New Brunswick is implementing stricter penalties for impaired driving, giving police more options to deal with offenders. Drivers caught with a BAC of 0.08 or higher will face immediate licence suspensions, vehicle impoundment, and mandatory interlock devices.
A new campaign from MADD Canada is targeting students to ensure they don't drive while impaired. Motorists caught in New Brunswick for driving while impaired will face additional immediate consequences under new penalties that take effect Jan. 1. Changes to the province’s Motor Vehicle Act give police discretion to issue a roadside suspension or lay criminal charges.
Previously, police could only lay criminal charges, sending drivers through a lengthy process in the province’s clogged court system. “It streamlines the process, so it will help reduce the caseload inside the court system,” said Cpl. Matthew Leblanc-Smith, a spokesman for New Brunswick RCMP. Leblanc-Smith said the new rules impose immediate sanctions on some drivers — without giving them a criminal record. As well, he said, the changes allow the more serious offenders to be sent into the criminal justice system. “I don’t know if (the changes are) going to work better as a deterrent, but it will give police more options and better tools,” he said.Under the new rules, drivers with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 or above, or who refuse to give a breath sample, will get an immediate three-month licence suspension. The existing rules permit officers to seize vehicles, but starting Jan. 1 drivers caught with 0.08 or higher will have their vehicles immediately impounded for at least 30 days.For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. As well, they will have to equip their car for 12 months with an interlock device, which includes a mouthpiece into which a driver must blow. If alcohol is detected on the breath sample, the engine won’t start.Plane with ‘suspected landing gear issue’ moved after rough Halifax landingYet more political turmoil for Trudeau as pressure mounts Drivers with a blood alcohol level between 0.05 and
IMPAIRED DRIVING PENALTIES NEW BRUNSWICK ROAD SAFETY DRIVING LAWS
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