Your odds are worse without representation. You have to have all of the documents that you submitted in 2006. The Secretary of State will compare them to what you submit at your next hearing. If you do not have them, they can be obtained from the SOS, with filling out the proper form. You still have to prove you have not drank anything since 2006, as part of having a restricted license means no drinking alcohol. You still have to have a substance abuse assessment, drug test, letters in support of sobriety and there is a new form that has to be filled out, which is very long and must contain the right information. An attorney can review your old documents and make certain that your new documents are consistent, because consistency is a must. Nothing can be different than what you told them last time, except this time you have to prove you do not drink, do not go to bars, do not have alcohol in your home. Proof of treatment is great, AA is great, but may not be necessary. You have to follow the recommendations that were in your last assessment. If your last assessor stated you needed to continue AA, you should have continued AA. It is hard to answer anything else because I do not know what your last assessor said you needed to do. As far as why you have not gone back sooner, you just need an explanation such as I was happy with restricted license and followed it. You will need letters stating that you followed the restrictions and did not drive outside of your restrictions.
Answered on Dec 02nd, 2013 at 10:35 AM