Hi,
I recently got a DUI in NJ (less than a year ago). Thankfully it was on an empty road and no one was around, but unfortunately I can't turn back time and have to live with the consequences. Anyway, I served the required license suspension and paid the necessary fines, but the BAC reading was thrown out.
I have read that having a DUI/DWI makes me inadmissable to Canada for X amount of years, but I found this on canadainternational.gc.ca:
"I have original paperwork to show that my actual blood alcohol reading for my drink driving conviction was 0.080% or less. Can I enter Canada as a visitor?
Yes, provided the conviction or traffic infringement notice was not for Impaired Driving, a drink driving offence alone with a blood alcohol reading 0.08% exactly or below will not make you inadmissible. You may proceed to Canada. You do not have to contact the Canadian Consulate General in Sydney, Australia."
I am very confused on how this works. Can I visit (or move to) Canada from the U.S. if my blood alcohol reading was deemed inadmissable but I still have the DUI on my record? I am guessing moving there is out of the question until the ten years have passed, but the above quote says pretty clearly that visiting with a BAC of less than 0.08 (in my case there is no valid BAC) is OK.
Can anyone help clear this up for me?
I recently got a DUI in NJ (less than a year ago). Thankfully it was on an empty road and no one was around, but unfortunately I can't turn back time and have to live with the consequences. Anyway, I served the required license suspension and paid the necessary fines, but the BAC reading was thrown out.
I have read that having a DUI/DWI makes me inadmissable to Canada for X amount of years, but I found this on canadainternational.gc.ca:
"I have original paperwork to show that my actual blood alcohol reading for my drink driving conviction was 0.080% or less. Can I enter Canada as a visitor?
Yes, provided the conviction or traffic infringement notice was not for Impaired Driving, a drink driving offence alone with a blood alcohol reading 0.08% exactly or below will not make you inadmissible. You may proceed to Canada. You do not have to contact the Canadian Consulate General in Sydney, Australia."
I am very confused on how this works. Can I visit (or move to) Canada from the U.S. if my blood alcohol reading was deemed inadmissable but I still have the DUI on my record? I am guessing moving there is out of the question until the ten years have passed, but the above quote says pretty clearly that visiting with a BAC of less than 0.08 (in my case there is no valid BAC) is OK.
Can anyone help clear this up for me?