A new state law went into effect Friday requiring first-time DUI offenders with a blood-alcohol content of 0.10 percent or higher to install breathalyzers, known as ignition interlocks, in their vehicles for a year.
- Ignition interlocks are a good start but more needs to be done to keep impaired drivers off the road
MONTPELIER, VT — August 29, 2017 - The Department of Liquor Control is pleased to announce that Skyler Genest has been hired as the new Director of the Compliance & Enforcement Division
SALT LAKE CITY — Customers at Utah's state-controlled liquor stores soon will no longer be able to write a check to pay for their purchases.
Rising sales of booze in the Buckeye State are leaving the state agency that oversees liquor thirsting for more operators.
(Harrisburg) - A new law going into effect Friday aims to cut down on drunk driving.
It requires first-time offenders to have breathalyzers installed in their cars—something 48 other states already do.
Car breathalyzers—officially called Ignition Interlock Systems—require drivers to blow into a device to start their vehicle. If the device detects any alcohol, the car won't start, and it'll also register the attempt.
Virginia will have plenty of options to consider for replacing the state's central liquor warehouse and headquarters.
Craft brewers in West Virginia are doing more than creating the perfect beer; they are creating new economic opportunities and bringing people to the state.
Washington and Lee High School students attended the Youth Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention Project (YADAPP) held from July 17 — 21, 2017 on the campus of Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia.
SALT LAKE CITY — A rare condition in which yeast and sugar combine in the gut to make a person drunk, without drinking, may be of special concern to Utahns after the state's new DUI law takes effect at the end of the year.
RALEIGH - The next time you go to a local brewery, a request for money might not be from someone who forgot a wallet at home.