卡车运输组织要求联邦法院剥夺纽约州和加利福尼亚州的商用驾驶执照管理权
Trucking Group Asks Federal Court To Strip New York, California Of CDL Authority

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trucking-group-asks-federal-court-strip-new-york-california-cdl-authority

运输小企业联盟(SBTC)已向美国联邦上诉法院提起请愿,要求强制联邦监管机构撤销纽约州和加利福尼亚州的商业驾驶执照(CDL)项目认证。 SBTC认为,鉴于联邦汽车运输安全管理局(FMCSA)已认定这两个州在联邦许可法规(特别是关于非本地驾驶员和英语水平要求方面)存在“严重违规”,美国交通部依法有义务撤销其签发商业驾驶执照的授权。 该联盟以近期发生在弗吉尼亚州的一起致命巴士车祸为例,指出肇事驾驶员虽持有纽约州签发的商业驾驶执照,却涉嫌存在英语能力缺陷。联盟认为,这证明必须严格执行联邦标准以确保公共安全。此次诉讼背景源于一项全国范围的审计,该审计指出多个州存在违规行为。 这份请愿书凸显了围绕州许可政策与移民问题的持续法律争端。请愿书指责FMCSA在审计发现纽约州和加利福尼亚州存在严重违规率后,未能采取行动。SBTC主张,这些联邦调查结果应自动触发撤销认证的要求,但政府至今尚未执行。

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原文

Authored by Noi Mahoney via FreightWaves,

The Small Business in Transportation Coalition (SBTC) has filed a court petition seeking to force federal regulators to decertify the commercial driver’s license programs of New York and California.

The Small Business in Transportation Coalition said the U.S. Department of Transportation has failed to enforce federal law after finding states out of compliance. (Photo: Jim Alen/Freightwaves)

The petition, filed June 10, asks the court to review actions by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and the U.S. Department of Transportation and order the agencies to revoke the authority of New York and California to issue CDLs, escalating a dispute over immigration-related licensing policies and English-language proficiency requirements for commercial drivers.

SBTC argues that FMCSA has already determined both states were in “substantial noncompliance” with federal CDL regulations and therefore must be decertified under federal law. The organization contends that federal statutes require the transportation secretary to prohibit a state from issuing CDLs once such a determination is made.

The filing, made in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, specifically challenges FMCSA’s April 16 final determination regarding New York and also seeks relief related to a Jan. 7 determination involving California.

SBTC alleges the agency improperly failed to act on a petition it submitted in May 2025 requesting decertification orders against several states, including New York and California.

Virginia crash cited in petition

The lawsuit comes less than two weeks after a fatal bus crash on Interstate 95 in Virginia that killed five people and injured dozens more.

According to the court filing, SBTC points to the May 29 crash as evidence that stronger enforcement of federal licensing standards is needed. The organization alleges the bus driver involved held a New York-issued CDL despite concerns about English-language proficiency.

The crash involved a bus operated by E&P Travel Inc. Federal investigators are examining the company’s connections to a broader network of bus operators in the Northeast, according to CBS News. The driver, identified by CBS News as Jing S. Dong of Staten Island, New York, faces five felony involuntary manslaughter charges.

Compliance findings at center of dispute

SBTC’s petition centers on FMCSA’s nationwide review of state CDL programs following changes to federal rules governing non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses.

The coalition says FMCSA’s audits initially identified 24 states and the District of Columbia as being in substantial noncompliance with federal CDL requirements. According to the filing, New York and California ultimately received final notices of substantial noncompliance after federal reviews of their handling of non-domiciled CDL and permit applications.

The petition alleges New York’s noncompliance rate exceeded 55%, while California’s was about 25% during federal audits. SBTC argues those findings legally trigger mandatory decertification orders.

FMCSA previously warned multiple states that they could face funding consequences or additional enforcement actions if they failed to comply with federal CDL standards for non-domiciled drivers.

Latest chapter in broader legal battle

The lawsuit follows a separate high-profile challenge brought by Florida against California and Washington.

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court declined Florida’s request to file an original-action lawsuit alleging California and Washington violated federal law by issuing CDLs to undocumented immigrants.

The case stemmed from a fatal crash on Florida’s Turnpike involving a truck driver who reportedly held a California-issued CDL and had previously been licensed in Washington.

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