Stricter sentencing and new fines
- A minimum mandatory sentence of eight years will be given to those convicted of "one-punch" assaults when the assailant is intoxicated by drugs and/or alcohol and a person dies as a direct or indirect result of the assault.
- An extra two years will be added to mandatory minimum sentences for violent assaults committed when the assailant is intoxicated by drugs and/or alcohol.
- Police will be encouraged to conduct drug and alcohol testing when they suspect an offender has been under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol when committing a violent assault.
- Courts will no longer consider voluntary intoxication as mitigating factor in sentencing.
- The maximum sentence for the illegal supply and possession of steroids will increase to 25 years from two years.
- Intoxicated and disorderly behaviour can be fined up to $1,100 – five times higher than it was before the introduction of the measures.
New Sydney CBD precinct
- A new CBD precinct will be established (see map for boundaries) with its own alcohol-related regulations.
- In the new precinct, certain licence conditions will be imposed on venues. Conditions can include prohibiting the use of glass, restrictions on outlaw motorcycle gangs and the use of CCTV.
- "Party boats" and "party buses" operating within the precinct will also be subject to restrictions.
- Pubs, bars and registered clubs in the precinct cannot admit patrons past 1:30am and alcohol cannot be served past 3:00am. This excludes small bars (less than 60 person capacity), restaurants and tourism accommodation. Venues that have a license to operate past 3am can do so but cannot serve alcohol past that time.
- A precinct-wide freeze on new liquor licences will be introduced but small bars, restaurants and tourist accommodation will be excluded.
- Buses from Kings Cross to the CBD will be free on Friday and Saturday nights.
- Police can ban trouble makers from the precinct or part of the precinct for up to 48 hours. The Police Commissioner can extend the ban for a longer period of time.

Map of the proposed CBD precinct subject to new, stricter alcohol and drug regulations. Source: NSW Government
Licencing regulations and other measures
- All bottle shops in New South Wales must close at 10pm.
- A risk-based liquor licencing scheme will be implemented – imposing higher fees on establishments with later trading hours, poor compliance histories and those situated in high risk locations.
- Police can conduct undercover operations involving minors or young-looking adults in order to enforce laws prohibiting the sale of alcohol to minors.
- A media campaign will be launched to address the culture of binge drinking and alcohol related violence.
Do you think these new measures will reduce alcohol related violence in Sydney? Have your say in the comments section below.
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