THE number of drivers breath tested during the long weekend road blitz more than doubled this year but the number detected drink driving fell.
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Operation Go Slow wrapped up at midnight on Monday but several drivers will feel the effects for months to come after they lost their licences in the double demerits operation.
A 21-year-old P-plater was nabbed at 154km/h in a 100 zone on the New England Highway at Kentucky while an 18-year-old P-plater was detected at 143km on the same road, near Goonoo Goonoo Station.
During the blitz, a 51-year-old also lost his licence on the spot after he was detected at 56km per hour over the 100 speed limit on the New England Highway near Wallabadah.
In Tamworth, an 18-year-old motorcyclist will front court for allegedly driving at more than 30km over the speed limit, bald tyres, overtaking on the inside lane and special range PCA.
Police said a 28-year-old woman tested positive roadside to methamphetamine in her oral fluid while driving with a three-month-old child in the car in Moree while a 25-year-old man returned a positive reading for the same drug during a lick stick test in Uralla – the fourth time he had been detected by police.
Both samples have been sent for testing, and charges could follow, police said.
Operation Go Slow
Oxley, Barwon and New England LACs
- 6,366 RBTs
- 220 speeding tickets
- 16 seatbelt offences
- 197 other infringements
Source: Western Region Highway Patrol
Across the region, seven people tested positive to methamphetamine in lick stick tests during the four-day blitz and the same amount were charged with drink driving.
A 35-year-old woman allegedly blew .181 in Armidale after she was stopped by police, but the number of PCAs was down from 12 last year.
Investigators are examining whether fatigue caused a rollover on Saturday morning that saw three seriously injured, while eight were taken to hospital on Monday.
A motorcyclist broke two legs and a shoulder when he fell off his bike on the Oxley Highway near Gingers Creek on Sunday.
In total, five crashes were recorded across the Barwon, Oxley and New England commands, with 16 tickets for seatbelts given out.
Police conducted 6,366 RBTs – doubling last year’s numbers.
The number of speeding drivers dropped from 227 last year to 220 this year, while 197 infringements for offences such as unlicensed driving, crossing double lines and using a mobile was up on last year’s figure of 120.
“The majority of people are doing the right thing but it only takes one,” Senior Sergeant Brett Davies told Fairfax Media.
The majority of people are doing the right thing but it only takes one.
- Western Region Highway Patrol Senior Sergeant Brett Davies
“The proactive numbers have increased, so police are stopping and talking to more motorists to try and prevent fatigue, speeding and other offences.
“But simple mistakes can lead to very traumatic incidents occurring.”