do you get arrested for drunk driving if you're not even on the road?  Rabble-B


Found 16 hours ago on NESN.com: Yardbarker Blogger Network
Via NESN:
There aren't many worse things you can do as an employee than driving drunk while at work, a fact that extends to Zamboni drivers.
A 34-year-old man was arrested in Apple Valley, Minn., after police were called to the local rink to investigate what was some erratic Zamboni driving, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports. The part-time employee was having problems getting the Zamboni off the ice after his sloppy driving while on the ice.
"He looked like I do when I have my allergy attacks," youth hockey coach Bryan Dornstreich said. "I didn't really think anything of it."
While Dornstreich was working with a referee, a parent came over to say that the attendant was "weaving all over, slurring his words."
Witnesses noticed that the job, which usually takes about 10 minutes, took him 25 minutes to complete because he attempted to fix missed spots.
Dornstreich warned the referee, who was in charge of moving the nets off the ice, to stay clear of the driver. The coach then made sure that everybody stayed away from the glass during the joyride. When the man finished his sloppy work, parents had to go onto the ice to "scrape off the rough parts" so the team could practice.
The man also reportedly stumbled and smelled of booze and was arrested by authorities after he failed field sobriety tests. The investigation is ongoing and he's yet to be charged, but state records state the man in question has been convicted of drunk driving on three other occasions, according to the Star Tribune.

1 comment:

  1. I don't really know what law should be respected on ice, because it shouldn't be the same as on the streets, but it's true that the driver did a big mistake by drinking at work....maybe he will get fired and that's all.

    A few years ago I heard about a similar impaired driving Toronto and all I can remember is that the driver was fired but the police couldn't take his license because he had a good lawyer that found a legal bug....There was no law to punish impaired driving on ice:))

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