Well, odds are you will not get it. Even though you beat the second DUI, the agency requires you report the second arrest on the upcoming medical. Plus, they have the record that you were arrested for DUI on the state tapes as of 60 days after the arrest. That will trigger the requirement for you to send in the officer's report of your described behavior, and ALL the court papers. Since it's pretty clear you didn't blow, they will treat is as if you had 0.15. There, they will see you have tolerance (the ability to operate a vehicle even though intoxicated, see more, below). This then gets treated as two alcohol related public events.
http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org...m/ame/guide/app_process/app_history/item18/v/
Never mind the 61.15 requirements. Those are additional. Your CFI did you a favor. Even if you only had an administrative 15 day license suspension, you need to make the Airman Security report in writing, or you lose your Pilot cert(s). Try getting hired with a suspension on your record at age 21. Not gonna ever happen.
The requirement for certification at any class with two in the past five years is "non-HIMS" HIMS (as you are not employed by a company with a HIMS program).
(1) 28 day inpatient rehab, outpatient granted under extreme waiver conditions only. Even outpatient, is 8 hours/day 5 days a week no cellphone, miss/late a day and you fail.
(2) Sponsorship by a HIMS AME.
(3) Monthly random drug/Ethanol testing- the HIMS AME runs the program. They call you pee, you pay- about $60 per hit on a visa card. Fail to pee in the subsequent 24 hours, it's scored as a positive. You're done.
(3) Montly visits at least to a drug and alcohol counselor
(4) 2 AA meetings per week, signed off.
(5) Six months minimum, down. That would be late September at BEST.
(6) Montly visits to the HIMS AME for evaluation.
(7) Evaluation by a HMS psychiatrist and by a HIMS neuro psychologist, at month 7 IF YOUR SPONSOR THINKS YOU ARE READY. If you go too soon you just blew $4,000.
Special issuance 6 months at a time, granted with concurrence of the Federal Air Surgeon (this takes a while). Then you continue with
(8) Random drug testing- 2years
(9) Montly visits to the sponsoring AME. He can space this out to every other month if you have made progress and "get it".
(10) Continued 2/wk AA. By now you will HATE AA if you are "faking" getting it, and you will fail.
(11) At least monthly visits to the Drug and Alcohol Counselor for evaluation.
(12) One year return to the Psychiatrist and psychologist- probably half as much $$s this time.
(13)Continue second year of Special issuance. Program same as first year.
At the end of two years you may be considered for release with recommendation from everyone in your after care probram.
TWO events even if you beat the recent one it, is considered cause to evaluate you for chronic repetitive abuse, and is by definition chronic repetitive abuse unteil you prove it's not. The agency is goingto consider the second report as an alcohol event if the word alcohol or the description of breath or behavior even suggests its- even if you blew ZERO. And if you didn't blow, it doesn't matter, it's presumed to be 0.15. It's all in the officer's behavior description.
Never mind a guy called "rational recovery" who posts here. These are the rules. You can pi_s, dodge, and spout all you want.
Or you can organize, get help, get well, and resume your pilot training after a year off. Or you can sell insurance, flip burgers, etc. Jobs in which you hold a public trust have requirements. Being a Flight Deck officer is one of them.
Very few local attornies understand the FAA's rules, and they can do nothing as this is all administrative law.
In summary, unless there is no mention of drug/alcohol behavior anywhere on the arresting officer's report (and if you were arrested for DUI, I hardly think that's going to be the case), you need make alternate career plans or take a year off of school. No way are you going to make August.
SERIOUSLY Start looking for a job. Or change majors to engineering. But in either case, you need to take control, and get help. HIMS is help (but you dont belong to an organization with such a program), so we do Non-HIMS - HIMS. Google it.
Lastly, for a THIRD class and a THIRD only, you can stand down for two years, prove abstinence and recovery for TWO years (random testing, negative Driver's license f/u) show recovery activities (AA signoffs, letters from bosses, etc), and get reissued a THIRD, but ONLY a THIRD until five years from the latest offense.
If this means you have to return to live at home, tell me where home is, and send a real email, I'll tell you where the resources are.