Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Toughened DWI restrictions approach legislative finish line

— UPDATED at 2:55 p.m. May 17 following Senate action

A bill born from a tragedy is likely to become law.

Inspired by an incident in which a drunken driver with several prior convictions for driving while impaired killed two people on a restaurant patio and injured several others, Rep. Larry Kraft (DFL-St. Louis Park) crafted HF2130, a bill that would expand the state’s ignition interlock program.

Ignition interlock is something like a breathalyzer that won’t allow a vehicle to start until the driver has proven they’re not impaired.

After passing the House earlier this month and doing the same in the Senate with some additions, a conference committee met for 20 minutes on Thursday to reconcile the differences between the two bills and sent its report on to both chambers. The House passed the report 126-5 on Friday, the Senate 66-0 Saturday, and it's on its way to the governor’s desk for his signature.

“This is a great bill,” Kraft said. “It will save lives.”

The bill would:

  • specify the time a person must participate in the ignition interlock program before becoming eligible for reinstatement of a standard driver’s license;
  • allow someone to pay the law’s $680 reinstatement fee for a standard license in installments;
  • require someone with one DWI (driving while impaired) offense over a 20-year period to use the interlock device for two years, with the required length of time increasing if further offenses happen; and
  • maintain the existing license revocation requirements for those with no prior incidents, but extend the lookback period for prior offenses from 10 years to 20 years.

Related Articles


Priority Dailies

Legislature — with budget incomplete — gavels out, prepares for special session
House Speaker Lisa Demuth and Republican Floor Leader Harry Niska speak with the media following the May 19 end of the regular legislative session. (Photo by Michele Jokinen) Some years, state legislative sessions surge to a climax on their final day, a flurry of activity providing a sustained adrenaline rush, culminating in smiles of satisfaction as...
Walz, lawmakers strike budget deal in session's final days
Gov. Tim Walz and three of four legislative leaders announce a bipartisan agreement on biennial budget targets during a May 15 press conference. (Photo by Andrew VonBank) With five days to go in the 2025 session, three of four legislative leaders announced a budget agreement Thursday that would sunset unemployment insurance for hourly school empl...