By SCOTT BAUER (AP)
MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin is known historically as a hotbed of social reforms, yet cracking down on drunken drivers has never been high on policymakers' to-do list. Maybe that's because so many have had to recite their ABCs on the side of the road.
Big breweries once dominated the state and ties to the beer industry remain stout, giving way to a belief that hard drinking is as much a part of the Wisconsin culture as the Green Bay Packers and cheese. That's created a blind spot of sorts for the socially conscious state: drunken driving.
Wisconsin has long had the nation's highest rates of drinking — and binge drinking — among adults and some of the most lax laws on drunken driving. There's also a history of lawmakers who have been caught behind the wheel after having a few too many. It's a paradox for a state in which leaders pride themselves on being on the forefront of welfare programs, health care and workers' rights.
"There is a live hard, play hard, cut corners, get away with anything you can culture in the Legislature," said Mordecai Lee, a former longtime Democratic legislator who's now a University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor. "Driving drunk is just part of a larger political culture of getting away with anything you can."
The latest accused legislator is state Rep. Jeff Wood, who was charged with driving under the influence three times over a 10-month period. He has pleaded not guilty and appears poised to serve out his term with only a ceremonial slap on the wrist.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jI9jimhhu4trY4Iy-yZO9x3zqm9gD9EROA2O0 As someone who moved here from another state, I have to agree that this is a huge blind spot. :shrug: