Go to court and face the officer that wrote the ticket. If this is an old violation that is already in the system, then you are stuck.
Chris Perry against Michigan State
There are too many variables to be able to give you an estimate. It depends on the car, what type of insurance you need, and how much insurance. For an accurate price contact an insurance company.
AnswerPoints stay on your driving record with Michigan for 2 years. Insurance companies may hold them for longer.
Because it is a legal requirement when you are working on someone's body and for insurance purposes.
NO! Michigan auto insurance is almost twice as expensive. I have a 2009 Ford Fusion and pay $792 for six months (minimum MI coverage) in Michigan. I bought a home in Orlando Florida and transferred my auto insurance to Florida and pay $408 for the same (minimum FL coverage). Clean driving record.
Such records are not consideered to be "public records" and are not regulated by statute law, so it is entirely up to the insurance companies involved.
Insurance companies will maintain a permanent record of the incident, and if you were ticketed or charged your DMV record will always reflect that fact. Your DMV driving record is a running compilation of your entire driving history.
Parking tickets are "non-moving" violations. Should not be on your record if they are paid. Even if they are on your record, they are not recorded with points against you. Your insurance does not go up, and you can still get driving jobs.
For insurance purposes, the points will remain for three years. The DUI itself will remain on your MVR for seven years.
For insurance purposes, and for purposes of employment, three years. It will remain on your MVR for seven years, although some states will keep it on a certified MVR for ten.
For insurance purposes, three years. Anything further than that is up to the employer - they set their own criteria as to what they'll accept and not accept on a driving record.
Well logically if Michigan is not a member of reciprocity program they should refuse to supply records to florida. That question would need to be posed to the DMV in Michigan as to wheter their policy is to allow access to the records which would mean reciprocity.