In addition to the jail term or the term of house arrest with electronic monitoring or continuous alcohol monitoring or both types of monitoring and jail term, the court shall require the offender to be assessed by an alcohol and drug treatment program that is authorized by section 3793.02 of the Revised Code, subject to division (I) of this section, and shall order the offender to follow the treatment recommendations of the program. The purpose of the assessment is to determine the degree of the offender’s alcohol usage and to determine whether or not treatment is warranted. Upon the request of the court, the program shall submit the results of the assessment to the court, including all treatment recommendations and clinical diagnoses related to alcohol use.
I suggest you tell the court the truth about your drinking so you can get the help you need.
(v) In all cases, if the vehicle is registered in the offender’s name, immobilization of the vehicle involved in the offense for ninety days in accordance with section 4503.233 of the Revised Code and impoundment of the license plates of that vehicle for ninety days.
Ninety days is the best case scenario. I doubt with three DUI's you will get any kind of consideration for driving to work.
If the sentence is being imposed for a violation of division (A)(1)(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), or (j) of this section, a mandatory jail term of ten consecutive days. The court shall impose the ten-day mandatory jail term under this division unless, subject to division (G)(3) of this section, it instead imposes a sentence under that division consisting of both a jail term and a term of house arrest with electronic monitoring, with continuous alcohol monitoring, or with both electronic monitoring and continuous alcohol monitoring. The court may impose a jail term in addition to the ten-day mandatory jail term. The cumulative jail term imposed for the offense shall not exceed six months.
I'm glad you are prepared to go to jail because you will be going, in fact you will probably be getting more than the minimum. The court is going to look at your record and see that in 8 years you have gotten more DUI's than most get in a lifetime. You need to prepare yourself to change your life drastically. This is a first degree misdemeanor, one step under a felony. You are facing a very serious charge that will likely not allow you to work the system. You have throughly proven to the state that you are not responsible enough to have the privilege to drive.