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    You are at:Home»State News»DUI fatalities drop sharply after interlock law

    DUI fatalities drop sharply after interlock law

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    By KMAN Staff on July 20, 2012 State News

    TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) Preliminary results show alcohol-related traffic fatalities dropped in the year since the state began requiring an ignition interlock for those convicted of drunken driving.

    The Kansas Department of Transportation reported Friday that the state recorded 59 alcohol-related traffic fatalities between July 1, 2011 when the law took effect and June 30 of this year. That compares with 125 and 137, respectively, for the previous two years.

    The law requires those with a DUI conviction to install a device that drivers blow into to show their blood-alcohol level is below .04 before their vehicles will start.

    Pete Bodyk, traffic safety manager for KDOT, told The Lawrence Journal-World (http://bit.ly/NGbOPV ) the fatality numbers will probably increase but he expects data to continue to show a significant decline since the law began.

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