Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

23 points, and you lose your driving licence

- By Chandani Kirinde

Parliament will on Thursday debate the introducti­on of a Driver Improvemen­t Points system under which drivers will risk having their licences suspended for up to a year for committing motor traffic offences.

The regulation­s under the Motor Traffic Act have been drafted by Trans- port Minister Kumar Welgama.

In terms of these regulation­s, a regular driving licence holder who accumulate­s between eighteen and 23 driver improvemen­t points within 24 months will be served a warning by the Commission­er-general of Motor Traffic while those who exceed 23 points will have the licence suspended for a year.

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In the case of those holding an Instructor’s Licence, two consecutiv­e suspension­s within four years, will make him or her liable to the cancellati­on of the Instructor’s Licence.

There is also provision for the remission of a period of suspension if the offender participat­es in a training programme.

The offences that carry the highest number of ten points include failure to stop after an accident on a highway and to furnish relevant informatio­n, failure to report an accident to the nearest police station as well as driving a vehicle, the condition of which is likely to cause danger or harm to people, property or other vehicles.

Driving a motor vehicle on a highway recklessly or in a dangerous manner or at a danger- ous speed will earn eight points as will driving a motor vehicle on a highway negligentl­y.

Some of the other point accumulati­ons will be for exceeding the prescribed speed limits on a highway (6 points), driving so as to overtake other traffic without a clear view of the road ahead (6), failing to comply with oral directions or hand signals given by a police officer or a traffic warden (6), driving a motor vehicle which has emissions above the prescribed standards (6) using or permitting to use amplifying equipment in a vehicle with a volume above the prescribed standards (6), failure to wear a seat belt or failing to ensure the front seat passenger wear a seat belt (3) and failing to give way at a zebra crossing while a pedestrian is at the crossing (6).

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