gives them 60 days, when you get a revocation notice you have 60 days to clear it up. and site hardship. heather: 100 days total, the license is improper. and when i put the case to social media and viewers who are the jury, there was a lot of tough love out there, if you can t handle this don t drive a car, and how do you respond? this is not someone who is drunk driving but speeding violations and when you have so many people on social security who only make $1400 a month and $400, one third of their income, you can t pay it and what courts are not doing is offering a
pushing them into poverty. doug, though, the number in north carolina, 436,000? i can t imagine that those are all cases where people have a poverty issue. are some people just deadbeats, not paying the fines? what do you do with this law? you totally read my mind. first a little context. 43 states currently have this type of statute, which, you know, results in revocation or suspension of a driver s license for failure to pay the fine. to your point, i understand what eric s saying, and he s right, if it targets somebody who shutly cannot pay the fine, that s one issue. mixing apples and oranges together, you also have the people who have the money to pay the fine and simply don t pay it. this is a class action. so it s going to be very interesting to see how many people fall into category a, which is they have the money and aren t paying, or b, as eric was saying, they simply can t pay. by the way, in the lawsuit, the notice gives them 60 days after the 40 days. when you get a