- Random roadside drug testing program expanded to include cocaine.
- The number of serious crashes involving drivers who tested positive for cocaine has increased in the last five years.
- Drug drivers will have their licence disqualified, face fines of up to $2167, and jail time for repeat offenders.
There is now more ways for Queensland Police to detect dangerous drivers and keep them off the state’s roads.
The highly successful roadside drug testing program has been expanded with cocaine added to the list of narcotics that can be detected.
Random roadside screening has been used in Queensland for more than 15 years, with police conducting approximately 50,000 random tests every year.
Shockingly, 1 in 4 motorists tested will return a positive result for illicit drugs.
Previous testing kits have been able to detect the presence of methylamphetamine, MDMA (ecstasy) and THC (the active ingredient in cannabis) from a sample of saliva.
The addition of cocaine to the program is in response to the increasing number of drivers caught with cocaine in their system over the last 5 years and is part of sweeping drug driving reforms committed to in the Queensland Road Safety Action Plan.
The state has a zero-tolerance approach to drug driving and there are tough penalties for offenders.
Drivers who test positive for cocaine, cannabis, speed, ice, or ecstasy will have their licence disqualified, face fines of up to $2,167, and repeater offenders could receive jail time.
Quotes attributable to the Transport and Main Roads Minister Mark Bailey:
” It is shocking to think that a quarter of all random drug tests in our state return a positive result, this is unacceptable.
“If you’re behind the wheel with drugs in your system, you’re not only a danger to yourself but to every other Queenslander and we make no apologies for coming down hard.
“Drug driving is one of the major contributing factors to fatal crashes and after the number of lives lost on our roads last year, this change to the roadside testing is very timely.
“Right now, TMR is working on a number of other road safety initiatives, and I will have more to say in the coming months.
“We are doing everything in our power to make sure all Queenslanders feel safe when they get behind the wheel”.