New rules coming to combat drinking and driving in Sask.
The Government of Saskatchewan is planning to implement harsher penalties to try and reduce drinking and driving rates in the province.
SGI Minister Joe Hargrave made the announcement in the Legislature Monday afternoon.
The new rules include:
An instant three-day vehicle seizures for drivers with a blood alcohol content between .04 and .08 on a first offence.
Raising the cutoff age for zero BAC tolerance from 19 to 21, with a 60-day licence suspension on first offence
Increasing mandatory ignition interlock periods for repeat offenders
The new rules, if approved, would take effect January 1, 2017.
Hargrave touted the success of similar rules in British Columbia, where immediate vehicle seizures helped halve the drinking and driving rate in the province. However, he said court challenges to the B.C. laws encouraged his ministry to implement rules more gradually.
“We want to make sure we get it all done right,” he said. “We want to make a made-in-Saskatchewan model.”
Saskatchewan has the highest drinking and driving rate per-capita across all the provinces in Canada.
The province will also be providing $1.3 million in funding to law enforcement to increase police check stops and add more automatic licence plate readers across the province.
The ALPRs scan licence plates of vehicles passing by a police cruiser, notifying the officer if the plate is stolen or unregistered. It can also determine if the driver associated with the plate is suspended or wanted by police.
There are currently 15 ALPR units used in Saskatchewan. The new funding will bring that number to 47.
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