3 Mistakes That Quietly Sink Michigan License Restoration Cases
If your Michigan driver's license was revoked or suspended for a substance-related offense, you already know the road back isn't simple. The Office of Hearings and Administrative Oversight (OHAO) — formerly the DAAD — doesn't hand your license back just because time has passed. You have to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that your substance abuse problem is under control and likely to stay that way.
Every year, people walk into that hearing well-intentioned and walk out denied — not because they aren't sober, but because of avoidable errors in how their case was built. Here are three of the most common ones.
1. Inconsistent Sobriety Dates
This is the single most common reason a case falls apart. If your substance abuse evaluation says your sobriety date is March 2021, but one of your letters of support says early 2022, the hearing officer will notice — and it will cost you your credibility. Your sobriety date needs to match exactly across your evaluation, every letter of support, and your own testimony. Before you submit anything, sit down and compare every document side by side.
2. Treating the Evaluation as a Formality
Your substance abuse evaluation carries enormous weight in this process — often more than any other document you submit. It's not a box to check. A rushed or incomplete evaluation, or one that doesn't clearly address your history, insight, and relapse prevention plan, can undermine an otherwise strong petition. This is exactly why the evaluation should be done by someone trained specifically in DAAD-compliant, SOS-258 evaluations who understands what hearing officers are looking for.
3. Focusing on Hardship Instead of Risk
It's natural to want to explain how hard life has been without a license — the rides you've had to ask for, the job opportunities you've missed. But the hearing officer isn't there to evaluate your hardship. Their only question is whether you present a risk of repeating past behavior. Petitions and testimony that lean on hardship instead of addressing risk directly tend to fall flat. Every piece of your case should answer one question: why is this no longer likely to happen again?
The Bottom Line
None of these mistakes are about whether your sobriety is real. They're about whether your case proves it clearly, consistently, and completely — which is exactly what the law requires. A thorough, professionally prepared substance abuse evaluation is one of the best ways to protect yourself against several of these pitfalls at once, since it forces consistency across your entire case from the start.
Want the Complete Picture?
Every common pitfall, exactly what hearing officers are listening for, and a step-by-step walkthrough of the entire petition process — it's all in my Michigan Driver's License Restoration Preparation Manual.
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