A new research in New Zealand has revealed that most drink-driving deaths on NZ roads are caused by drunk drivers or repeat offenders.
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Of those 88 deaths, 34 people were killed in crashes where drivers at fault had a previous conviction, 50 by drivers who were at least double the current legal limit.
The research comes during debate over whether the drink-driving limit should be lowered, and ahead of the release of a report probing drivers who caused the most mayhem.
Reports said that legislation before the Parliament is designed to help get those high-risk drivers off the road.
Among other things, the legislation will slap a zero blood-alcohol limit on repeat offenders for three years, use alcohol interlocks and double the prison sentence for dangerous driving causing death.
Transport Minister Steven Joyce said the research showed there were no silver bullets in lowering the number of drink-driving deaths and there were already 'a significant number of people operating well outside the law' - meaning that simply lowering the blood-alcohol limit was not the answer.
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The legal limit is 80mg per 100ml of blood after the Cabinet decided against lowering the limit to 50mg earlier this year.
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