If you fail to complete required evaluation or treatment, you will be dropped from the DDP and your conditional license will be revoked. A copy of your completion notice will be sent to the DMV. Then, depending on your license status and driving record, your license will be restored or you will be eligible to apply for a new license.
You may not be allowed to apply right away if:. Bring the letter to any state or county motor vehicle office for additional information about re-entering. There are restrictions on the number of times that a participant may re-enter the program and keep a conditional license. At the time of sentencing, the court may have issued you a conditional discharge CD that requires DDP completion. DMV will notify the court if you do not enroll in the program, or are dropped from it.
The court then may call you in for re-sentencing. Other fees also may be required in certain cases. Checks or money orders must be made payable to the "Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. After enrollment, you also must pay a fee directly to the agency that will conduct your DDP classes.
Motor vehicle staff will tell you the exact fee and who to pay. Payment is expected when you attend the first class. There will be additional fees if you transfer to another DDP or apply to re-enter a program you have been dropped from. During the DDP course, you may be referred to a DMV recognized health care provider for formal evaluation and resulting treatment, if necessary. If formal evaluation or treatment is needed, you will have to pay additional fees to the agency that provides those services see "About the Program".
A conditional license generally is not valid for driving a taxicab or any motor vehicle that requires the driver to have a Commercial Driver License CDL.
In certain situations, a conditional license may be issued to the holder of a CDL or a Class E license. If your job or school changes location, you must immediately notify the DMV. To do this, complete a "Conditional License-Privilege Attachment" MV, available at most motor vehicle offices , and submit it to a state or county motor vehicle office. Your conditional license will be revoked if you are convicted of violating any condition listed above, or of any moving violation. After the conditional license is revoked, you may continue to attend the Drinking Driver Program, but you may not drive under any circumstances.
If you are over 21 years old and complete the program without additional convictions, your full license will be restored at the end of the program see "Re-licensing After DDP". If you are under 21 and your conditional license is revoked, you must serve a one-year revocation even if you complete the DDP. Your conditional license also will be revoked if you are convicted or found guilty of any additional alcohol or drug-related violation, or any other violation or incident that usually results in license revocation.
If your conditional license is revoked for any of these reasons, you may continue to participate in the DDP without driving, but you will not be re-licensed immediately after you complete the program. The DMV will consider your re-licensing only after you have completed the DDP and have served any required revocation period. You must turn in the revoked conditional license to a state or county motor vehicle office to receive credit toward the revocation period.
If you are dropped from the Drinking Driver Program, your conditional license will be revoked. If this occurs, your original license suspension or revocation will be reinstated for its full length. You must turn in your conditional license immediately upon receiving a revocation order. If you wait, your return to full license status may be delayed. For those who are put on probation, they cannot take the DDP without written permission of the court or their probation officer.
Many courts require enrollment in the DDP even if the motorist does not want to get a conditional license. The DDP is a class designed to reduce personal and property damage losses caused by alcohol and drugs. You enroll at your local DMV office.
This is information you'll find out in court, and having a DWI attorney on your side is beneficial. Unlike some other states, New York doesn't require drivers with DWI convictions to file an SR 22 , the financial responsibility certificate that shows you're carrying the state's required minimum liability insurance. However, that doesn't mean you're exactly off the hook. DWI convictions are red flags to car insurance companies, and most charge higher rates once you have a DWI conviction on your driving history.
When it's time to renew your liability coverage, check with your agent and find out if you'll experience a rate increase. If so, you might find lower rates if you compare other insurance companies.
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