Not unless you have allowed your license to expire and there has been a passage of time before you applied again. If it's strictly a matter of renewing and updating your currently valid license, no.
You have to start the permit process all over again.
First, you have to be a resident of Connecticut. After that, you have to start from square one again.
You will have to get a CT learner's permit, which typically entails starting the whole process over again.
You'd have to be a resident of VT, and you'd pretty much have to go through the process again... unrestricted drivers licenses are reciprocal and can be transferred right over - this does not hold true for learners permits.
It depends what permit is is.
The drivers learning permit is suspended for 30 days and $175 license restoration fee is imposed as well as any other court fines that are acquired. There is also the possibility of having to take all written test over again and additional driving school hours to complete.
No. The written test is what got you the permit, now you have to pass the driving test so practice a lot so that you are comfortable behind the wheel, its nervousness that causes most people to fail on the first try.
You're going to have to pay for the permit... no two ways about it. If you take the written tests, the only thing you'll have to pay for until you get an actual CDL is the permit itself, and you can take those tests at the DMV - you don't have to go to a truck driving school for that.
No. You have to go through the learner's permit process all over again.
No. You'll have to start the permit process over again.
There is no point looking for it and no ways to find it. Simply go back to the Department of Motor Vehicles in any Ohio city, tell them to cancel the old permit, and do the steps to have them reissue it. Make sure you again provide your identity documents and anything that they required the first time.
The permit expiration date is on the front of the permit.