There was a 58 per cent reduction in serious injury road traffic collisions during the August bank holiday weekend this year compared to the same weekend last year, according to the Garda.
The force said the data also represents a 66 per cent reduction in serious injury collisions against the previous five August bank holiday weekends.
The Garda ran a roads policing operation from 7am on August 3rd to 7am on August 9th.
There were three fatalities on our roads during that period, and eight serious collisions took place that resulted in eight serious and life-threatening injuries.
Missing the target: Manchester United refund fails to find its way to PTSB account
A Finn on Inis Mór: ‘In Finland you just ignore everyone you don’t know. Even people you know sometimes’
Is it true that women need more sleep each night than men?
Owen Doyle: World Rugby should leave the lineout alone and fix the scrum
To date this year, 104 people have died on Irish roads. That is 12 more lives lost than this time last year.
Over the bank holiday period, the Garda carried out 900 mandatory intoxicant testing checkpoints. More than 4,000 roadside drug and alcohol tests were conducted which led to 196 arrests for driving under the influence of an intoxicant.
Throughout the weekend, gardaí issued more than 1,143 on the spot fixed charge penalty notices for speeding offences.
Of the 837,171 vehicles checked for speeding by Go-Safe nationwide, 2,841 drivers were detected for speeding.
The top speed detected was 203km/h in a 120km/h zone on the M8 Ballinaglanna North, Kilworth, Co Cork.