NRS484C.210. Revocation of license, permit or privilege to drive when test shows concentration of alcohol of 0.10 or more in blood or breath; periods of ineligibility to run consecutively. [Effective on the date of the repeal of the federal law requiring each state to make it unlawful for a person to operate a motor vehicle with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 percent or greater as a condition to receiving federal funding for the construction of highways in this State.]  


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  •       1.  If the result of a test given under NRS 484C.150 or 484C.160 shows that a person had a concentration of alcohol of 0.10 or more in his or her blood or breath at the time of the test, the license, permit or privilege of the person to drive must be revoked as provided in NRS 484C.220 and the person is not eligible for a license, permit or privilege for a period of 90 days.

          2.  If a revocation of a person’s license, permit or privilege to drive under NRS 62E.640 or 483.460 follows a revocation under subsection 1 which was based on the person having a concentration of alcohol of 0.10 or more in his or her blood or breath, the Department shall cancel the revocation under that subsection and give the person credit for any period during which the person was not eligible for a license, permit or privilege.

          3.  Periods of ineligibility for a license, permit or privilege to drive which are imposed pursuant to this section must run consecutively.

      (Added to NRS by 1983, 1066; A 1995, 1884, 1919; 1999, 2455; 2003, 1158, 2561, effective on the date of the repeal of the federal law requiring each state to make it unlawful for a person to operate a motor vehicle with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 percent or greater as a condition to receiving federal funding for the construction of highways in this State)—(Substituted in revision for NRS 484.384)