ns name, address, date of birth, and airman certificate number;(2)The type of violation that resulted in the conviction or the administrative action;(3)The date of the conviction or administrative action;(4)The State that holds the recorded of conviction or administrative action; and(5)A statement whether the motor vehicle action resulted from the same incident or arose out of the same factual circumstances related to a previously reported motor vehicle action.In addition to the report to the FAA, Mr. Walker must also look at the information he must supply on his next medical application. Section 18(w) asks if you have committed a motor vehicle action, it contains the same requirement as 14 CFR 61.15(c). He will have to answer yes to this question, and provide an explanation. The explanation should contain: (1) the alcohol or drug offense for which you were convicted or the type of administrative action involved; (2) the name of the state or other jurisdiction involved; and (3) the date of the conviction and/or administrative action. However, Mr. Walker will not have to answer yes to part (v) since he committed a traffic related misdemeanor.If Mr. Walker fails to report his motor vehicle action, his certificate will be suspended or revoked and denied any application for any certificate or rating. Although 14 CFR 61.15(f) does not say how long the suspension will be, in many cases it is a 30-day suspension, such as in Anderson v. Hinson, Docket No. SE-12343 (1994). In this case, Mr. Anderson failed to report a motor vehicle action, and received a 30-day suspension. Although he said he did not believe that FAA had given adequate notice and his license suspension did not merit a report, the ALJ did not find him credible.If Mr. Walker receives another motor vehicle action, he has very little chance of flying with the majors. If he commits another motor vehicle action within 3 years, his license will be suspended or revoked and denie...