The Christmas road toll for 2015/16 came in at 12, a figure that is neither remarkable nor unremarkable if you compare it with previous years.
Statistics show there were 16 in the same period last year (and 345 injured), shortly following the new drink-driving limits. In 2013/14 there were seven. In 2008/09 there were 25.
Opponents of the new drink driving limits, introduced in December 2014, will argue that lowering the alcohol limit makes no difference to the death rate, and that the new limits instil fear in drivers of being caught, as well as crippling the hospitality industry, particularly in the country where you invariably have to drive to a venue.
Well, fear is not a bad thing. It might be negative, but fear is part of survival and avoiding dangerous situations. And while it might seem a shame that people will choose to avoid alcohol because of the fear of losing their licence - as opposed to wrecking lives and property - well, punishment is part of committing crime.
According to statistics, alcohol has been a contributing factor in only 18 per cent of the road deaths these holidays. Losing control of the car was the most common cause of dying on the road. In half the cases, the deaths involved single vehicles.