Roadblocks to relicensing push some drivers to illegal behavior

An interlock ignition device can be installed in a vehicle to monitor a driver’s blood-alcohol content, a mechanism by which those who’ve lost their licenses to DUIs can continue to drive. (Max Dible / West Hawaii Today)

A group of people wait outside the Kailua-Kona DMV office on Friday. (Max Dible / West Hawaii Today)

KAILUA-KONA — A bureaucratic barrier, a lack of adequate state statutes and the sluggish pace at which county Departments of Motor Vehicles process road tests have created a glitch in the driver’s relicensing process that’s incentivizing thousands of Hawaii residents to break the law every year.