Drink drivers face swifter justice with new roadside breathalysers
New roadside breathalyser technology and a new approach to road casualty investigation.
- government announces bold package of measures to improve road safety
- measures include £350,000 for a competition to bring a new mobile breathalyser to the market
- £480,000 for the RAC Foundation to trial an innovative new approach to road casualty investigation, looking more closely at what is really causing road collisions
Drink drivers are to face swifter justice thanks to new roadside breathalyser technology that will allow police to gather on-the-spot proof.
Mobile evidential breath tests will allow police to gather early evidence of drink driving, by taking a breath sample from suspect drivers at the roadside. The instant test means they will not need to be taken back to a police station to obtain evidence as is currently the case.
It will mean those marginally over the drink drive limit will not have extra time to ‘sober up’ and stand a chance of passing a later test at the station.
It will also free up crucial police time and resources.
As part of a continued crackdown on those motorists who choose to drink and drive, the government is committing £350,000 for a competition which will see companies bring the new mobile breathalyser to market.
Roads Minister Jesse Norman said:
The drink drive limit has helped to give us one of the safest road networks in the world but there is always more we can do.
This new mobile breathalyser technology will enable the police to enforce the alcohol more rigorously limit on those who still choose to drive after drinking, putting others at risk.
The latest figures show that fewer people died on British roads in 2015 as a result of drink driving than in any year since records began.
In 2016, more than 460,000 people undertook breath tests in 2016, with almost 59,000 testing positively or refusing a test.
The competition is being run by PACTS (Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety) in the summer, and will invite companies to submit proposed technologies which will rapidly calculate the amount of ethanol in exhaled breath for use at the roadside. It is expected police forces throughout the UK will be able to use the device by summer 2020.
The government has also announced investigation teams dedicated to analysing the cause of road collisions will be deployed to UK roads later this year, as part of plans to improve road safety.
Supported by £480,000 of government funding, the RAC Foundation will lead the trial of an innovative new approach to road casualty investigation alongside police forces, with dedicated teams carrying out in-depth research in selected cases to get a better understanding of what is really causing collisions on our roads.
Drawing on the example of the internationally recognised Accident Investigation Branches for Rail, Maritime and Aviation, collisions will be analysed in 3 regions over 3 years.
RAC Foundation Director Steve Gooding said:
We are keen to seize the opportunity to work with the DfT, the Police and others to explore the scope for learning more about the causes of the road crashes that continue to blight - and curtail - so many lives, in particular to establish the practicalities, costs and full benefits of tackling and pre-empting them more effectively.
RAC Foundation will work alongside DfT, Highways England, DVSA and the police to gather learning that will help inform government’s long term strategy for road safety.
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