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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
TRANSPORT LEGISLATION (DRUG DRIVING) AMENDMENT BILL 2007
Serial
132
Transport Legislation (Drug Driving)
Amendment Bill 2007
Ms
Lawrie
A Bill for an Act to amend
legislation administered by the
Minister for
Infrastructure and Transport
NORTHERN TERRITORY OF
AUSTRALIA
TRANSPORT LEGISLATION (DRUG DRIVING)
AMENDMENT ACT 2007
____________________
Act No. [ ] of
2007
____________________
TABLE OF PROVISIONS
NORTHERN
TERRITORY OF AUSTRALIA
____________________
Act No. [ ] of
2007
____________________
An Act to amend legislation
administered by the
Minister for
Infrastructure and Transport
[Assented to [ ]
2007]
[Second reading [ ]
2007]
The Legislative Assembly of the Northern
Territory enacts as follows:
Part 1 Preliminary
matters
Short title
This Act may be cited as the Transport
Legislation (Drug Driving) Amendment Act
2007.
This Act commences on the date fixed by the
Administrator by Gazette notice.
Part 2 Amendment of Traffic
Act
Act amended
This Part amends the Traffic
Act.
Amendment of section 3
(Interpretation)
(1) Section 3(1), definition prescribed
breath analysis instrument
omit
section 29
substitute
section 29AAW
(2) Section 3(4)
omit
Repeal and substitution of
Part V
Part V
repeal, substitute
Part
V Driving with alcohol or drug in blood
Division 1 Preliminary
matters
(1) In this Part:
commercial passenger vehicle, see
section 3(1) of the Commercial Passenger (Road) Transport
Act.
Crash, see Australian Road
Rules – dictionary.
driving instructor means a person
approved under section 25B of the Motor Vehicles
Act.
drug means a substance (other than
alcohol):
(a) prescribed by the Regulations under
section 28; or
(b) that, when consumed, ingested or used by a
person deprives the person, temporarily or permanently, of the person's normal
mental or physical faculties.
GVM, see Australian Road Rules
– dictionary.
high range blood alcohol content means
a blood alcohol content of 0.15% or greater.
Note
The table in regulation 58 of the Traffic
Regulations provides a conversion from blood alcohol level expressed as a
percentage to a level expressed by grams per volume of
blood.
immediate suspension offence means an
offence that attracts a notice of immediate suspension under
section 29AAN.
low range blood alcohol content means
a blood alcohol content of 0.05% or greater, but less than
0.08%.
medium range blood alcohol content
means a blood alcohol content of 0.08% or greater, but less than
0.15%.
road, see Australian Road Rules
– dictionary.
road-related area, see
Australian Road Rules – dictionary.
(2) In this Part:
drive:
(a) means the act of driving a motor vehicle;
and
(b) includes starting the engine of a motor vehicle;
and
(c) also includes putting a vehicle in motion;
and
(d) includes attempting to do any of those
things;
on a road, road-related area or public
place.
(3) In this Part, a police officer directs a person
to pull over (or pulls a driver over) when the officer signals to
the person to bring the motor vehicle the person is driving to a stop near where
the signal is made.
(4) In this Part, a reference to a failure
to:
(a) submit to a breath test or breath analysis;
or
(b) submit to a saliva test; or
(c) provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
is taken to be a reference to:
(d) a refusal or failure to submit to a breath test
or breath analysis, or to provide a sufficient sample of breath for a breath
test or breath analysis; or
(e) a refusal or failure to submit to a saliva test
or provide a sufficient sample of saliva; or
(f) a refusal or failure to submit to the taking of
a sample of blood;
respectively.
(5) In this Part, a reference to driving under the
influence of alcohol or a drug is taken to be a reference to driving a motor
vehicle under the influence of alcohol or a drug, or any combination of alcohol
and a drug or drugs, to such an extent as to be incapable of having proper
control of the vehicle.
Division 2 Offence
of driving with alcohol in blood
20 Impairment not
necessary
It is not necessary to show that a person's ability
to drive a motor vehicle is impaired in order to establish an offence under this
Division.
21 High range blood
alcohol content
(1) A person who drives a motor vehicle with a high
range blood alcohol content commits an offence.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 10 penalty units or imprisonment for
12 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –20 penalty units or imprisonment for
12 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1)).
(3) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 12 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of 18 months.
(4) However, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a high range blood alcohol
content;
(b) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(c) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
the person's licence to drive is automatically
cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a licence for a minimum
period of 5 years.
(5) Also, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a medium range blood alcohol
content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
and the person has also been previously found guilty
at any time of committing any of the following offences:
(d) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(e) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(f) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(g) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
(h) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
the person's licence to drive is automatically
cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a licence for a minimum
period of 5 years.
(6) A relevant offence is an immediate suspension
offence.
22 Medium
range blood alcohol content
(1) A person who drives a motor vehicle with a
medium range blood alcohol content commits an offence.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –20 penalty units or imprisonment for
12 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1)).
(3) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of 12 months.
(4) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
23 Low range blood
alcohol content
(1) A person who drives a motor vehicle with a low
range blood alcohol content commits an offence.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 5 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
or
(iii) a low range blood alcohol content (only if the
previous offence was committed after 1 July 2007 and only if the previous
offence was committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence);
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis.
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1)).
(3) For subsection (2)(a)(iii), an offence for
which an infringement notice was issued and not withdrawn is taken to be a
previous finding of guilt for the offence.
(4) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence that is a second or subsequent offence, the person's licence to drive is
automatically cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a
licence:
(a) for a second offence – for a minimum
period of 3 months; or
(b) for a subsequent offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months.
(5) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
(6) The Regulations may prescribe persons to whom,
or circumstances in which, this section does not apply.
24 Some
drivers to be zero alcohol
(1) This section applies to the following
persons:
(a) a person who has not reached the age of 18
years;
(b) the holder of a learner licence when driving a
vehicle of the class to which the learner licence relates;
(c) the holder of a licence that is provisional
under section 42 or section 10A of the Motor Vehicles
Act;
(d) a person who is not licensed to drive a motor
vehicle (other than through failure to renew a licence);
(e) a person who is not a resident of the Territory
who does not have a right under section 32(1) to drive in the
Territory.
(2) The person must not drive a motor vehicle if
the person's blood contains alcohol.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 5 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
(3) An offence against subsection (2) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence
if the person has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
or
(iii) a low range blood alcohol content (only if the
previous offence was committed after 1 July 2007 and only if the previous
offence was committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence);
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
subsection (1));
(f) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 25(1) or (2) and only if the previous offence was committed within
3 years before committing the relevant offence).
(4) For subsection (3)(a)(iii), (e) and (f),
an offence for which an infringement notice was issued and not withdrawn is
taken to be a previous finding of guilt for the offence.
(5) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 3 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of
6 months.
(6) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
25 Driver
of certain vehicles to be zero alcohol
(1) Subject to the Regulations, this section
applies to the following persons:
(a) the driver of a vehicle having a GVM of more
than 15 t;
(b) the driver of a vehicle carrying dangerous goods
within the meaning of the Dangerous Goods Act;
(c) the driver of a commercial passenger vehicle
within the meaning of the Commercial Passenger (Road) Transport
Act;
(d) the driver of a vehicle capable of seating more
than 12 persons (including the driver);
(e) the driver of a vehicle carrying more than
12 persons (including the driver);
(f) the driver of a vehicle that has a space
designed primarily for the carriage of goods when a person is travelling in that
space.
(2) This section also applies to a person
who:
(a) is under the age of 25 years;
and
(b) has not held, in the Territory or elsewhere, a
licence to drive a motor vehicle for a continuous period of
3 years;
but does not apply if section 24 applies to the
person.
(3) The person must not drive a motor vehicle if
the person's blood contains alcohol.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 5 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
(4) An offence against subsection (3) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
or
(iii) a low range blood alcohol content (only if the
previous offence was committed after 1 July 2007 and only if the previous
offence was committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence);
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
(f) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
subsection (1) or (2) and only if the previous offence was committed within
3 years before committing the relevant offence).
(5) For subsection (4)(a)(iii) and (f), an
offence for which an infringement notice was issued and not withdrawn is taken
to be a previous finding of guilt for the offence.
(6) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence that is a second or subsequent offence, the person's licence to drive is
automatically cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a
licence:
(a) for a second offence – for a minimum
period of 3 months; or
(b) for a subsequent offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months.
(7) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
(8) The Regulations may prescribe persons to whom,
or circumstances in which, this section does not apply.
(1) A driving instructor, when instructing another
person how to drive a motor vehicle, must not:
(a) drive a motor vehicle; or
(b) permit a person to drive a motor vehicle if the
instructor is occupying a passenger seat in the vehicle for the purpose of
instructing the person to drive the vehicle;
if the instructor's blood contains
alcohol.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 5 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
or
(iii) a low range blood alcohol content (only if the
previous offence was committed after 1 July 2007 and only if the previous
offence was committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence);
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
(f) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 25(1) or (2) and only if the previous offence was committed within
3 years before committing the relevant offence);
(g) a relevant offence (a previous relevant
offence) only if the previous relevant offence was committed within 3
years before committing the relevant offence;
(h) an offence (a previous offence)
committed before the commencement of this section that would, if committed after
the commencement of this section, be a relevant offence (only if the previous
offence was committed after 1 July 2007 and only if the previous offence
was committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence).
(3) For subsection (2)(a)(iii), (f), (g) and
(h) an offence for which an infringement notice was issued and not withdrawn is
taken to be a previous finding of guilt for the offence.
(4) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence that is a second or subsequent offence, the person's licence to drive is
automatically cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a
licence:
(a) for a second offence – for a minimum
period of 3 months; or
(b) for a subsequent offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months.
(5) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
Division 3 Offence
of driving with drug in blood
27 Impairment not
necessary
It is not necessary to show that a person's ability
to drive a motor vehicle is impaired in order to establish an offence under this
Division.
28 Driving
with certain drugs in the blood
(1) A person commits an offence if, while there is
in the person's blood a prohibited drug, the person:
(a) drives a motor vehicle; or
(b) is a driving instructor occupying a passenger
seat in a vehicle for the purpose of instructing another person to drive the
vehicle.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 5 penalty units or imprisonment for
3 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –7.5 penalty units or imprisonment for
6 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(b) driving with a prohibited drug in the
blood.
(3) For subsection (2)(b), an offence for
which an infringement notice was issued and not withdrawn is taken to be a
previous finding of guilt for the offence.
(4) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence that is a second or subsequent offence, the person's licence to drive is
automatically cancelled and the person is disqualified from obtaining a
licence:
(a) for a second offence – for a
minimum period of 3 months; or
(b) for a subsequent offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months.
(5) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
(6) For subsection (1), a prohibited
drug means a drug prescribed by the Regulations as either of the
following:
(a) drugs that are strictly prohibited for
subsection (1);
(b) drugs that are prohibited for
subsection (1) but to which the defence under section 29
applies.
29 Defence
for certain drugs
(1) It is a defence to a prosecution for an offence
against section 28(1) if:
(a) analysis of a blood sample taken under this
Part:
(i) gives no indication of any drug prescribed under
section 28(6)(a); but
(ii) does indicate the presence of a drug (or drugs)
prescribed under section 28(6)(b); and
(b) the defendant satisfies the court as to the
matters mentioned in subsection (2).
(2) The defendant must satisfy the court
that:
(a) the defendant was, at the time of the alleged
offence, under treatment by a medical practitioner and had taken the drug as
part of that treatment; and
(b) the defendant had taken the drug in accordance
with the directions of the medical practitioner.
Division
4 Offence of driving under influence of alcohol or drug
29AAA Driving
under influence
(1) A person commits an offence if, while under the
influence of alcohol or a drug to such an extent as to be incapable of having
proper control of the vehicle, the person:
(a) drives a motor vehicle; or
(b) is a driving instructor occupying a passenger
seat in a vehicle for the purpose of instructing another person to drive the
vehicle.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 10 penalty units or imprisonment for
12 months.
For a second or subsequent
offence –20 penalty units or imprisonment for
12 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence
if the person has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class of person mentioned
in section 24(1)).
(3) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 6 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of
12 months.
(4) A relevant offence that is a second or
subsequent offence is an immediate suspension offence.
(5) Evidence other than the result of a breath
analysis or blood test may be given in a court to show the concentration of
alcohol in a person's blood or to show that a person was or was not under the
influence of alcohol or a drug.
(6) A court may find that a person was, at the
relevant time, under the influence of alcohol or a drug:
(a) without there being evidence of the
concentration of alcohol or a prohibited drug in the person's blood;
or
(b) even though the evidence showed there was
present in the person's blood a concentration of alcohol less than
0.05%.
(7) For this section, a person is taken to be under
the influence of alcohol or a drug even though the effect on the person's
ability to have proper control of a vehicle arises from a combination of alcohol
and a drug or a combination of drugs.
Division 5 Taking
of samples
29AAB When
police can pull driver over at random
(1) A police officer may direct the driver of a
motor vehicle to pull over, without reasonable suspicion the driver has
committed an offence, for one or both of the following
purposes:
(a) to require the driver to submit to a breath test
to determine whether there is alcohol in the driver's blood;
(b) to require the driver of a vehicle with a GVM of
4.5 t or greater to submit to a saliva test to determine whether there is a
prohibited drug in the driver's blood.
(2) The person must comply with the
direction.
Maximum penalty: 200 penalty units or imprisonment
for 12 months.
29AAC Breath
test and breath analysis
(1) A police officer may, in the following
circumstances, require a person to submit to a breath test or a breath analysis
(or both) to determine if the person's blood contains alcohol:
(a) the person is a driver directed to pull over
under section 29AAB(1)(a);
(b) the officer has reasonable cause to suspect the
person:
(i) has committed an offence against Division 2
or 4; or
(ii) was the driver of a motor vehicle that was
involved in a crash on a road, road-related area or public place;
or
(iii) was involved in a crash on a road,
road-related area or public place and the person has, or had at the time of the
crash, alcohol in the person's blood.
(2) The officer may only require the person to
submit to a breath test or breath analysis if not more than 4 hours has
expired since the driver was pulled over or the offence, or crash, mentioned in
subsection (1) occurred.
(3) If a police officer requires a person to submit
to a breath test, the person must comply with the directions given by the
officer or another police officer.
(4) If a police officer requires a person to submit
to a breath test and:
(a) the person fails to provide a sufficient sample
of breath for the completion of the test; or
(b) the officer reasonably believes (whether as a
result of the test or otherwise) that the person may have committed an offence
under Division 2;
the officer or another police officer may arrest the
person without warrant and detain the person for the purpose of carrying out a
breath analysis.
(5) A police officer may require the arrested
person to submit to a breath analysis.
(6) A police officer must not require a person to
submit to a breath test or breath analysis under this section if it appears to
the officer that the person:
(a) is injured, and the officer is satisfied it may
be detrimental to the person's medical condition for the person to submit to the
breath test or breath analysis within the time mentioned in subsection (2);
or
(b) has a physical disability that prevents the
person from providing a sufficient sample of breath for the completion of a
breath test or breath analysis.
29AAD Further breath
analyses
(1) A person who has provided a sufficient sample
of breath for a breath analysis may be required by a police officer to submit to
one more breath analysis on the same occasion and the person must provide a
sufficient sample of breath for that analysis.
(2) A person who has submitted to a breath analysis
may, after receiving the result of the initial analysis, request that a further
analysis be carried out on one other sample of the person's breath, and the
police officer who carried out the initial analysis (or another officer) must
carry out an analysis on one further sample of the person's breath provided the
sample of breath is sufficient.
(3) A request under subsection (2) must be
made without undue delay after the person receives the result of the initial
analysis.
29AAE Offence of
failing to submit to breath analysis
(1) A person who is required under
section 29AAC or 29AAD to submit to a breath analysis must not fail to
provide a sample of breath sufficient for the analysis to be carried
out.
Maximum penalty: For a first
offence – 10 penalty units or imprisonment for 12
months.
For a second or subsequent offence –
20 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1)).
(3) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 12 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of 18 months.
(4) However, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a high range blood alcohol
content;
(b) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(c) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
the minimum period for which the person is
disqualified from obtaining a licence is 5 years.
(5) Also, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a medium range blood alcohol
content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
and the person has also been previously found guilty
at any time of committing any of the following offences:
(d) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(e) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(f) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(g) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
(h) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
the minimum period for which the person is
disqualified from obtaining a licence is 5 years.
(6) A relevant offence is an immediate suspension
offence.
(7) A person is taken to have failed to provide a
sufficient sample of breath for a breath analysis if the person's actions (or
inactions) in any way prevent a police officer from requiring the person to
submit to a breath analysis.
(8) It is a defence to a prosecution for a relevant
offence if the defendant satisfies the court:
(a) it would have been detrimental to the
defendant's medical condition to have submitted to a breath analysis at the time
the person was required to do so; or
(b) the defendant had other reasonable grounds for
failing to submit to a breath analysis.
(9) It is not reasonable grounds for failing to
submit to a breath analysis that the defendant had consumed alcohol after the
defendant ceased to drive a motor vehicle.
29AAF Requirement
for saliva test
(1) A police officer may, in the following
circumstances, require a person to submit to a saliva test to determine if the
person's blood may contain a prohibited drug:
(a) the person is a driver required to pull over
under section 29AAB(1)(b);
(b) the officer has reasonable cause to suspect the
person:
(i) has committed an offence against Division 3 or
4; or
(ii) was the driver of a motor vehicle that was
involved in a crash on a road, road-related area or public
place.
(2) The officer may only require the person to
submit to a saliva test if not more than 4 hours has expired since the driver
was pulled over or the offence, or crash, mentioned in subsection (1)
occurred.
(3) If a police officer requires a person to submit
to a saliva test, the person must comply with the directions given by the
officer or another police officer.
(4) If a police officer requires a person to submit
to a saliva test and:
(a) the person fails to provide a sufficient sample
of saliva for the completion of the test; or
(b) the officer reasonably believes (whether as a
result of the test or otherwise) that the person's blood may contain a
prohibited drug;
the officer or another police officer may arrest the
person without warrant and detain the person for the purpose of having a sample
of blood taken for analysis.
(5) A police officer must not require a person to
submit to a saliva test under this section if it appears to the officer that the
person:
(a) is injured, and the officer is satisfied it may
be detrimental to the person's medical condition for the person to submit to the
saliva test within the time mentioned in subsection (2);
or
(b) has a physical disability that prevents the
person from providing a sufficient sample of saliva for the completion of a
saliva test.
29AAG Requirement
to give blood sample
(1) Subsection (2) applies if a police
officer:
(a) does not require a person to submit to a breath
test or breath analysis for a reason mentioned in section 29AAC(6) and the
officer reasonably believes that the concentration of alcohol in the person's
blood is such that the person has committed an offence against this Act;
or
(b) the officer has reasonable cause (whether or not
as a result of a positive indication from a saliva test) to suspect the person's
blood contains a prohibited drug.
(2) The officer may require the person to give a
sample of blood for the purpose of analysis by an authorised analyst to
determine if the person's blood contains:
(a) alcohol in a concentration that constitutes the
person having committed an offence against Division 2 or 4; or
(b) a prohibited drug.
(3) If a person is required under this section to
give a sample of blood, a police officer must make arrangements for the person
to be taken to a hospital or health centre for a sample of the person's blood to
be taken.
(4) If the person is to be taken to a health
centre, the police officer making the arrangements must ensure there is a
medical practitioner, a registered nurse or a qualified person at the health
centre who is available and willing to take the sample.
29AAH Offence of
failing to provide blood sample
(1) A person who is required to give a sample of
blood for this Part must not fail to:
(a) comply with an arrangement for taking the person
to a hospital or health centre for the taking of a sample of the person's blood;
or
(b) give, in accordance with the directions of the
person taking the blood sample, a sample of blood sufficient for
analysis.
Maximum penalty: For a first offence – 10
penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months.
For a second or subsequent offence –
20 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months.
(2) An offence against subsection (1) (a
relevant offence) is a second or subsequent offence if the person
has previously been found guilty of any of the following
offences:
(a) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(d) failing to give a sample of blood for
analysis;
(e) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1)).
(3) If a court finds a person guilty of a relevant
offence, the person's licence to drive is automatically cancelled and the person
is disqualified from obtaining a licence:
(a) for a first offence – for a
minimum period of 12 months; or
(b) for a second or subsequent
offence – for a minimum period of
18 months.
(4) However, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a high range blood alcohol
content;
(b) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(c) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
the minimum period for which the person is
disqualified from obtaining a licence is 5 years.
(5) Also, if a court finds a person guilty of a
relevant offence and the person has previously been found guilty of any of the
following offences, committed within 3 years before committing the relevant
offence:
(a) driving with a medium range blood alcohol
content;
(b) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(c) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
and the person has also been previously found
guilty at any time of committing any of the following offences:
(d) driving with:
(i) a high range blood alcohol content;
or
(ii) a medium range blood alcohol content;
(e) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(f) failing to provide a sufficient sample of breath
for a breath analysis;
(g) failing to provide a sample of blood for
analysis;
(h) driving with alcohol in the blood (if the
person, at the time of the previous offence, was of a class mentioned in
section 24(1));
the minimum period for which the person is
disqualified from obtaining a licence is 5 years.
(6) A relevant offence is an immediate suspension
offence.
(7) It is a defence to a prosecution for a relevant
offence if the defendant satisfies the court:
(a) it would have been detrimental to the
defendant's medical condition to have given the sample of blood at the time the
person was required to do so; or
(b) the defendant had other reasonable grounds for
failing to give the sample.
(8) It is not reasonable grounds for failing to
give a blood sample that the defendant had consumed alcohol or another substance
after the defendant ceased to drive a motor vehicle.
29AAJ Failure to give
sample of blood in certain circumstances
(1) This section applies if a person is found
guilty of an offence against section 29AAH(1) and the court is satisfied
that:
(a) the person was required to give the blood sample
because the person entered a hospital for examination or treatment of injuries;
and
(b) the person's injuries did not arise from a crash
in which the person was driving a motor vehicle.
(2) The court must not sentence the person to a
term of imprisonment, cancel the person's licence or impose a fine greater than
1 penalty unit.
(3) The person's licence is not cancelled by force
of the finding of guilt despite section 29AAH(3).
(4) The offence is not taken into account as a
second or subsequent offence, or for determining whether another offence is a
second or subsequent offence, in accordance with section 21(2)(d),
22(2)(d), 24(3)(d), 29AAA(2)(d), 29AAE(2)(d) or 29AAH(2)(d).
29AAK Taking
of sample of blood
(1) A sample of blood may be taken for this Act,
from a person taken to a hospital or a health centre under section 29AAG,
or from a person who has apparently attained the age of 15 years and who
enters a hospital or health centre for examination or treatment of injuries
which may have been received in a crash:
(a) at a hospital – by a medical
practitioner, a registered nurse or a member of the staff of the hospital who is
under the direct supervision of a medical practitioner or registered nurse;
and
(b) at a health centre – by a
medical practitioner, a registered nurse or a qualified person.
(2) If a person is taken to a hospital under
section 29AAG, the person in charge of the hospital must ensure a sample of
the person's blood is taken as soon as practicable.
(3) The Minister responsible for administering
hospitals in the Territory must ensure that, for the purpose of analysis by an
authorised analyst, a sample of blood is taken as soon as practicable from each
person who has apparently attained the age of 15 years who enters a
hospital for examination or treatment of injuries which may have been received
in a crash.
(4) For subsection (3), a medical
practitioner, registered nurse or a member of the staff of a hospital who is
under the direct supervision of a medical practitioner or registered nurse
may:
(a) take a sample of blood from a person who is
unconscious or apparently incapable of consenting to the taking of the sample;
or
(b) require a person to give a sample of
blood.
(5) However, a member of the staff of a hospital or
a health centre is not required to take a sample of the person's blood if the
member of staff believes on reasonable grounds that:
(a) the concentration of alcohol in the person's
blood is already known; or
(b) the taking of the sample would be detrimental to
the person's medical condition; or
(c) the injuries of the person were not received in
a motor vehicle accident or the motor vehicle accident happened more than
12 hours before the person entered the hospital or health centre;
or
(d) a period of more than 4 hours has elapsed
since the person entered the hospital or health centre.
(6) A blood sample taken under this section is the
property of the Commissioner.
(7) However, the person who takes the sample may
make approximately half of the sample available to the person from whom it was
taken.
(8) No action or proceedings for assault, whether
in or outside the Territory, lie against a person who takes a blood sample for
this Act.
(9) This section does not obligate any person to
take a sample of blood at a health centre.
29AAL Right to
communicate with medical practitioner
(1) A person who is in custody after undergoing a
breath analysis or after giving a sample of blood under this Act may ask to
communicate with a medical practitioner for the purpose of requesting the
medical practitioner to do any of the following:
(a) examine the person;
(b) take a sample of the person's
blood;
(c) arrange for a sample of the person's blood to be
taken by another medical practitioner, a registered nurse or a qualified
person.
(2) If a request is made under subsection (1),
a police officer must make arrangements that are reasonable in the circumstances
for the person to communicate with a medical practitioner.
Division 6 Immediate
licence suspension
29AAM Licence
suspension for up to 24 hours
(1) Subject to the Regulations, if a person
is:
(a) arrested under section 29AAF(4);
or
(b) taken to a hospital or a health centre under
section 29AAG;
to have a sample of blood taken for this Act, a
police officer may, before the person is released from custody or departs the
hospital or health centre, give the person a notice under this
section.
(2) The notice must be in an approved form
and:
(a) has the effect that the person's licence is
suspended immediately the person is given the notice; and
(b) must inform the person that he or she is
disqualified from driving;
for the period, not exceeding 24 hours,
specified in the notice.
(3) A notice under this section cannot be
challenged or reviewed in any court.
(4) A police officer who gives a person a notice
under this section must provide details of the notice, and the person to whom it
was given, to the Registrar without delay.
29AAN Notice
of immediate licence suspension and disqualification from
driving
(1) If a person is charged with an immediate
suspension offence, a police officer may give the person a notice under this
section.
(2) For subsection (1), a person is charged with
the offence when given a copy of the charge, signed by a police
officer.
(3) The notice must be in an approved form
and:
(a) has the effect that the person's licence is
suspended immediately the person is given the notice; and
(b) must inform the person that he or she is
disqualified from driving until the charge is determined by a court;
and
(c) must require the person to surrender to police
any licence document the person holds; and
(d) must include a statement of the person's right
to appeal to the Local Court against the suspension and
disqualification.
(4) A police officer who gives a person a notice
under this section must provide details of the notice, and the person to whom it
was given, to the Registrar without delay.
(1) A person who is given a notice under
section 29AAN must not, without reasonable excuse, refuse or fail to
surrender any licence document held by the person.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment
for 12 months.
Note
The onus is on the person to establish there was
reasonable excuse for a failure to surrender a licence
document.
(2) A person who is given a notice under
section 29AAN must not, while disqualified from driving, apply for a
licence in the Territory or elsewhere.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment
for 12 months.
29AAQ Appeal against
immediate suspension notice
(1) A person given a notice under
section 29AAN may appeal to the Local Court against the licence suspension
and disqualification from driving as a result of the notice.
(2) The appellant:
(a) must give 14 days written notice of the appeal
to the Registrar and to the Local Court; and
(b) must set out particulars of exceptional
circumstances the appellant relies upon to justify the setting aside of the
notice.
(3) In determining the appeal, the Local Court must
hear:
(a) any evidence tendered by the appellant;
and
(b) any evidence tendered by or on behalf of the
Registrar; and
(c) any evidence required by the Court from a
medical practitioner.
(4) The Court may, by order:
(a) uphold the notice; or
(b) if satisfied of exceptional circumstances that
justify it – set aside the notice.
(5) An order under subsection (4) is final and
cannot be appealed against or reviewed by the Court or any other
court.
Division 7 Licence
cancellation on finding of guilt
29AAR Further
disqualification for certain drivers
(1) This section applies if:
(a) a court finds a person guilty of any of the
following offences:
(i) driving under the influence of alcohol or a
drug;
(ii) driving with a high range blood alcohol
content;
(iii) driving with a medium range blood alcohol
content;
(iv) refusing or failing to provide a sufficient
sample of breath for a breath analysis;
(v) refusing or failing to provide a sample of
blood; and
(b) at the time of committing the offence the person
was driving:
(i) a vehicle with a GVM of 15 t or more;
or
(ii) a commercial passenger
vehicle.
(2) The person is disqualified from obtaining a
licence to drive a vehicle with a GVM of 15 t or more or a commercial
passenger vehicle for a minimum period of 5 years.
Note
The person's licence to drive a motor vehicle is
cancelled, and the person is also disqualified from obtaining a licence to drive
any vehicle, for the period specified in the relevant
section.
29AAS When court
finds person guilty
(1) If a court finds a person guilty of an offence
under this Part, the person's licence is cancelled and the person is
disqualified from obtaining another licence for the minimum period specified in
relation to the offence, taking into account whether the offence is a first,
second or subsequent offence.
(2) For subsection (1), a court which finds a
person guilty of an offence under this Part must specifically find whether the
offence is the person's first, second or subsequent offence.
(3) The cancellation and disqualification occur
automatically by operation of this Part, but take effect from the date of the
finding of guilt.
(4) The court may order that the person be
disqualified from obtaining a licence for a period longer than any minimum
period specified in this Part, as the court considers fit.
(5) The period of disqualification is reduced by
any period of licence suspension imposed under section 29AAN in relation to
the same offence.
Division
8 Court and evidentiary matters
29AAT Use of
indicated blood alcohol content in court proceedings
(1) This section applies:
(a) in any proceedings in a court;
and
(b) even if evidence is given that the person
consumed alcohol after the time of the alleged commission of the offence (the
relevant time) and before the breath analysis was carried out or
the sample of blood was taken.
(2) If a breath analysis is carried out on a person
in accordance with section 29AAC or 29AAD, the blood alcohol content
indicated by the analysis is taken to be the blood alcohol content of the person
at the relevant time.
(3) If more than one breath analysis was carried
out, the lower of the blood alcohol contents indicated is taken to be the blood
alcohol content of the person at the relevant time.
(4) If a sample of a person's blood is taken in
accordance with section 29AAK:
(a) the blood alcohol content indicated by analysis
of the sample is taken to be the blood alcohol content of the person at the
relevant time; and
(b) any prohibited drug detected in the person's
blood is taken to have been present in the person's blood at the relevant
time.
(5) If the person's blood is analysed because the
person was taken to a hospital or health centre with injuries that may have been
caused in a crash:
(a) the indicated blood alcohol content mentioned in
subsection (2) or (4) is taken to be the blood alcohol content of the
person at the time of the crash; and
(b) any prohibited drug detected in the person's
blood is taken to have been present in the person's blood at the time of the
crash.
29AAU Evidence
by certificate
(1) In any proceedings in a court, a certificate in
the relevant prescribed form purporting to be signed by:
(a) a person authorised by the Commissioner under
this Act to use a prescribed breath analysis instrument for this Act;
or
(b) a member of the staff of a hospital or health
centre; or
(c) an authorised analyst or a person employed by an
organisation authorised as an analyst;
is prima facie evidence of the matters stated in the
certificate and the facts on which they are based.
(2) For subsection (1), the Regulations may
prescribe forms of certificate to be used by different persons on different
occasions.
(3) If the Regulations do not prescribe a form for
a specific situation, the Registrar may approve a form for use in that
situation.
29AAV If
witness to be called
In any proceedings in a court, if a party intends to
call as a witness a person whose evidence may be received by way of certificate
under section 29AAU, that party must:
(a) give not less than 14 days notice in writing of
that intention to the other party; and
(b) call the person in accordance with the
procedures of the relevant court to give the person's evidence.
29AAW Breath
analysis instrument
(1) The Regulations may provide:
(a) that a device for the carrying out of a breath
analysis is a prescribed breath analysis instrument; and
(b) for the proper use of a prescribed breath
analysis instrument;
for this Act.
(2) A court must not receive evidence that a
prescribed breath analysis instrument, when it is in good working order and used
in accordance with the Regulations relating to its use, does not give a true and
correct assessment of the concentration of alcohol in a person's
blood.
29AAX Limitation on
use of certain evidence
The fact that a sample of a person's blood, when
analysed for this Act, indicated the presence of a prohibited drug cannot be
used in evidence in any proceedings in a court under the Misuse of Drugs
Act.
29AAY References to
court and proceedings
In this Part:
(a) a reference to proceedings in a court includes a
reference to a preliminary examination under Part V of the Justices
Act; and
(b) a reference to a court includes a reference to a
Justice conducting a preliminary examination under Part V of the
Justices Act.
Repeal of sections 39, 49 and 50
Sections 39, 49 and 50
repeal
Schedule 1
repeal
Part 3 Amendment of Traffic
Regulations
Subordinate legislation
amended
This Part amends the Traffic
Regulations.
Amendment of Part 4
heading
Part 4, heading
omit
alcohol
substitute
alcohol or drug
Repeal and substitution of regulation
55
Regulation 55
repeal, substitute
55 Application of
section 25 of Act
(1) Section 25(3) of the Act does not apply to
the driver of a vehicle of a type mentioned in section 25(2)(a) to (f) of
the Act if the person is any of the following:
(a) a police officer;
(b) a member, as defined in the Fire and
Emergency Act, of the Northern Territory Fire and Rescue
Service;
(c) a member, within the meaning of the Disasters
Act, of the Northern Territory Emergency Service;
(d) a protective service officer as defined in the
Australian Federal Police Act 1979 (Cth);
and is driving the vehicle in the course of the
person's duties as such a member or officer.
(2) Section 25(3) of the Act does not apply to
the driver of a vehicle of a type mentioned in section 25(2)(a) to (f) of
the Act if the person is driving the vehicle:
(a) to a place at which the vehicle is to be used
in, or the occupants of the vehicle are to take part in; or
(b) at a place at which the vehicle is being used
in, or the occupants of the vehicle are taking part in; or
(c) from a place at which the vehicle was used in,
or the occupants of the vehicle took part in;
a fire management operation within the meaning of
the Motor Vehicles Act or an operation relating to the control of a
bushfire at that place.
(3) Section 25(3) of the Act does not apply to
the driver of a vehicle of a type mentioned in section 25(2)(d) of the Act
if not more than 9 persons (including the driver) are travelling in the
vehicle.
(4) Section 25(3) of the Act does not apply to
the driver of a vehicle of a type mentioned in section 25(2)(f) of the Act
if the space designed for carrying goods was enclosed at the time of the
manufacture of the vehicle.
55A Drugs prescribed
for section 28 of Act
(1) The drugs prescribed for section 28(6)(a)
are specified in Schedule 1A, Part A.
(2) The drugs prescribed for section 28(6)(b)
are specified in Schedule 1A, Part B.
55B Licence
suspension for up to 24 hours
A police officer must not give a person a notice
under section 29AAM of the Act if:
(a) a saliva test gave a positive indication of the
presence of morphine (but no other prohibited drug); and
(b) the person denies having consumed morphine;
and
(c) the person's ability to properly control a motor
vehicle was not apparently impaired.
Note
A saliva test may give a false positive
indication of the presence of morphine if the person had consumed codeine. A
blood test will confirm whether the substance was codeine or morphine, but in
the absence of impairment, the person must initially be presumed to have
consumed codeine only.
Amendment of regulation 56 (Prescribed breath
analysis instrument – section 29)
Regulation 56, heading
omit
section 29
substitute
section 29AAW
Amendment of regulation 58 (Conduct of breath
analysis)
Regulation 58(4)
omit
section 19
substitute
Part V
Amendment of regulation 60 (Authorised
analysts)
Regulation 60
omit
person
substitute
person or organisation
Amendment of regulation 61
(Forms)
Regulation 61
omit
section 27
substitute
section 29AAW
Schedule 1, item 26
omit
|
Drive with alcohol in blood contrary to
section 19(7) or (8)
|
TA 19(7), 19(8)
|
200
|
3
|
|
Drive with alcohol in blood contrary to
section 19(6)
|
TA 19(6)(a), 19(6)(b), 19(6)(c)
|
200
|
3
|
substitute
|
Drive with alcohol in blood contrary to section
23(1)
|
TA 23(1)
|
200
|
3
|
|
Drive with alcohol in blood contrary to section 25
or 26
|
TA 25(3), 26(1)(a), 26(1)(b)
|
200
|
3
|
|
Drive with prohibited drug in blood contrary to
section 28
|
TA 28(1)
|
200
|
|
After Schedule 1
insert
Schedule
1A Drugs prescribed for section 28 of Act
regulation 55A
Part A
The following drugs are prescribed for
section 28(6)(a) of the Act:
Delta 9 tetrahydrocannabinol
Methylamphetamine (speed, ice)
3,4-Methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA,
ecstacy)
Methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA)
Diacetyl morphine (heroin)
Benzoylmethylecgonine (cocaine)
Part B
The following drugs are prescribed for
section 28(6)(b) of the Act:
Morphine
Methadone
Amphetamine (dextroamphetamine,
d-amphetamine)
(1) Schedule 2, Form 3, back of Form
3
omit
Sections 25 and 26 of the Traffic Act read as
follows:
(Copy of sections 25 and 26 of the Traffic
Act)
substitute
Sections 29AAG and 29AAK of the Traffic Act
read as follows:
(Copy of section 29AAG and section 29AAK of
the Traffic Act)
(2) Schedule 2, Form 4,
paragraph (a)(ii)
omit
section 26
substitute
section 37
(3) Schedule 2, Form 4, back of Form
4
omit
Sections 25 and 26 of the Traffic Act read as
follows:
(Copy of sections 25 and 26 of the Traffic
Act)
substitute
Sections 29AAG and 29AAK of the Traffic Act
read as follows:
(Copy of section 29AAG and section 29AAK of
the Traffic Act)
Part 4 Amendment of Motor Vehicles
Act
Act amended
This Part amends the Motor Vehicles
Act.
Amendment of section 102AA (Applications
made by certain offenders)
(1) Section 102AA(1), definition subsequent
offence
omit
(2) Section 102AA, Table
omit, substitute
TABLE
|
Item
|
Column 1 Traffic
Act
|
Column
2 Offence
|
Column
3 Requirements
|
|
1
|
section 22
|
A first offence of driving a motor vehicle with a
medium range blood alcohol content
|
|
|
section 29AAA
|
A first offence of driving a motor vehicle under the
influence of alcohol or a drug
|
That the applicant has successfully completed an
approved course
|
|
2
|
section 22
|
A second or subsequent offence of driving a motor
vehicle with a medium range blood alcohol content
|
|
|
section 29AAA
|
A second or subsequent offence of driving a motor
vehicle under the influence of alcohol or a drug
|
That the applicant has successfully completed an
approved course or undergone an approved treatment, or both, at the discretion
of the Registrar
|
|
3
|
section 21
|
A first offence of driving a motor vehicle with a
high range blood alcohol content
|
That the applicant has successfully completed an
approved course or undergone an approved treatment, or both, at the discretion
of the Registrar
|
|
section 29AAE
|
A first offence of failing or refusing to submit to
a breath analysis in relation to the driving of a motor vehicle
|
|
|
4
|
section 21
|
A second or subsequent offence of driving a motor
vehicle with a high range blood alcohol content committed within 3 years
after being convicted of an offence referred to in item 3 or in this
item
|
That the period for which the person was
disqualified from obtaining a licence declared or imposed by the Court has
elapsed since the making of the order and the approval of the Local Court to
make an application for a licence has been obtained
|
|
section 29AAE
|
A second or subsequent offence of failing or
refusing to submit to a breath analysis in relation to the driving of a motor
vehicle
|
|
|
5
|
section 22
|
First or second or subsequent offence of driving a
motor vehicle with a medium range blood alcohol content
|
|
|
section 29AAA
|
First or second or subsequent offence of driving a
motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or a drug
|
That the period for which the person was
disqualified from obtaining a licence declared or imposed by the Court has
elapsed since the making of the order and, if the application for a licence
relates to a heavy vehicle, or commercial passenger vehicle, the approval of the
Local Court to make the application has been obtained
|
|
section 29AAE
|
First or second or subsequent offence of failing or
refusing to submit to a breath analysis in relation to the driving of a motor
vehicle
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|
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