Yes, as you should.
In North Carolina, a DWI (Driving While Impaired) conviction can affect your ability to obtain a CDL (Commercial Driver's License). If you have a DWI on your record, you may face a disqualification period, typically lasting one year for a first offense, which can extend to three years for subsequent offenses. It's essential to check with the North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles for specific details and requirements based on your situation. Ultimately, a DWI can complicate the process, but it doesn't completely preclude you from obtaining a CDL after the disqualification period.
It might be the only place you can work. Unless they need you to drive, and unless the state requires a license
The only reason I can think of where you might lose your license is if you have a hardship license so that you can drive to school. Otherwise, if you have a good driving record and insurance, you should be fine.
When you get a DUI, DWI, or open container, there's typically a license suspension period which follows afterwards. Once this suspension period is over, and you've met all the conditions for reinstatement of your license (including payment of reinstatement fees), you can get a CDL 30 days later (you must hold a valid DL in your state of residence for at least 30 days before that state can issue you a CDL). However, if you don't have at least five years between your DUI/DWAI/open container conviction and the time you're trying to find a CDL job, you're only wasting your time and money - nobody will hire you for any driving job, least of all, a CDL driving job.
Yes, North Carolina can still restrict a driver's license after a DWI (Driving While Impaired) conviction. Typically, a DWI conviction may result in a suspension of driving privileges, and individuals may face restrictions or conditions, such as having to install an ignition interlock device. The specifics can vary based on the severity of the offense and whether it is a repeat offense. It's important for individuals to understand their rights and obligations following such a conviction.
No
I wish... I paid $318 in 2010 to renew my Class A CDL at $15/year (8 year license) with three endorsements at $3/year each, plus $96 for TSA fingerprinting and a background check for my hazmat endorsement. And those prices reflect the cost of a CDL. For non-CDL licenses (of any class), it's $4/year (again, typically an 8 year license), and an additional $1.75/year if you're getting a motorcycle endorsement.
No
When you receive 12 points within a 3 year period your license is revoked. You can visit this website in order to find out what individual offenses are worth: http://www.dmv.org/nc-north-carolina/point-system.php
No way to answer without knowing specifically what it is you're referring to.
There is no grace period, anywhere.
No