PER CURIAM.
Thomas L. Colameco appeals from a final decision of the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission (NJMVC) that reduced a previously imposed suspension of his license and denied his request for a hearing. We affirm.
The record includes three notices from the NJMVC to Colameco, all sent to the same Swedesboro address, advising him that his driving privileges had been suspended. The first notice, sent in November 2010, advised that Colameco's driving privileges were suspended "indefinitely" due to his failure to pay insurance surcharges. A second notice, dated May 31, 2011, advised Colameco his driving privileges were suspended as of July 29, 2011, "indefinitely" because he failed to answer a summons in the Logan Township municipal court in February 2011. A third notice, dated November 20, 2011, advised Colameco his driving privileges were suspended as of that date "indefinitely" because he failed to submit payment for his insurance surcharge assessment. The November 2011 notice set forth the requirements for satisfying the suspension and stated further:
On December 9, 2011, Colameco was arrested and charged with violations of
On November 20, 2012, Colameco entered a guilty plea to the DWI offense and the remaining charges were dismissed on the prosecutor's motion. The sentence included a suspension of Colameco's driving privileges for ninety days.
On December 16, 2012, NJMVC issued a notice to Colameco that his driving privileges were suspended as of that date for a period of 180 days. The notice stated that the suspension was in addition to other driving suspensions outstanding as of November 20, 2012, and advised:
Colameco requested a hearing before NJMVC regarding this suspension. Through counsel, he asserted the following as "contested issues":
NJMVC denied the request for a hearing. In the denial letter, the Chairman and Chief Administrator set forth his findings and decision as follows:
However, after considering Colameco's driver history record, mitigating circumstances indicated in his request, and his need for driving privileges, the Chairman reduced the period of suspension to thirty days. Colameco's suspension was stayed thereafter pending this appeal.
The sole issue Colameco argues in this appeal is that NJMVC violated his due process rights by failing to provide notice and failing to provide him with a hearing. His contention regarding the lack of notice is that NJMVC failed to advise him of the date for which the alleged misconduct — driving while privileges were suspended — occurred.
This argument lacks any merit. Colameco has not argued that he did not receive the three notices of suspension that advised him unequivocally that his driving privileges were suspended — indefinitely — from as early as November 2010. Colameco has not argued he was unaware of the suspension when he continued to drive. Indeed, his payment of required fees and restoration of his privileges just nine days after his DWI arrest belie any suggestion to the contrary.
As the NJMVC noted in denying Colameco's request for a hearing, he presented no factual disputes or legal arguments that made such a hearing necessary. In this appeal, he contends that "there may be speedy trial issues as well as a host of other issues for which a hearing and factual findings may be necessary" and asks for "a hearing so facts may be developed." Like the request to the NJMVC, these arguments fail to present either a factual dispute or a legal argument that would necessitate a hearing. We therefore find this argument to lack any merit as well.
Affirmed. The order staying the thirty-day suspension of Colameco's driving privileges is vacated.